The main caliber of battleships of World War II. Battleships

The defeat in the First World War, it would seem, finally crossed out Germany from the contenders for naval dominance. According to the Treaty of Versailles, the Germans were allowed to have in service ships with a displacement of up to 10 thousand tons with guns with a caliber of no more than 11 inches. Therefore, they had to say goodbye to the hope of keeping even their very first dreadnoughts and be content with hopelessly outdated battleships of the Deutschland and Braunschweig types. When it became possible to replace the latter with ships of new projects (and this was allowed to be done no earlier than after 20 years of their being in service), it was these "Versailles" restrictions that led to the appearance of "capital" ships of the Deutschland type, unusual in all respects.

When it was created, the Germans proceeded from the fact that the new ship would primarily be used on enemy communications as a raider. The successful actions of Emden and Koenigsberg in 1914 against British shipping at the same time clearly showed that the weak armament of light cruisers leaves them no chance when a more serious enemy appears. Therefore, the "Deutschland" must be stronger than any enemy heavy cruiser and at the same time faster than any battleship. This idea, frankly, is not new, but previous attempts to implement it rarely led to the desired result. And only the Germans finally managed to embody it in metal as close as possible to the idea. "Deutschlands" with a very limited displacement received powerful weapons, decent (by cruising standards) protection and a huge cruising range. In the German Navy, the new ships were officially classified as battleships (panzerschiffe), in fact they were heavy cruisers, but due to the excessively powerful main battery artillery, they remained in the history of world shipbuilding as "pocket battleships".

Indeed, the armament of the "Deutschland" - two three-gun 11-inch towers and another 8 six-inch as a medium caliber - looked quite "battleship". The new 283-mm cannon (the Germans officially called it "28-cm", and therefore in the literature it is often listed as 280-mm) - with a barrel length of 52 calibers and an elevation angle of 40, it could fire 300-kg shells at a range of 42.5 km. To "shove" such artillery into cruising dimensions was made possible, firstly, by the all-round lightening of the hull due to the widespread introduction of electric welding and, secondly, by the use of fundamentally new engines - four twin diesel units with hydraulic transmission. As a result, the project left room for an armor belt with a thickness of 60-80 mm, and for anti-torpedo protection about 4.5 m wide (together with boules), ending with a 40-mm longitudinal bulkhead.

The entry into service of the lead "pocket battleship" coincided with Hitler's coming to power and resulted in a noisy propaganda campaign designed to instill in the layman that the revival of the German fleet began with the creation of "the best" ships in the world. In fact, these statements were far from the truth. For all their originality, the "Deutschland" and the "Admiral Scheer" and "Admiral Graf Spee" that followed it did not surpass all the "Washington" cruisers in terms of armor protection, and they were inferior to everyone in speed by an average of 4-5 knots. The seaworthiness of the "pocket battleships" at first turned out to be unimportant, because of which they had to urgently redo the bow of the hull. To top it all, it should be noted that their real standard displacement exceeded the declared one (10 thousand tons) by 17-25%, and the total displacement on the "Admiral Count Spee" generally reached 16020 tons!

The obvious limitations of the capabilities of "pocket battleships" in the light of the new naval doctrine announced by Hitler forced the construction of three more ships of the same type to be abandoned in favor of full-fledged battleships. In June 1935, an agreement was concluded in London, allowing Germany to have a fleet that was 35% of the British. Having won a diplomatic victory, the Germans could now build battleships quite legally.

The creation of ships went under the personal control of the Fuhrer. It is he who is considered to be the author of the new role assigned to the armored giants of the Kriegsmarine in the impending war. The fact is that, being unable to compete with the British fleet in a general battle, the Nazis intended to use their battleships as ocean raiders. It was in the actions of mighty ships against transport shipping that Hitler saw an opportunity to bring the "mistress of the seas" to her knees.

By the combination of parameters, the Scharnhorst and Gneisenau are often (and quite rightly) called battlecruisers. However, their continuity with their outstanding ancestors - "Derflinger" and "Mackensen" - is very arbitrary. The Scharnhorst project is largely descended from "pocket battleships". The only thing that the designers borrowed from the Kaiser battlecruisers was the armor scheme. Otherwise, the Scharnhorst is simply a Deutschland that has grown to normal size with a third 283-mm turret and a steam turbine plant.

The armor protection of the Scharnhorst according to the scheme was old-fashioned, but at the same time very powerful. A vertical belt of 350 mm cemented armor was mounted on the outside and could withstand 1016 kg 406 mm projectiles at ranges of more than 11 km. Above was an additional 45 mm belt. There were two armored decks: 50 mm upper and 80 mm (95 mm above the cellars) lower with 105 mm bevels. The total weight of the armor has reached a record value - 44% of the normal displacement! Anti-torpedo protection had an average width of 5.4 m on each side and was separated from the hull by an inclined 45-mm bulkhead.

The 283-mm guns of the SKC-34 model were somewhat improved compared to the previous model SKC-28: the barrel length increased to 54.5 calibers, which allowed the heavier 330-kg projectile to provide the same firing range - 42.5 km. True, Hitler was dissatisfied: he considered the German ships of the First World War period clearly underarmed and demanded that 380-mm guns be installed on the Scharnhorst. Only the unwillingness to delay the entry of battleships into service for a long time (and new weapons would delay their readiness for at least a year) forced him to compromise, postponing the rearmament of the ships at the time of their future upgrades.

The mixed placement of medium artillery in two-gun turrets and deck shield installations looks very strange. But this fact is explained very easily: the latter had already been ordered for the failed 4th and 5th "pocket battleships", and the Scharnhorst designers simply "disposed" them.

Already during the construction of the Scharnhorst and Gneisenau, it became clear that the attempts of the international community to limit the naval arms race had failed. The leading maritime powers immediately began designing super-battleships, and the Germans, of course, did not stand aside.

In June 1936, the Bismarck and Tirpitz, the largest warships ever built in Germany, were laid down at the shipyards of Hamburg and Wilhelmshaven. Although it was officially announced that the displacement of the new battleships was 35 thousand tons, in reality this value was exceeded by almost one and a half times!

Structurally, the Bismarck largely repeated the Scharnhorst, but fundamentally differed primarily in the main caliber artillery. A 380 mm cannon with a barrel length of 52 calibers could fire 800 kg projectiles at a muzzle velocity of 820 m/s. True, by reducing the maximum elevation angle to 30, the firing range, compared with the 11-inch, decreased to 35.5 km. However, this value was also considered excessive, since it seemed impossible at that time to fight at such distances.

The armor differed from the Scharnhorst mainly by increasing the height of the main belt and thickening the upper belt to 145 mm. Deck armor, as well as the width of anti-torpedo protection, remained the same. Approximately the same can be said about the power plant (12 Wagner boilers and 3 four-casing turbo-gear units). The relative weight of the armor has decreased somewhat (up to 40% of the displacement), but this cannot be called a disadvantage, since the ratio between protection and armament has become more balanced.

But even such giants as Bismarck and Tirpitz could not satisfy the Fuhrer's growing ambitions. At the beginning of 1939, he approved the design of the "H" type battleship with a total displacement of over 62 thousand tons, armed with eight 406-mm guns. In total, it was supposed to have 6 such ships; two of them managed to lay in July-August. However, the outbreak of war crossed out the plans of the Nazis. Surface ship construction programs had to be curtailed, and in September 1939 Hitler could only oppose 22 English and French battleships and battlecruisers with the "11-inch" Scharnhorst and Gneisenau ("pocket battleships" do not count). The Germans had to rely only on new raider tactics.

The first joint corsair operation "Scharnhorst" and "Gneisenau" was carried out in November 1939. It resulted in the sinking of the English auxiliary cruiser Rawalpindi, a former passenger liner armed with old cannons. The success was, to put it mildly, modest, although Goebbels propaganda inflated this unequal duel to the scale of a major naval victory, and in the German Youth Library series they even published a separate book called The End of Rawalpindi.

In April 1940, both sisterships provided cover for the German invasion of Norway and for the first time engaged in battle with a worthy enemy - the battlecruiser Rinaun. The duel proceeded in conditions of poor visibility and continued intermittently for more than two hours. The Gneisenau scored two hits on the British, but also received two 381-mm shells, one of which silenced the rear turret. The Scharnhorst was not hit, but her forward turret was also out of action due to damage caused by the storm.

Soon another battle took place in Norwegian waters, which received a huge response in the navies of the whole world. On June 8, the Scharnhorst and Gneisenau stumbled upon the British aircraft carrier Glories, escorted by the destroyers Ardent and Ekasta. Using radar, the Germans opened fire from a range of 25 km and quickly achieved hits that damaged the flight deck and prevented the aircraft from being lifted into the air. Glories caught fire, capsized and sank. Trying to save the aircraft carrier, the destroyers bravely rushed into a suicidal attack. Both were shot, but still one torpedo from the Ecasta hit the Scharnhorst. The battleship took in more than 2500 tons of water and received a roll of 5 to starboard; two artillery turrets - aft 283 mm and one 150 mm - were out of action; speed has dropped drastically. All this somewhat blurred the undoubted success of the operation.

The results of the first battle of battleships with an aircraft carrier inspired admirals with conservative views on naval warfare, but, alas, not for long. It soon became clear that the shooting of the Glories was just a tragic coincidence, an exception to the rule...

Finest hour "Scharnhorst" and "Gneisenau" - their joint "ocean voyage" in January - March 1941. During two months of piracy in the Atlantic, they captured and sank 22 allied steamships with a total tonnage of over 115,000 tons and returned to Brest with impunity.

But then fortune turned away from the Germans. While in French ports, the battleships began to be subjected to massive air attacks. It was hardly possible to complete the repair of some damage, as the English bombs caused new ones. I had to take my feet. The breakthrough across the English Channel to Germany in February 1942 was the last joint operation of the Nazi super raiders.

On the night of February 27, the Gneisenau, which had just arrived in Kiel, was hit by a British 454-kg armor-piercing bomb in the area of ​​\u200b\u200bthe first tower. The explosion caused huge destruction and a fire (230 powder charges of the main caliber flared up at once). 112 sailors were killed and 21 wounded. The battleship was towed to Gotenhafen (Gdynia) for repairs. During the latter, by the way, it was planned to replace the main artillery with six 380-mm guns. Alas, these plans remained on paper. In January 1943, all work was stopped, and on March 27, 1945, the skeleton of the Gneisenau was flooded in order to block the entrance fairway.

The Scharnhorst, after a lengthy repair (and it was blown up by two mines during the English Channel breakthrough), moved to Norway, where it then mainly settled in the fjords. On December 26, 1943, under the flag of Admiral Erich Bey, while trying to attack the allied convoy JW-55B, he was intercepted by British cruisers. The very first hit from the Norfolk cruiser disabled the German radar, which in the conditions of the polar night led to fatal consequences. Soon the battleship Duke of York joined the cruisers, and the Scharnhorst's position became hopeless. After stubborn resistance, the raider, mutilated by heavy shells, was finished off by torpedoes from British destroyers. The British picked up 36 people from the water - the remaining 1932 crew members of the fascist battleship died.

Bismarck and Tirpitz entered service with the Kriegsmarine already during the war. The first combat campaign for the lead ship was the last. The beginning of the operation, it would seem, was going well: the unexpected death of the Hood in the eighth minute of the battle on May 24, 1941 shocked the British admirals. However, the Bismarck also received a fatal hit from a 356-mm projectile that dived under the armor belt. The ship received about 2 thousand tons of water, two steam boilers failed, the speed decreased by 3 knots. What follows is well known. Three days later, the Nazi battleship sank. Of the 2092 people on board, 115 escaped. Among the dead was Admiral Lutyens, a former hero of the Scharnhorst and Gneisenau Atlantic raid.

"Tirpitz" after the death of the sistership, the Germans used extremely carefully. As a matter of fact, he also had only one combat operation on his account - an almost fruitless campaign to Svalbard in September 1942. The rest of the time, the super-linker hid in the Norwegian fjords and was methodically "beaten" by British aircraft. In addition, on September 11, 1943, he received a severe blow from under the water: the British midget submarines X-6 and X-7 blew up 4 two-ton mines under its bottom. The last Nazi battleship was no longer able to go out to sea under its own power:

It should be noted that in the maritime historical literature, Bismarck and Tirpitz are often referred to as almost the most powerful battleships in the world. There are several reasons for this. First, the Nazi propaganda said so. Secondly, the British played along with her in order to justify the not always successful actions of their fleet, which was many times superior in strength. Thirdly, Bismarck's rating was greatly increased, in general, by the accidental death of Hood. But in reality, against the background of their counterparts, the German super-battleships did not stand out for the better. In terms of armor, armament and anti-torpedo protection, they were inferior to the Richelieu, Littorio, and South Dakota, not to mention the Yamato. The weak points of the "Germans" were capricious energy, the "non-universality" of 150-mm artillery, and imperfect radar equipment.

As for Scharnhorst, it is usually criticized, which again is not entirely fair. Although it had the same disadvantages as the Bismarck (to which, at first, poor seaworthiness was added, which forced the bow of the hull to be rebuilt), it deserves a good rating due to its smaller size in accordance with the cost-effectiveness criterion. In addition, it should be borne in mind that it was the second in the world (after the Dunkirk) completed project of a high-speed battleship, which was ahead of its more powerful "class brothers" in time. And if the Scharnhorst could be rearmed with six 380-mm guns, then it could generally be considered a very successful battlecruiser, surpassing the British Repulse in almost all respects.

World War II was the golden age of battleships. The powers that claimed dominance at sea, in the pre-war years and the first few war years, laid on the stocks several dozen giant armored ships with powerful main-caliber guns. As the practice of the combat use of "steel monsters" has shown, battleships acted very effectively against formations of enemy warships, even being in the numerical minority, capable of terrifying convoys from cargo ships, but they can practically oppose nothing to aircraft that, with several hits of torpedoes and bombs, can let multi-ton giants to the bottom. During the Second World War, the Germans and Japanese preferred not to risk battleships, keeping them away from the main naval battles, throwing them into battle only at critical moments, using them very inefficiently. In turn, the Americans mainly used battleships to cover aircraft carrier groups and amphibious landings in the Pacific Ocean. Meet the ten biggest battleships of World War II.

10. Richelieu, France

Battleship "Richelieu" of the same class, has a weight of 47,500 tons and a length of 247 meters, eight guns of the main caliber of 380 mm caliber placed in two towers. The ships of this class were created by the French to counter the Italian fleet in the Mediterranean. The ship was launched in 1939 and was adopted by the French Navy a year later. The Richelieu did not actually take part in the Second World War, except for a collision with a British aircraft carrier group in 1941, during an American operation against Vichy forces in Africa. In the post-war period, the battleship was involved in the war in Indochina, covering naval convoys and supporting French troops with fire during landing operations. The battleship was withdrawn from the fleet and decommissioned in 1967.

9. Jean Bar, France

The French battleship "Jean Bar", class "Richelieu", was launched in 1940, but by the beginning of the Second World War, it was never put into the fleet. At the time of the German attack on France, the ship was 75% ready (only one main battery turret was installed), the battleship was able to get from Europe to the Moroccan port of Casablanca under its own power. Despite the absence of part of the weapons, the Jean Bar managed to take part in the hostilities on the side of the Axis countries, repelling the attacks of the US-British forces during the Allied landing in Morocco. After several hits by the main caliber guns of American battleships and aerial bombs, the ship sank on November 10, 1942. In 1944, "Jean Bar" was raised and sent to the shipyards for repairs and rearmament. The ship became part of the French Navy only in 1949, never took part in any military operation. In 1961, the battleship was withdrawn from the fleet and sent for scrap.

8. Tirpitz, Germany

The German battleship Tirpitz of the Bismarck class, launched in 1939 and put into service in 1940, had a displacement of 40,153 tons and a length of 251 meters. Eight main guns with a caliber of 380 millimeters were placed in four towers. Vessels of this class were intended for raider operations against the enemy merchant fleet. During the Second World War, after the loss of the battleship Bismarck, the German command preferred not to use heavy ships in the maritime theater of operations, in order to avoid their loss. Tirpitz spent most of the war in the fortified Norwegian fjords, taking part in only three operations to intercept convoys and support landings on the islands. The battleship sank on November 14, 1944 during a raid by British bombers, after being hit by three aerial bombs.

7. Bismarck, Germany

The battleship Bismarck, commissioned in 1940, is the only ship on this list to take part in a truly epic naval battle. For three days, the Bismarck, in the North Sea and the Atlantic, stood alone against almost the entire British fleet. The battleship was able to sink the pride of the British fleet, the cruiser Hood, in battle, and seriously damaged several ships. After numerous hits by shells and torpedoes, the battleship went under water on May 27, 1941.

6. Wisconsin, USA

The American battleship "Wisconsin", class "Iowa", with a displacement of 55,710 tons, has a length of 270 meters, on board, which has three turrets with nine 406 mm main battery guns. The ship was launched in 1943 and entered service in 1944. In 1991, the ship was withdrawn from the fleet, but remained in the US Navy reserve until 2006, becoming the last battleship in the US Navy reserve. During World War II, the ship was used to escort aircraft carrier groups, support amphibious operations, and bombard the coastal fortifications of the Japanese army. In the post-war period, he participated in the Persian Gulf War.

5. New Jersey, USA

The Iowa-class battleship New Jersey was launched in 1942 and entered service in 1943. The ship went through several major upgrades, and was eventually decommissioned from the fleet in 1991. During the Second World War, it was used to escort aircraft carrier groups, but did not really participate in any serious naval battle. For the next 46 years, she participated in the Korean, Vietnamese and Libyan wars as a support ship.

4. Missouri, USA

The Iowa-class battleship Missouri was launched in 1944 and commissioned into the Pacific Fleet the same year. The ship was withdrawn from the fleet in 1992, and turned into a floating museum ship, which is now available for anyone to visit. During the Second World War, the battleship was used to escort aircraft carrier groups and support amphibious landings, and did not participate in any serious naval battle. It was on board the Missouri that the Japanese surrender pact was signed, which put an end to World War II. In the post-war period, the battleship participated in only one major military operation, namely the Gulf War, during which the Missouri provided fire support to the multinational forces from the sea.

3. Iowa, USA

The Iowa battleship, class of the same name, was launched in 1942 and was put into service a year later, fought on all oceanic fronts of World War II. At first, he patrolled the northern latitudes of the US Atlantic coast, after which he was transferred to the Pacific Ocean, where he covered aircraft carrier groups, supported landing forces, attacked enemy coastal fortifications and participated in several naval operations to intercept strike groups of the Japanese fleet. During the Korean War, she provided artillery fire support for ground forces from the sea. In 1990, the Iowa was decommissioned and turned into a museum ship.

2. Yamato, Japan

The pride of the Japanese Imperial Navy, the Yamato battleship had a length of 247 meters, weighed 47,500 tons, had three turrets with 9 460 mm main caliber guns on board. The ship was launched in 1939, but was ready to go to sea on a military campaign only in 1942. For the entire duration of the war, the battleship took part in only three real battles, of which only in one was it able to fire on enemy ships from main battery guns. Yamato was sunk on 7 April 1945 by enemy aircraft after being hit by 13 torpedoes and 13 bombs. Today, the Yamato-class ships are considered the largest battleships in the world.

1. Musashi, Japan

"Musashi" is the younger brother of the battleship "Yamato", has similar technical characteristics and armament. The ship was launched in 1940, was put into service in 1942, but was ready to go on a military campaign only in 1943. The battleship participated in only one serious naval battle, trying to prevent the Allies from landing troops in the Philippines. On October 24, 1944, after a 16-hour battle, Musashi sank in the Sibuyan Sea, after being hit by several torpedoes and aerial bombs. Musashi, along with her brother Yamato, is considered the largest battleship in the world.

The fate of these steel monsters, conceived as a thunderstorm of the oceans and seas, has developed in different ways. The military leadership of all the warring countries had high hopes for them. However, it soon became clear that size, in general, does not matter. Battleships gradually gave way to aircraft carriers.

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1. By the beginning of World War II, the USSR was armed with three Sevastopol-class battleships: the Paris Commune, the October Revolution and the Marat. They were laid down in June 1909 at the shipyards of St. Petersburg and launched in June-September 1911 and then, of course, they were called differently: “Sevastopol”, “Gangut” and “Petropavlovsk”. "Marat" and "October Revolution" were used in the system of coastal defense of Leningrad, and the flagship of the Black Sea Fleet "Paris Commune" defended Sevastopol in 1942. All three battleships were withdrawn from service only after the war.

2. The history of German battleships was sad. The Bismarck was sunk by a British squadron on May 27, 1941 in the very first combat campaign. The Tirpitz, sent to Norwegian waters in 1942 to hunt for Arctic convoys, was destroyed by five-ton bombs in the parking lot as a result of a British air raid in November 1944. On the night of February 27, 1942, in the North Sea, a 500-kilogram British aerial bomb pierced the upper deck of the battleship Gneisenau; it was never restored. The Scharnhorst sent the battleship Duke of York and the cruiser Jamaica to the bottom north of Norway on December 26, 1943.

3. The French battleship "Richelieu" in 1943-1944, together with the forces of the British Navy, participated in the liberation of Norway. The obsolete battleship was scrapped in 1968.

4. Almost two dozen battleships of the King George V, Queen Elizabeth, Nelson and Rivenge types of the Royal Navy of Great Britain fought against enemies from the English Channel to the Mediterranean and the coast of Africa.

5. Four American battleships were sunk and four more seriously damaged in the attack on the naval base at Pearl Harbor. The remaining American battleships fought as part of the US Pacific Fleet. On board the battleship Missouri, the Japanese surrender was signed on September 2, 1945. Missouri turned out to be a long-liver: he fired his last salvo in 1991 in the Persian Gulf. The ship appears in the old film "Under Siege" with Steven Seagal. True, the shooting was carried out on the decommissioned battleship Alabama.

6. Japanese battleships "Yamato" and "Musashi" were the largest ships of this type in the world. Imperial Japan really hoped that thanks to battleships it would be possible to seize dominance at sea. However, the very first combat campaign of the Yamato in the Philippine Sea turned out to be extremely unsuccessful: on June 19, 1944, he fired at his own planes. On October 24, 1944, Musashi was killed in the Sibuyan Sea by bombs and torpedoes from American aircraft. On April 7, 1945, as a result of a powerful attack by carrier-based aircraft, he went to the bottom of the Yamato, taking with him more than three thousand crew members.

7. Italy has never been a sea power. Three battleships "Littorio", "Vittorio Veneto" and "Roma" did not distinguish themselves by major successes. "Vittorio Veneto" and "Littorio" went to the Allies after the war and were dismantled for scrap, and "Roma" on September 9, 1943, the day after the surrender of Italy, was sunk by German aircraft.

There is a myth according to which the fleet that helped the United States win the war, America began to build on the morning of December 8, 1941, when it recovered a little from the Japanese defeat of Pearl Harbor that had happened on the eve. Myth. In fact, the American militarists began building all ten high-speed battleships that brought victory to Washington on their decks at least ten months before the samurai attack on Pearl Harbor. The North Carolina-class battleships were laid down at two-week intervals in June 1940 and entered service in April and May 1941. In fact, three of the four South Dakota-class battleships were launched before December 7, 1941. Yes, the fleet that crushed Japan had not yet been built, but even more so it could not have been built by rolling up its sleeves only on the morning of December 8th. Thus. The strike of Japanese aviation on the main base of the US Pacific Fleet played absolutely no role in the fate of the high-speed battleships of the US Navy.

Fast battleships in World War II and after


The Washington Treaty of 1922 stopped the production of heavy ships for the US Navy. Due to the intrigues of politicians, the construction of seven battleships and six battlecruisers had to be stopped or not started at all. It got to the point that on February 8, 1922, it was decided to dismantle the battleship Washington (BB47), which was in 75% of the readiness stage - a blatant act of vandalism! The Washington Treaty limited the number of battleships in the US and British navies to 18 and 20 respectively. Japan was allowed to have ten such ships, France and Italy - a few. In the ten years that have passed since the conclusion of the treaty, only two battleships have entered service in the world - the British Nelson and Rodney. The construction of these ships began in 1922 and was specifically stipulated in the Washington Treaty, because the frankly weak Grand Fleet at that time had only extremely outdated battleships. The world “vacation” in battleship building ended in 1932 with the laying of the Dunkirk ship with a displacement of 26,500 tons in France.

In the US Navy, the conclusion of the Washington Treaty was treated with mixed feelings. The admirals mourned over the missing battleships and cruisers, but those of them. who were considered realists, understood the complexity of the political and economic situation in the country and the world that developed after the end of the First World War. Although for the United States, this situation was rather favorable. The United States entered the First World War as the third largest naval power in the world. And after the war, the US Navy became one of the two great fleets of the world, and most experts agreed that in a short time the US Navy would become the No. 1 fleet in the world. The grandeur of the Grand Fleet, unattainable before, was fading into history. The war clearly demonstrated the strategic role of the fleet. Only the fleet was able to ensure the passage of convoys across the Atlantic. After the war, the US Navy was de facto the only serious enemy - the Japanese navy. Everything was fun and rosy for the American admirals, but then the Great Depression suddenly happened.





The global economic crisis contributed to the coming to power in a number of countries that did not firmly defend the ideals of freedom and democracy, authoritarian regimes. In Italy, Duce Mussolini came to power, in Germany - the Fuhrer Hitler. Well, in the USA - Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Roosevelt was at one time involved in the affairs of the US Navy, served as Assistant Secretary of the Navy. In 1932, the ex-assistant became the President of the United States from the Democratic Party. Roosevelt considered the adoption and implementation of an ambitious shipbuilding program one of the ways to bring the country out of the Great Depression. However, the first "naval" budget, adopted in the time of Roosevelt, provided for the construction of aircraft carriers, cruisers and destroyers, it did not say anything about the construction of battleships. Japan's sudden announcement of its refusal to comply with the terms of the Washington Treaty, made in 1934, changed the situation by 1936 in the most dramatic way. For the first time in ten years, American designers rolled up their sleeves, washed their hands, took a drawing board, drawing paper and drawing pen, after which they began to draw the outline of a battleship of the future. The process has begun. It remains to deepen it.

The design of the battleship after 1922 was determined to a greater extent not by technology, but by politics. The British constantly insisted on limiting the size, displacement and armament of battleships due to the simple fact that they themselves had decrepit, small and poorly armed battleships. They all wanted the same. The British demanded that new battleships not be armed with artillery above 14 inches, although the Washington Treaty set the limit for the main caliber of battleships at 16 inches. Surprisingly. but the Americans were the first to benefit from the requirements of the British in terms of displacement and size. The size and displacement of all American ships were limited by the capacity of the Panama Canal - the requirement for the passage of ships through the canal from the Pacific Ocean to the Atlantic and back was mandatory when designing any American ship or ship. At the same time, American admirals began to swear in American style when they heard about the limitation of the main caliber of a battleship to 14 inches. The restrictions imposed by the Panama Canal, combined with restrictions on the main battery, promised the US Navy a battleship weaker than the British Nelson or the Japanese Nagato. Japan withdrew from the treaty and put 16-inch guns on the battleship. The British demanded 14 inches from everyone but themselves, also arming the Nelson with 16-inch main battery artillery. In October 1935, US representatives began negotiations with British representatives regarding the limitations of the Washington Treaty in the light of the perfidy of the Japanese military. The parties came to an agreed opinion on April 1, 1937 ... after which the permitted main caliber of battleships automatically increased to 16 inches.





On September 14, the North Carolina was hit by a torpedo fired by the Japanese submarine 1-19. The submarine then fired six torpedoes in one gulp, three of them hit the USS Wasp, one hit the destroyer O'Brien and one hit the battleship. 1 main caliber.The explosion destroyed the battleship's armor belt.The battleship listed five degrees, but retained the ability to maneuver at high speed.On October 11, 1942, the battleship was put in dry dock for repairs at Pearl Harbor.

The decision to increase the caliber gave rise to new problems. The design of battleships for the US Navy in 1937 was already in full swing, and now even more powerful guns were required to develop new larger and heavier turrets, then "fit" new turrets into the design of the already designed ship. A well-thought-out position was once taken by Admiral Standley, who ordered the design of universal three-gun turrets of the main caliber, designed for mounting both 14-inch guns and 16-inch guns. The size and caliber of battleship guns even became a subject of debate during the 1936 presidential election campaign. Republicans criticized Democrat Roosevelt for publicly speaking in favor of increasing the main caliber of battleship artillery, pointing out that such statements promote an increase in the arms race and are a tangible blow to detente international tension. Ordinary Americans did not heed the arguments of the Republicans, electing Roosevelt president for a second term and, thereby, confirming the obvious fact that America has always been a reserve of rabid imperialism. Japan, on the other hand, did not react at first to the statements of the American Democrats. believing that the unclear international situation will delay the design of new battleships for the US Navy. Only on March 27, 1937, did the Japanese government publicly speak out against the new terms of the Washington Treaty. It was then that a decision was made in Japan to build Yamato-class battleships with a displacement of 64,000 tons armed with 18-inch artillery.









In the interval between firing the main battery, the sailors walk along the poop of the battleship "Massachusetts". Two huge American flags are raised on the mast - a faint hope that the French will not shoot at their sincere American friends, with whom they fought shoulder to shoulder with the Boches during the First World War.





Even the refusal of the Japanese to comply with the 14-inch limit on the caliber of battleship artillery did not cause sharp statements in the USA and Great Britain. Roosevelt was the first politician to advocate arming his own ships with guns larger than 14 inches. The British began in 1937 to build a new series of battleships of the "King George V" type with 14-inch guns, although the former Secretary of the Navy, a certain Winston Churchill, sharply objected to this.

Roosevelt, however, reconsidered his decision regarding the main caliber of battleships - in favor of 14 inches. Specialists from the Naval Design Bureau felt offended and even outraged somewhere. Meanwhile - in vain: they should read the newspaper "Pravda" more often. After all, the venality of bourgeois politicians has long been known to the whole world, who weave any fairy tales in order to attract the votes of voters, and immediately after the elections they forget about both fairy tales and voters. In fact, the choice in favor of a larger caliber battleship artillery is not so unambiguous. as it may seem to amateurs. A 14-inch projectile weighs 680 kg. Projectile caliber 16 inches - 450 kg. Due to a more powerful powder charge, a 14-inch projectile flies further than a 16-inch one, due to its greater mass it has a greater destructive ability, and wear on an expensive gun barrel causes less wear. However, as representatives of the design bureau noted in their excited message dated May 17, 1937 to the President of the United States: the real difference lies in the "dead" zone of the guns. In this case, a dead zone is not considered to be a zone that cannot be penetrated due to an insufficiently small angle of descent of the guns, but a zone in which the projectile is not even theoretically capable of penetrating armor of a certain thickness. That is, the "dead" zone is not adjacent to the ship, but far away from it. Experts made calculations based on the average thickness of the armor of battleships - 12 inches of the main armor belt and 5-6 inches of armored deck. It turned out that at short firing distances, the armor penetration of 14 and 16 caliber shells is approximately the same. At long firing distances, at which a naval battle is actually conducted, a 14-inch projectile is significantly inferior to a 16-inch one, about ten times!







Iowa



Roosevelt, in response to the message, promised to think or come up with something. The President kept his word. In early June 1937, he suggested that Ambassador Gru once again turn to the Japanese side with a proposal to agree to limit the main caliber of battleships to 14 inches. While the court - yes, the case - Roosevelt puts forward a proposal, the Japanese discuss it, then prepare an answer - the design of battleships could not stand still. This time it didn't take long for an answer. The Japanese agreed to the proposal of the US President, with a slight amendment: subject to the limitation of the total number of battleships in the US Navy and the British Navy - ten American and ten British. Such an amendment was completely unacceptable for Roosevelt, so on July 10, 1937, the president gave the command to design battleships with 16-inch artillery.

The debate over the main caliber of battleships delayed the design of battleships for several months. But as soon as the decision was made, the design moved forward by leaps and bounds. The budget for the 1938 financial year allocated financial flows for the construction of two battleships "North Carolina" and "Washington" with the laying, respectively, on October 27, 1937 and June 14, 1938. According to the budget for the 1939 financial year, July 5, 1939 was laid "South Dakota", after 15 days - "Massachusetts". November 20, 1939 "Indiana" and February 1, 1940 "Alabama". The budget for fiscal year 1941 called for the bookmark "Missouri" on January 6, 1941 and "Wisconsin" on January 25, 1941.







The Two Oceans Navy Act passed in 1940 by Congress provided for the construction of seven more battleships - two more Iows (Illinois and Kentucky) and five Montana-class monsters armed with four towers with three 16-inch tools in each and on each. Due to their width, the Montanas would no longer be able to pass the Panama Canal. The last two Iowas were laid down, the first two Montans were ordered, but their construction was abandoned in 1943. The Kentucky was no longer considered a modern ship, which is why discussions were held for a very long time on what to do with the hull of the unfinished battleship. The corps occupied an empty slipway for five long years. In the end, the unfinished ship was launched in 1950. J. but they did not finish building it, and in 1958 they sold it for scrap.

There is a myth according to which the fleet that helped the United States win the war, America began to build on the morning of December 8, 1941, when it recovered a little from the Japanese defeat of Pearl Harbor that had happened on the eve. Myth. in fact, the American militarists began building all ten high-speed battleships that brought victory to Washington on their decks at least ten months before the samurai attack on Pearl Harbor. The North Carolina-class battleships were laid down at two-week intervals in June 1940 and entered service in April and May 1941. In fact, three of the four South Dakota-class battleships were launched before December 7, 1941. Yes, the fleet that crushed Japan had not yet been built, but even more so it could not have been built by rolling up its sleeves only on the morning of December 8th. Thus. The strike of Japanese aviation on the main base of the US Pacific Fleet played absolutely no role in the fate of the high-speed battleships of the US Navy.





The U-boats of the Kriegsmarine began to pose a mortal threat to England. It was the presence of such a threat that forced the command to shift priorities in the development plans of the US Navy. In 1941, the American fleet was involved on an ever-larger scale in escorting Atlantic convoys. First of all, not the Pacific, but the Atlantic fleet was strengthened. In the US Navy. as well as in the White House, they clearly underestimated the yellow danger. The calculation was based on that the power of the Pacific Fleet would be enough to defend the Philippines from a possible Japanese attack while Hitler was dealt with in Europe. Intended for operations off the East Coast of the United States, the North Carolinas and the aircraft carrier Hornet were sent to the Atlantic. But after Pearl Harbor, both battleships were transferred to the Pacific Ocean.







While not yet fully commissioned, the Washington became the first high-speed American battleship to take part in the hostilities. The battleship was transferred from the base in Casco Bay to the base of the British fleet of Scapa Flow, from where she, together with Her Majesty's ship Wasp, set off on a campaign in March 1942. the purpose of which was to support the landing of New Zealand troops on Madagascar. In early May, the Washington took part in the escort of the PQ-15 and QP-11 convoys to and from Murmansk. Together with the British battleship King George V, the American ship patrolled the waters between Norway and Iceland in case the Kriegsmarine ships appeared. The naval battle did not take place then, but the adventures happened. A British battleship collided with a British destroyer. "Washington" went on a military campaign from Scapa Flow again. On June 28, 1942, he, along with the battleship Duke of York, went out to guard the ill-fated convoy PQ-17. To defeat the convoy, the Germans initiated Operation Rosselsprung. Four large surface ships of the Kriegsmarine appeared in the Alta Fjord. including Tirpitz. Well, "Tirpitz", he alone was able to smash the entire combined Anglo-American fleet to smithereens. And here - as many as four large ships of the German fleet. The order of the British Admiralty to leave convoys to the warships to their fate looks quite understandable under such conditions. In fact, the German ships never left Norwegian waters, which did not save the convoy. Participation, or rather non-participation, in guarding the PQ-17 convoy was the last combat (type of combat) operation of the battleship Washington in the Atlantic. With a short stop on the West Coast, the battleship was transferred to the Pacific Ocean.



The beginning of the campaign in the Pacific turned out to be the hardest losses for the Americans in aircraft carriers. By mid-May 1942, the Lexington was sunk, the Saratoga was torpedoed, and the Yorktown was badly damaged. The fleet was in urgent need of replenishment. The USS Wasp hurried to the rescue, escorted by the battleship North Carolina. By the time the Panama Kapal ships passed, the peak of the crisis in the Pacific campaign had passed safely for the Americans, but the Yorktown was lost in the Battle of Midway and the Pacific Fleet needed a new aircraft carrier even more urgently. Wasp, North Carolina, and four cruisers made up the TF-18 formation. The formation arrived in San Diego on June 15, 1942, and then headed for the South Pacific. Along the way, "North Carolina" was isolated from TF-18 and became part of the TG-61 group. 2 guarding the USS Enterprise. Enterprise aircraft were involved in Operation Watchtower, the landing on Guadalcanal, which began on August 7, 1942. As part of TG-61. 2 "North Carolina" took part in a two-day battle off the Eastern Solomon Islands. August 23-24, 1942 At one point in the battle, the battleship's anti-aircraft guns became so dense that the North Carolina disappeared in clouds of smoke. A request was received from the Enterprise - what is wrong with the ship, do you need help? In eight minutes, the battleship's anti-aircraft gunners shot down 18 Japanese aircraft and damaged seven (or seventy - it was not possible to establish exactly). Thanks to the art of the North Carolina anti-aircraft gunners, the American fleet then had no losses.



Despite clear success in the first battle, North Carolina failed to protect the USS Wasp in the next. Perhaps that battle was the most successful example of the use of torpedo weapons in history. On September 14, 1942, the Japanese submarine 1-19 fired a salvo of six torpedoes at an aircraft carrier from a distance of approximately 1400 m. One covered a distance of ten miles, passing the keels of two destroyers along the way. after which it stuck into the left side of the nose of the "North Carolina" below the armored belt. As a result of the explosion of a torpedo, a hole of 32 square meters was formed in the board. foot through which the ship received 1000 tons of water. Two torpedoes passed in front of the nose of the aircraft carrier, one of them hit the destroyer O'Brien (also in the left bow of the hull, the torpedo passed 11 miles). The remaining three torpedoes hit the starboard side of the aircraft carrier. The consequences of the torpedo explosions became catastrophic for the aircraft carrier. The ship did not sank, but its repair did not make sense. "O" Brien lost her nose and sank three days later. "North Carolina" acquired a negative pitch angle of 5 degrees, the bow cellar of the battleship's ammunition was flooded. Attempts to tow the battleship were unsuccessful. Nevertheless, the battleship continued to guard the aircraft carrier Enterprise under its own vehicles. sometimes developing a stroke of 25 knots. There was no danger of flooding, but the damage to the battleship turned out to be great. The ship was sent to Pearl Harbor for repairs, and the Enterprise went there along with the battleship. The battleship was under repair until January 1943.



The American fleet in the South Pacific remained without high-speed battleships for only three weeks - Washington came from the Atlantic to Noumea already on October 9, 1942. A week later, South Dakota and Enterprise (reorganized) left Pearl Harbor for the South Pacific. connection TF-6I). "Washington" became part of the TF-64 compound. along with three cruisers and six destroyers. This connection was intended to escort convoys between Noumea and Gaudalcanal. the formation was commanded by Rear Admiral Wills A. "Ching" Lee. formerly served as Chief of Staff to the Commander of the Pacific Fleet, Vice Admiral William F. "Bill" Halsey. Lee would spend most of the war as commander of TF-64. The admiral was at the right time and in the right place. Subsequent events culminated in the confrontation between American and Japanese battleships in the Pacific. The month of the war of battleships has come.

The month began with an attempt by Japanese aircraft carriers to make another raid in the area of ​​the Solomon Islands. Again, the aircraft carriers of the United States fleet rushed to intercept them, and again, high-speed battleships provided an escort for carrier-based aircraft carriers. "South Dakota" was still guarding the "Enterprise", retaining the aircraft carrier in a tough case at Santa Cruz, which took place on October 26, 1942. Then the battleship's anti-aircraft gunners shot down at least 26 Japanese airplanes. The next day, the battleship Washington was nearly hit by a torpedo fired by the submarine I-15. On the same day, the South Dakota became the target of a Japanese submarine attack. Dodging a torpedo, the South Dakota collided with the destroyer Mahan. Fortunately, none of the ships received serious damage.

Admiral Lee's battleships went into action again two weeks later. On November 11, 1942, the TF-64 formation was reorganized, it included the battleships "South Dakota" and "Washington", the destroyers "Winham" and "Welk". The connection was intended to give additional protection to the TF-16 grouping, the core of the bark was the aircraft carrier Enterprise. Two days later, after the dramatic first naval battle at Guadalcanal, TF-64 was reinforced by the destroyers Preston and Gwin. The unit was ordered to go to Guadalcanal in case of a possible second coming of the Japanese Admiral Kondo. On November 14, Lee approached the strait, and from the other end Kondo sailed here with his battleship Kirishima, heavy cruisers Rakao and Atagi, light cruisers Nagara and Sendai, and eight destroyers.









The forces of the opponents, who inexorably walked towards each other, were theoretically approximately equal. The Japanese had more ships, and Lee had more large-caliber artillery. In addition, Admiral Lee had the opportunity to use radar, which the Japanese were completely deprived of. But the Japanese had excellent training for naval battles at night and were far superior to the Americans in the art of using torpedo weapons. Kondo led his forces in four separate columns. Lee lined up his squadron with the destroyers at the head, followed by the Washington and South Dakota.





The Japanese discovered the American fleet at 10:15 p.m. on November 14, 1942, identifying the enemy forces as four destroyers and two heavy cruisers. At 2245 Lee changed course, heading south. At 23.00, the radar of the battleship "Washington" spotted Japanese ships. Minutes later, eye contact was made. At 23:17, the battleship Washington opened fire with its main caliber on the Japanese destroyers. The destroyers withdrew undamaged. The return fire of the Japanese heavy ships and the main group of destroyers led to horrific consequences for the American destroyers. The two lines of enemy ships diverged on opposite courses. The Japanese put all their artillery and all their torpedo tubes into action. The destroyer "Priston" came under concentrated fire from the cruiser "Nagara" and destroyers. The destroyer exploded at 23.27 and disappeared from the surface nine minutes later. The destroyer Welk was next in sight of the Nagara gunners. It was hit by a torpedo at 23:32. The ship sank 11 minutes later.





However, the fight was not at all like a one-sided game. As soon as the American battleships entered the business, events quickly took a completely different turn. The lead Japanese destroyer "Ayanami" received three gifts of the main caliber from the "South Dakota" at 23.32, after which it was engulfed in flames.

Eight minutes later, the fire reached the magazines of the ammunition, and after seven minutes, "Annami" went down in history. The fight, however, was far from over. Another American destroyer in the line - "Gwin" - received a portion of 1-inch shells from the "Nagara" at 23.37, after which it was forced to withdraw from the battle. Benham, the last American destroyer, received a torpedo in her bow a minute later. Its speed immediately dropped to 5 knots, but the ship still remained afloat, although it was no longer possible to continue the battle.



Suddenly, silence hung over the gray waves of the greatest of the oceans of the planet Earth. Relative silence: the noise of ship engines after the rumble of artillery reminded the sailors of the chirping of grasshoppers among the fields of Arizona and the fields of Fujiyama. The guns fell silent, for at 23.43 the column of the Japanese samurai of Nagara went beyond the firing range of the American ships. The two battleships of the US Navy still held out to the west. The lull was just an episode on the way to a climax. The main forces of the Japanese appeared on the scene - the Kondo column consisting of the battleship Kirishima, two heavy cruisers and two destroyers. And here is Lee. at the most critical moment, an unfortunate incident occurred: the radar of the main battery fire control system on the battleship South Dakota failed. Another problem faced by the American naval commander. there was a violation of battle formation by battleships. The ships walked in the wake of each other for a very short time. To avoid a collision with sinking and damaged destroyers, the South Dakota took to the north, as a result of which it was a good few hundred meters closer to the Japanese than the Washington. Unexpectedly, at 2350, South Dakota was illuminated by the searchlight of the Japanese battleship Kirishima. At the same time, all five Japanese ships fired on the battleship of the US Navy. In a short time, 27 shells with a caliber of 5 inches or more hit South Dakota. The South Dakota was unable to return fire to fire. The third tower of the main caliber was temporarily out of order, a fire spread through the superstructure, among the team 58 people were killed and 60 injured. The South Dakota turned south.

However, the South Dakota situation also had some positive side. Behind the flaming Dakota, the Japanese did not see the Washington, whose radar worked properly in normal mode. Around midnight, the Washington opened fire with its main caliber from a distance of 8000 m. The battleship in the shortest possible time laid nine 16-inch shells and more than 40 5-inch shells in the Kirishima. On the Kirishima, the poorly armored steering gear failed, after which the Japanese battleship began to describe a wide circulation. Kondo had only one thing left - to give the order to withdraw, so as not to give up. "Washington" tried to pursue the enemy for several miles, but then the Yankees decided: "Game over." "Kirishima", unable to stay on course, was flooded by the Japanese themselves at 3.20 November 15, 1942.











For the first and last time in the entire war, American high-speed battleships met face to face in open battle with their Japanese opponent, the battle was won by ships of the United States fleet. It is worth noting that the conditions of the battle are not quite equal. "Kirishima" at a venerable age, which was approaching 30 years old, was two generations older than the American battleships, that is, they were fit for their grandfathers. The Kirishima began its life as a battlecruiser designed by the British during the First World War, and then, with successive steps, it was turned into a high-speed battleship. Booking "Kirishima" was half inferior to booking "Washington" or "South Dakota". Was it armor? Kirishima's sister ship, the Hiei battleship, two days earlier, also in a night battle, the Americans took out of the battle with one hit of an 8-inch projectile on the steering machine. The Second Naval Battle of Guadalcanal ended in victory for the American fleet, but the price, as in many other cases that took place in the waters of the Solomon Islands, was high. Three American destroyers sank (Benham sank by the end of the day), another destroyer and the battleship South Dakota were heavily damaged. It took seven months to repair the battleship.

Meanwhile, other South Dakota-class ships had completed combat training and were ready to take part in the fighting. "Massachusetts" received a baptism of fire on November 8, 1942 off the coast of North Africa, where the battleship escorted transports with landing forces that took part in Operation Torch. The American battleship also took part in the "neutralization" of the French battleship Jean Bar. The Massachusetts hit the Jean Bart with five 16-inch shells and disabled the French ship's only active main battery turret. By the evening of November 8, the invasion fleet began to be threatened by several destroyers of the Vichy government fleet. One 16-inch Massachusetts shell and several 8-inch shells fired through the Tuscaloosa's gun barrels sank the destroyer Fogue. In this battle, Massachusetts was nearly hit by a torpedo fired by a French submarine. The torpedo missed the battleship's hull only 15 feet away. By nightfall, a 16-inch shell from the American battleship's guns pierced the bow of the French destroyer Milan, after which the latter withdrew from the battle. At about 11 p.m., Massachusetts was hit by a 5-inch cannon shell from the French destroyer Boulogne, which soon disappeared in a flurry of concentrated artillery fire from the battleship Massachusetts and the light cruiser Brooklyn. The battle ended with a direct hit by a 16-inch shell from the battleship Massachusetts on the French flagship, the light cruiser Primakyu. The French fought bravely, but their light forces stood no chance against the latest fast battleship in the US Navy. The commander of the French squadron gave the order to return to port.





"Indiana" at the end of November 1942 was in the waters of. Tonga, where she, along with the Washington and the repaired North Carolina, provided cover for the aircraft carriers Enterprise and Saratoga during operations off Guadalcanal. Here, there was not much work for the battleships, since both the Japanese and the Americans had not yet recovered from the fierce naval battles off the Solomon Islands. For the first almost six months of 1943, there were almost no major naval battles in the South Pacific. Most of this period, teams of fast American battleships spent on Noumea. where they periodically hunted the wild animals of New Caledonia, took them for food, washing down the meat with excellent Australian champagne. Time worked for America. When the US Navy resumed offensive operations in the Pacific in mid-1943, the command already had a much stronger fleet at its disposal.





The activity of the American fleet in 1943 resumed in June both in the Pacific and in the Atlantic. The refurbished South Dakota joined the Alabama at Scapa Flow. enabling the British to send the battleships of the Home Fleet Hove and King George V to Sicily to participate in Operation Husky. Together with the remaining British battleships of the Anson Home Fleet. Duke of York and Malaya, cruisers Augusta and Tuscaloosa, two American battleships took part in a demonstration off the coast of Norway in order to divert the attention of the Kriegsmarine command from the Mediterranean Sea. Unfortunately for the Allies, German intelligence did not detect the movements of the Anglo-American fleet. Shortly after the demonstration, the South Dakota left the hospitable waters of Great Britain, leaving for the Pacific Ocean, where the battleships Washington, North Carolina and Indiana formed the TF3 formation. 3, designed to support Operation Cartwil, the June 30 invasion of New Georgia. It was the first of the typical amphibious operations in which high-speed battleships of the US Navy were involved - three battleships escorted aircraft carriers (in this case, the American "Saratoga" and the British "Victorius"), while the "old" battleships provided fire support for the invasion forces . Later, "Indiana" will be involved in the escort of the first raid of aircraft carriers, during which, on August 31, carrier-based aircraft hit Makin. The aircraft carriers Yorktown, Essex and Independence took part in that raid.





Indiana returned to the Gilbert Islands on November 19, 1943 as part of TF50 formation. 2 with the battleship North Carolina. The battleships came in the escort of the aircraft carriers Enterprise, Belly Wood and Monterey, involved in Operation Galvanic, the invasion of Makin. Washington, South Dakota, and Massachusetts made up the TF50 compound. 1, which also included the aircraft carriers Yorktown, Lexington and Cowpens, which covered the landing on Mile. At the end of August, carrier-based aircraft softened the Japanese defenses on the Gilbert Islands, so the samurai resisted the invasion for no more than a week. The Japanese were able to hold out only on Makin and, to a greater extent, on Tarawa. The same five high-speed battleships were brought together again by December 8 to cover the movement of aircraft carriers in the direction of Kwajalein. All five battleships became part of one formation, TF50. 8, commanded by Rear Admiral Lee. The battleships advanced to Nauru under the cover of aircraft from the aircraft carriers Bunker Hill and Monterey, where they fired 810 16-inch caliber shells and 3400 5-inch caliber shells at the small Japanese garrison of the island. By return fire, the Japanese sank one destroyer guarding the American squadron.

High-speed battleships again found themselves in the fire of battle January 29, 1944 - Operation Flintlock, the invasion of the Marshall Islands. Now there were already eight battleships, the Alabama (came from the Atlantic) and the first two Iowas (Iowa and New Jersey) were added. Again, the battleships were divided between aircraft carrier groups. "Washington", "Indiana" and "Massachusetts" were attached to the connection TG58. 1 ("Enterprise", "Yorktown" and "Belli Wood"), operating in the waters of the islands of Roy and Namur (Kwajalein). "North Carolina", "South Dakota" and "Alabama" escorted the aircraft carriers "Essex", "Intrepid" and "Cabot" of the TG58 formation. 2 in the waters of Maloelap. The newest "Iowa" and "New Jersey" worked in the interests of TG58. 3 ("Bunker Hill", "Monterey" and "Cowpens") in the Enewetok area. In the early hours of February 1, the battleships Indiana and Washington collided in the waters of Kwajalein. The ships were not seriously damaged, but their combat activity was interrupted for several months.

The six surviving high-speed battleships took part in the raid under the code name "Halestone", undertaken against Truk Island on February 17-18, 1944. "Iowa" and "New Jersey" were attached to the formation TG50. 9. Then Admiral Spruance chose the battleship New Jersey as his flagship. The other four battleships, along with the escort aircraft carriers, made up the TG58 formation. 3, it played an auxiliary role in the operation. A month later, on March 18, the Iowa and New Jersey, again under Rear Admiral Lee, escorted the USS Lexington and seven destroyers in TG50. 10 during the bombardment of Milli Atoll, south of Majuro. During the operation, Iowa received several direct hits from 6-inch shells fired by Japanese coastal batteries, which, however, did not cause serious damage to the ship. The battleship remained in the battle line. A similar grouping was formed on May 1, it was again commanded by our good friend Lee (already Vice Admiral!). for a raid on Ponape Island from the Caroline Archipelago. Seven fast battleships (Indiana was suspended) and ten destroyers, supported by aircraft from aircraft carriers of the TF58 formation. 1 fired back at the island without interference.



For the next raiding operation, seven battleships were again brought together, although now the place of Massachusetts was taken by Washington (with a new bow); "Massachusetts" went for repairs. The battleships formed the core of the TG58 group. 7. intended for shelling the enemy as part of Operation Forager - the invasion of the Mariana Islands. Spruance expected opposition from the Japanese fleet. The expectations of the American naval commander were justified - on June 18, 1944, an epic naval battle unfolded in the Philippine Sea, well known as the Great Marianas Rout. Lee's battleships then formed the core of the 5th Fleet. Throughout the day, the American battleships were subjected to sporadic raids by Japanese aircraft, the main target of which was actually the US Navy aircraft carriers. "South Dakota" then received one direct hit by an air bomb, another bomb exploded under the side of the "Indiana".

Spruance's strategies in that three-day battle, according to modern critical experts, lacked aggressiveness at times. Most of the questions are caused by the decision of the admiral to turn away from Ozawa's fleet on the evening of the 18th, leaving the initiative in the hands of the Japanese naval commander. Spruance's decision was then very much influenced by Lee, who did not want to risk his as yet undamaged battleships in a night battle with the Japanese, known for their art of warfare at night. Lee reasonably doubted the possibility of his ships, which had never yet operated in a single battle formation, to inflict more damage on the enemy than the enemy would inflict on them.


















The damage inflicted on the South Dakota did not become a reason for sending the battleship for repairs to Pearl Harbor. At the same time, the North Carolina went to the West Coast of the States for repairs, which this ship needed more than the South Dakota. Thus, six high-speed battleships remained available, capable of taking part in Admiral Halsey's TF38 raid in the Philippine Sea in September - October 1944.

And again, the grouping of fast battleships was dismembered. "Iowa" and "New Jersey" (Admiral Halsey's flagship) gave the TG38 compound. 3. Four other battleships ("Washington", "Indiana", "Massachusetts" and "Alabama") entered TG38. 3. "Washington" - the flagship of Admiral Lee. These forces supported raids on Palatz (September 6–8), Mindanao (September 10), Visayas (September 12–14) and Luzon (September 21–22). During the short pause that followed the strike on Luzon. "South Dakota" was replaced by "Indiana"; "South Dakota" went for repairs. The strikes resumed with a raid against Okinawa (October 10), then again against Luzon (October 11), then Formosa (October 12-14), Luzon again (October 15). In anticipation of the invasion of Leyte Gulf, which began on October 17, Washington and Alabama were transferred from TG38. 3 in TG38. 4.

The Imperial Japanese Navy responded to the American invasion of the Philippines by bringing together all of its main forces for the last time. The last time, Lee's battleships had a great chance, with a high probability of a successful outcome, to meet face-to-face with their opponents without intermediaries in the form of aircraft carriers. This chance did not work out for Lee.

The high-speed battleships were distributed in pairs among Admiral Halsey's aircraft carrier formation, which was in the San Bernardino Strait for most of the day on October 24. By the main forces of the Japanese fleet, the squadron of Admiral Kuri. carrier-based aircraft of the American fleet worked. The planes sank the super-linker Musashi, and the Kurita formation was partly sunk and partly dispersed. By the evening of October 24, the aircraft carriers of the Northern Fleet of Admiral Ozawa, who acted independently, were seen by the Americans north of Luzon. At 15:12 Halsey ordered Lee's fast battleships to head north, separating them into a separate formation, TF34.

Lee protested against the exclusion of his battleships from the general fleet and the immediate dispatch of ships from the San Bernardino Strait. He protested twice, both of which had no effect on Halsey. There were not even radar patrol destroyers left in the San Bernardino Strait.









In a slow and dangerous night maneuver, Lee regrouped his forces, concentrating his battleships in a screen in front of the carriers. Maneuvering took most of the night. At dawn on October 25, TF34 was formed and, at the head of Halsey's fleet, began to pursue Ozawa's aircraft carriers at high speed, the American fleet filled the entire horizon. Three hours after Halsey's departure from the strait, the ships of Admiral Kurita's Central Squadron arrived here. Accurately at the time of Halsey's first attack on Ozawa's ships, Admiral Kincaid, who was in Leyte Gulf, 300 miles to the south, radioed for help. Admiral Nimitz at Pearl Harbor heard Kincaid's calls and did not understand how the Japanese had gone undetected right on the Taffy-3 compound and why the Japanese had not been intercepted by Lee's battleships. At 10:00 Nimitz radioed Halsey:

- FROM WITH IN PAC ACYION COM TFIRD FLEET INFO COMINCH CTF77 X WHERE IS RPT WHERE IS TF34 RR THE WORLD WONDERS

The last three words were added to the radiogram to confuse Japanese cryptographers, but Halsey took them personally. Halsey flew into a rage, believing that he was put up as an eccentric with the letter "M" in front of Admiral King (COMINCH) and Admiral Kincaid (CTF77). The admiral had a stroke, almost an hour passed before he gave the order to Admiral Lee at 10.55 at full speed to help. TF34 returned to the channel at 01:00 on October 26, having left Kurita three hours earlier. The irony of fate - at the time of receiving the order to return to San Bernardino, Lee's battleships were only 42 miles from Ozawa's aircraft carriers. There was a chance for a successful battle both at the starting point and at the end point of the route. As a result, it didn't work out. not here. Four battleships scurried across the sea-ocean in a completely indecent way.

The chance for the last general battle of the battle fleets turned out to be missed, to the great indignation of naval historians of all countries and generations - how many lost fees! It's one thing to criticize Halsey and Lee, it's another to describe the battle. The number of printed characters, directly proportional to the amount of the fee, in the latter case increases many times over. Well - so lay the cards of historical solitaire.











Having missed the chance to put an end to the decline of their historical career, American battleships escorted aircraft carriers for the rest of the war, occasionally being involved in shelling Japanese coastal positions. Of the significant events, it is worth noting that the New Jersey and the newest Wisconsin campaign to Cam Ranh Bay in January 1945 guarding a cruiser and destroyer in order to shoot at the surviving ships of Kurita, who allegedly found their refuge in Cam Ranh. The campaign was interrupted, as on January 12, aviation reconnaissance was convinced of the absence of Kurita in Cam Ranh.

With the exception of the campaign to Cam Ranh, high-speed battleships were engaged until the end of the war exclusively in escorting aircraft carriers. Battleships, together with aircraft carriers, passed from November 1944 to March 1945 Luzon, Okinawa, Indochina, mainland China, Formosa and the waters of the Japanese islands. On January 25, the Indiana bombarded Iwo Jima once, firing 203 16-inch shells. In April 1945, the main efforts of the American fleet were directed to Okinawa, then high-speed battleships fired several times at the positions of the Japanese on the island. When the carriers returned to Japanese waters in July, the fast battleships came with them. The South Dakota, Indiana, and Massachusetts bombarded Kamaishi Island on July 14. 29–30 July aircraft factory at Hamamatsu and again on 9 August 1945 Kamaishi Island.

Victory Day over Japan found the fast battleships of the US Navy in Tokyo Bay divided into four aircraft carrier groups. The fact that the South Dakota was the flagship of Admiral Nimitz, and the signing of the Japanese Surrender Act on board the Missouri completely obscured the very modest contribution that high-speed battleships actually made to the outcome of the Pacific campaign. In fact, except for the first battles, these ships acted only as high-speed armored floating batteries.

With the end of World War II, heated discussions unfolded in the United States about reducing appropriations for military needs, as well as about ways to further build the armed forces in general and the Navy in particular. Including discussed the fate of the ten newest battleships. These ships became the crown of development, but the crown of development, according to most experts, no longer had a future. Battleships couldn't fly. Aircraft have finally become the main caliber of the navy.

In 1946, the battleship Missouri took part in the very successful Operation Goodwill, a campaign in the Mediterranean Sea, undertaken to limit the activity of the communist movement in Greece and Turkey. The operation of large ships with numerous crews required significant costs, while the role of such ships remained not entirely clear. In this light, the decision to withdraw battleships from the combat strength of the fleet looks logical. September 11, 1946, exactly one year after the Victory Day over Japan, the Indiana was withdrawn from the Navy. "North Carolina" and three other "South Dakotas" followed the path laid by "Indiana" in 1947, "New Jersey" and "Wisconsin" were excluded from the lists of the fleet in 1948, "Iowa" - in 1949.







At the start of the Korean War in 1950, the only battleship remaining in the US Navy was the Missouri. He arrived off the coast of Korea in mid-September 1950 and immediately began using his large guns to very remarkable effect. The assessment of the combat work was so high that it was decided in 1951 to put three battleships of the Iowa type back into operation.

The second "round" of the Iowa combat service turned out to be longer than the first. The interested parties signed an armistice in 1952, but before the armistice, the main caliber of four American battleships actively fought against the threat of communism, shelling Korea from the left and right, in the sense - from the East and from the West. Two years after the armistice, four battleships remained in the combat strength of the Navy, until legislators again intervened in their future fate, who decided to cut defense spending. The first on February 26, 1955, the Missouri was excluded from the lists of the combat strength of the Navy. The following year, the "sisters" "Missouri" were sent to rest. The Mississippi was withdrawn from the Navy on March 8, 1958 - for the first time since 1895, not a single battleship remained in the US Navy.











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One after another, the battleships went to the cutting, although there were also supporters of the continuation of the active service of battleships. In the early 1950s, the possibility of increasing the full speed of six old "high-speed" battleships to 31 knots was studied, so that they could again be used to escort aircraft carriers. The price of such an improvement turned out to be prohibitively high, which is why the idea had to be abandoned. The North Carolina and Washington were scrapped on June 1, 1960 (the North Carolina, however, was preserved as a memorial ship). Two years later, it was time for the four South Dakotas. Two of them, "Massachusetts" and "Alabama", put on eternal parking. If the Vietnam War had not happened, then a similar fate would most likely have awaited Iowa. The Vietnam War made me think about battleships - a decision was made to modernize and commission the New Jersey. The battleship once again entered the combat structure of the US Navy on April 8, 1968. The participation of the battleship in the Vietnam events turned out to be very short-lived, despite the extremely positive effect of its main caliber. Anxious diplomats made a fuss about "... destabilizing influence ..." in fear of a possible super-response of the enemy. December 17, 1969 "New Jersey" was again pushed into the reserve.




The radio equipment of the Iowa differed from that of the New Jersey only by the installation of an FC antenna on a tower-like superstructure. Coloring - extremely unusual, camouflage: Dull Black/Ocean Gray. Please note: one side of the black stripes is clear, the other is "softened" with gray paint. This paint scheme was developed for use in the Atlantic on escort aircraft carriers. Presumably, "Iowa" styles are the only ship in the Pacific Ocean, painted according to this scheme.

A ray of light in the dark life of old battleships flashed again in the 70s. Many narrow-minded people from among the inhabitants of the Pentagon have repeatedly criticized the authorities for their desire to store expensive relics of the Second World War. However, at the end of the decade, prominent analysts, mainly outside the Pentagon, began to work out new scenarios for naval policy, in which there was a place for battleships. Since the mid-1960s, the US Navy has been undergoing a rather slow process of replacing surface ships built during the Second World War with new ships focused on use in the oceans under the dominance of aircraft carriers and submarines as the main means of waging war at sea. At that time, the majority of the navies of the world (but not the Navy) were armed with relatively small and relatively weak ships, which were intended to combat aircraft and submarines. In most cases, they did not have body armor at all, and their superstructures were generally made of aluminum. Artillery, on the other hand, was represented at best by a caliber of 5 inches. The ships were intended to protect aircraft carriers or to hunt for enemy submarines. The main work was assigned to carrier-based aviation.





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In the late 1970s, this approach to the construction of the Navy was criticized by prominent representatives of the expert community. The Vietnam War showed that the development of air defense systems is progressing as rapidly as the development of aviation. This conclusion was confirmed during the Middle East war of 1973. At that time, the Israeli Air Force fulfilled the tasks assigned to them only at the cost of very large losses in people and equipment. Even if the level of losses in tactical aircraft participating in the raid is 1% (a very optimistic estimate), their cost becomes fabulous - the price of one aircraft already then went off scale for a million dollars. In addition, again with a loss level of 1%, two aircraft carriers (the standard composition of the US Navy aircraft carrier group) are not capable of providing close air support to the ground forces in the required volume for more or less a long time. None of the above problems could have been solved by the guns of the ships of that time. 5-inch caliber shells did not have sufficient damaging effect to destroy coastal fortifications. The big question is that ships that are not protected by armor will be able to withstand the fire of ground artillery and tanks. Aluminum burns, and the superstructures of many American ships were made of aluminum to save weight. What a fire on an “aluminum” ship can lead to was well shown by the collision of the Belknap cruiser with the Kennedy aircraft carrier in 1975. The British lost four destroyer-frigate class ships in the Falklands campaign, and several more ships failed due to damage, which would hardly have been fatal for ships of a similar class during the Second World War.

















An alternative to the use of aviation, insufficient and sometimes inadequate, analysts saw in the high-speed battleships of the Second World War. At the end of the 1970s, the issue of introducing ships of the Iowa type into the combat structure of the US Navy again arose on the agenda. The logic is simple: aircraft from two aircraft carriers will deliver 420 tons of explosives to the coast in about 12 hours of operations. while a battleship armed with nine 6-inch guns is capable of bringing down a similar "payload" on coastal installations in just 18 minutes. On the other hand, the range of carrier-based aircraft is several hundred miles, while the firing range of a battleship's main battery is only 20 miles. However, the experience of the Vietnam War showed that in 80% carrier-based aircraft worked on targets that could be fired from the guns of a battleship. In terms of accuracy of ammunition delivery and response time to a threat, a battleship is preferable to an aircraft. If we take naval artillery, then the 5-inch / 45-caliber guns that were widespread at that time on the ships of the US Navy simply should not be compared with the 16-inch monsters of the Iowa-class battleships. Let's compare anyway. The five-inch projectile weighs about 70 kg, the firing range is about 13 nautical miles; the projectile is capable of penetrating a 90 cm thick concrete floor. The mass of a 15-inch caliber projectile is from 860 to 1220 kg, the firing range is more than 20 nautical miles, the projectile pierces a concrete floor up to 9 m thick. New technologies have made it possible to increase the firing range of 16-inch guns to 50 nautical miles. With 12 inches of armor and an all-steel construction, the Iowa-class battleships were virtually immune to the French Exocet-type anti-ship missiles or the 500-pound bombs that had inflicted such heavy losses on the British fleet at the Falklands.





Despite the weight of the arguments of supporters of the next advent of battleships, cuts in the military budget during the presidency of Jimmy Carter made the return of the Iows to the US Navy impossible. Only the rise to power in 1980 of Ronald Reagan ignited hope in the hearts of battleship supporters. Reagan, immediately after his housewarming party, announced the start of a program to build a 600-ship navy. Appropriations allocated for fiscal year 1981 provided for the commissioning of the battleship New Jersey, appropriations for fiscal year 1982 for the commissioning of the Iowa. In the future, it was planned to modernize and commission the battleships Missouri and Wisconsin. Budget cuts and revisions of plans are typical of US politicians at the end of the 20th century, which is why the plans were not fully implemented, and the battleship commissioning program itself slowed down. The commissioning ceremony of the battleship "New Jersey" was furnished in Hollywood style, it took place on December 28, 1982 at a shipyard in Long Beach. Iowa underwent a deeper modernization, in full, and not in a truncated form like New Jersey. Iowa entered service on April 28, 1984. Congress blocked the allocation of funds for the modernization and commissioning of two other battleships. "New Jersey" proved to be excellent in the first year of service after commissioning in Nicaragua and Lebanon.

According to the plan, the New Jersey was to become the core of an autonomous formation of surface ships designed to strike at the coast and enemy ships.





















05/24/2016 at 20:10 · pavlofox · 22 250

The largest battleships in the world

For the first time ships of the line appeared in the 17th century. For a while, they lost the palm to slow-moving armadillos. But at the beginning of the 20th century, battleships became the main force of the fleet. The speed and range of artillery pieces became the main advantages in naval battles. Countries concerned about increasing the power of the navy, since the 1930s of the 20th century, began to actively build heavy-duty battleships designed to enhance superiority at sea. Not everyone could afford the construction of incredibly expensive ships. The largest battleships in the world - in this article we will talk about super-powerful giant ships.

10. Richelieu | Length 247.9 m

The French giant "" opens the rating of the largest battleships in the world with a length of 247.9 meters and a displacement of 47 thousand tons. The ship is named after the famous statesman of France, Cardinal Richelieu. A battleship was built to counter the Italian navy. The battleship Richelieu did not conduct active hostilities, except for participation in the Senegal operation in 1940. In 1968, the supership was scrapped. One of his guns was erected as a monument in the port of Brest.

9. Bismarck | Length 251 m


The legendary German ship "" takes 9th place among the largest battleships in the world. The length of the vessel is 251 meters, the displacement is 51 thousand tons. The Bismarck left the shipyard in 1939. The Fuhrer of Germany, Adolf Hitler, was present at its launch. One of the most famous ships of the Second World War was sunk in May 1941 after prolonged fighting by British ships and torpedo bombers in retaliation for the destruction of the English flagship, the cruiser Hood, by a German battleship.

8. Tirpitz | Ship 253.6 m


On the 8th place in the list of the largest battleships is the German "". The length of the vessel was 253.6 meters, displacement - 53 thousand tons. After the death of the "big brother", "Bismarck", the second of the most powerful German battleships practically failed to take part in naval battles. Launched in 1939, the Tirpitz was destroyed in 1944 by torpedo bombers.

7. Yamato | Length 263 m


"- one of the largest battleships in the world and the largest warship in history ever sunk in a sea battle.

"Yamato" (in translation, the name of the ship means the ancient name of the Land of the Rising Sun) was the pride of the Japanese navy, although due to the fact that the huge ship was protected, the attitude of ordinary sailors towards it was ambiguous.

The Yamato entered service in 1941. The length of the battleship was 263 meters, displacement - 72 thousand tons. Crew - 2500 people. Until October 1944, the largest ship in Japan practically did not participate in the battles. In Leyte Gulf, the Yamato opened fire on American ships for the first time. As it turned out later, none of the main calibers hit the target.

Japan's last pride hike

On April 6, 1945, the Yamato went on its last campaign. American troops landed on Okinawa, and the remnants of the Japanese fleet were tasked with destroying enemy forces and supply ships. The Yamato and the rest of the ships of the formation were attacked by 227 American deck ships for a two-hour period. Japan's largest battleship went out of action, having received about 23 hits from aerial bombs and torpedoes. As a result of the explosion of the bow compartment, the ship sank. Of the crew, 269 people survived, 3 thousand sailors died.

6. Musashi | Length 263 m


The largest battleships in the world include "" with a hull length of 263 meters and a displacement of 72 thousand tons. This is the second giant battleship built by Japan during World War II. The ship entered service in 1942. The fate of "Musashi" was tragic. The first campaign ended with a hole in the bow, resulting from a torpedo attack by an American submarine. In October 1944, Japan's two largest battleships finally came into serious combat. In the Sibuyan Sea, they were attacked by American aircraft. Coincidentally, the enemy's main attack was on the Musashi. The ship sank after being hit by about 30 torpedoes and bombs. Together with the ship, its captain and more than a thousand crew members died.

On March 4, 2015, 70 years after the sinking, the Musashi was discovered by American millionaire Paul Allen. It is located in the Sibuyan Sea at a depth of one and a half kilometers. "Musashi" takes 6th place in the list of the largest battleships in the world.


Incredibly, not a single super battleship was built by the Soviet Union. In 1938, the battleship "" was laid down. The length of the ship was to be 269 meters, and the displacement - 65 thousand tons. By the beginning of World War II, the battleship was built at 19%. It was not possible to complete the ship, which could become one of the largest battleships in the world.

4. Wisconsin | Length 270 m


The American battleship "" is ranked 4th in the ranking of the largest battleships in the world. It was 270 meters long and had a displacement of 55,000 tons. He entered service in 1944. During World War II, he accompanied aircraft carrier groups and supported amphibious operations. Served during the Gulf War. The Wisconsin is one of the last battleships in the US Navy Reserve. Was decommissioned in 2006. Now the ship is in the parking lot in the city of Norfolk.

3. Iowa | Length 270 m


With a length of 270 meters and a displacement of 58,000 tons, it ranks third in the ranking of the largest battleships in the world. The ship entered service in 1943. During the Second World War, "Iowa" actively participated in combat operations. In 2012, the battleship was withdrawn from the fleet. Now the ship is in the port of Los Angeles as a museum.

2. New Jersey | Length 270.53 m


The second place in the ranking of the largest battleships in the world is occupied by the American ship "", or "Black Dragon". Its length is 270.53 meters. Refers to the Iowa-class battleships. Left the shipyard in 1942. The New Jersey is a true veteran of naval battles and the only ship that took part in the Vietnam War. Here he played the role of supporting the army. After 21 years of service, it was withdrawn from the fleet in 1991 and received the status of a museum. Now the ship is parked in the city of Camden.

1. Missouri | Length 271 m


The American battleship "" tops the list of the largest battleships in the world. It is interesting not only for its impressive size (the length of the ship is 271 meters), but also for the fact that it is the last American battleship. In addition, the Missouri went down in history due to the fact that the surrender of Japan was signed on board in September 1945.

The supership was launched in 1944. Its main task was to escort Pacific aircraft carrier formations. Participated in the war in the Persian Gulf, where he opened fire for the last time. In 1992, he was withdrawn from the US Navy. Since 1998, the Missouri has had the status of a museum ship. The parking lot of the legendary ship is located in Pearl Harbor. Being one of the most famous warships in the world, it has been featured in documentaries and feature films more than once.

High hopes were placed on heavy-duty ships. Characteristically, they never justified themselves. Here is a good example of the largest battleships ever built by man - the Japanese battleships "Musashi" and "Yamato". Both of them were defeated by the attack of American bombers, without having time to fire at the enemy ships from their main calibers. However, if they met in battle, the advantage would still be on the side of the American fleet, equipped by that time with ten battleships against two Japanese giants.

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