hte145.txt 1.7 KB

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  1. The island of Truk was 800 square miles of sheltered lagoons and strong
  2. defensive capabilities. (1) In 1944 the island became vulnerable to allied attacks.(2) All
  3. of the warships were subsequently moved away from the island leaving all the forces on
  4. the island without warship protection. Truk was still considered one of Japan’s greatest
  5. naval bases. Vice Adm. Chuichi Hara was in command of the forces on the island.
  6. At this point in the war the allied forces were just moping up the Japanese as they
  7. proceeded to mainland Japan. There was no point in an amphibious assault on an island
  8. that had no military significance. Especially when you could just bomb the island form
  9. afar. The allied forces were not out to crush every Japanese stronghold. They were
  10. making the move towards Japan. It was not necessary to stop at every island and waste
  11. lives. Truk was to be neutralized.
  12. Carrier aircraft from task force 58 attacked Truk. And shot down everything that
  13. was thrown at them. And when they had nothing left to throw at them it was a duck
  14. shoot. They pounded the island. 31 ships were sunk(3). 270 aircraft destroyed(4). The
  15. forces on the island were reduced to nothing in a few short months. Of the forces that
  16. were left instead of fighting the allies they were fighting starvation and disease. 2,000
  17. died of starvation(5)
  18. <br><br><b>Bibliography</b><br><br>
  19. Work Cited
  20. Hagen, Jerome, War in the Pacific (Ohio: Book Masters, Inc. 1988) 270
  21. Hagen, Jerome, War in the Pacific (Ohio: Book Masters, Inc. 1988) 270
  22. Hagen, Jerome, War in the Pacific (Ohio: Book Masters, Inc. 1988) 270
  23. Hagen, Jerome, War in the Pacific (Ohio: Book Masters, Inc. 1988) 270
  24. Hagen, Jerome, War in the Pacific (Ohio: Book Masters, Inc. 1988) 271
  25. <br><br>
  26. Words: 229