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