English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

submarine aircraft carrier during second w.war which could carry A/c give me some info

2007-12-30 17:46:38 · 5 answers · asked by ysaremian 1 in Politics & Government Military

5 answers

The Japanese had one of the best sub fleets in the world at the time folks. Poor tactics doomed them. However the Sub you are looking for is known as the Sen Toku I-400-class. Three were built by Wars end. Each could carry three Aichi M6A Seiran aircraft, each carrying an 800 kilogram (1,764 lb) bomb 650 miles (1000 km) at 295 miles per hour (474 km/h). The existence of the Seiran was unknown to Allied intelligence.

One of Yamamoto’s plans was to use the sen toku (secret submarine attack), so that in the opening days of 1945, preparations were under way to attack the Panama Canal. The strategy was to cut the supply lines and access to the Pacific Ocean by U.S. ships. The plan was to sail westward through the Indian Ocean, around the southern tip of Africa, and attack the canal’s Gatun Locks from the east, a direction from which the Americans would not expect and were little prepared to defend. The flights would, of course, be one-way trips. None of the pilots expected to survive the attack, a tactic called tokko. Each pilot was presented with a tokko short sword, symbolic of the ultimate sacrifice.

On August 22, 1945, the crews of the submarines were ordered to destroy all their weapons. The torpedoes were fired without arming and the aircraft were launched without unfolding the wings and stabilizers. When I-401 surrendered to an American destroyer, the U.S. crew was astounded at its size. The commander of the submarine fleet, Captain Ariizumi, apparently decided on suicide rather than surrender to the Americans. He requested that his body be wrapped in the Japanese flag and buried at sea and shot himself. His body was never presented as proof of his death.

If Japan had just a few more months WW2 would have ended very differently. People forget, there were times the Allies could have lost, that war was not as one sided as games make it seem.


EDIT and to a credit to the Japanese, till the US and Russian Navy's Large Nuke subs came to be in the 1980's the I-400 class was the largest most heavily armed Submarine in the world.

2007-12-31 01:55:41 · answer #1 · answered by TK-421 2 · 1 0

a good number of German U-boats made it to Japan. some made it back to Germany, and others have been given sunk and their crews have been the two captured or drowned. you're able to be able to nicely be relating one particular sub that became donning factors of nuclear study nonetheless. That one sunk en-direction back to Germany, whether Germany had already surrendered.

2016-10-02 22:50:11 · answer #2 · answered by nason 4 · 0 0

I'd hardy call it an Aircraft Carrier. They did have a sub with a flat top designed to be used as a runway. Spy Planes would collect intel, radio in, sub would come up, they'd land, brief the captain and refuel and then fly off to do it again.

2007-12-30 20:25:26 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Japanese submarines were not the equal of German or American Subs during WWII, but they were effective. They were use initially in a support/protective roll for convoy and for recon for carrier ops. Later in the war, they adopted a more aggressive roll; they realized how effective the Germans and Americans utilized subs for a variety of missions and especially for sink and destroy missions.

They also had developed mini-subs prior to their attack on Pearl Harbor, and they use them at Pearl, but not very effectively.

2007-12-30 19:40:44 · answer #4 · answered by Bwana 3 · 0 0

Japan had not fully developed submarines during World War 2 that contributed to their loss.

2007-12-30 19:17:32 · answer #5 · answered by FRAGINAL, JTM 7 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers