In the autumn of 1943, a fleet submarine slipped through a mined strait into the interior of the Japanese empire and attacked the coastal shipping of the home islands in waters Tokyo had considered beyond the reach of American submarines. She did not come back. What she left behind was a record of seven war patrols that redefined what American submarine warfare could demand of a commander, a crew, and a doctrine - and a loss that the Sea of Japan held in silence for sixty-three years.USS Wahoo (SS-238): The Submarine That Changed the Pacific War is the definitive analytical account of the most consequential submarine command of the Pacific War. At its center is Dudley Morton, the commander who dismantled the cautious doctrine that had governed American submarine operations since Pearl Harbor and replaced it with a philosophy of aggressive, persistent, surface-approach combat that the Pacific Fleet's commerce-destruction campaign required but had not yet found a way to institutionalize. Morton's fourth and fifth war patrols - the penetration of Wewak Harbor, the domination of the Yellow Sea, the accumulated tonnage that placed the Wahoo at the top of the force's operational accounting - were not merely exceptional individual achievements. They were the demonstration that changed the reference point against which every Pacific submarine commander measured his own patrol.This is also the story of Richard O'Kane, the executive officer who absorbed Morton's method in the conning tower under fire and carried it to the Tang, where he became the Pacific War's most effective submarine commander by any measure the force applied. It is the story of the Gato-class hull and the Mark 14 torpedo whose defects nearly crippled the campaign before it could deliver its potential. It is the story of the Buyo Maru - the engagement whose moral weight the commemorative tradition has never fully absorbed and which this book examines with the analytical honesty the documented record requires. And it is the story of a wreck discovered in 2006 in two hundred meters of cold water, carrying the physical testimony of a final encounter that no survivor lived to describe.Drawing on war patrol reports, Japanese anti-submarine records, postwar American and Russian archival sources, and the serious scholarly literature on the Pacific submarine campaign, this book reconstructs the Wahoo's operational history across all seven patrols with a narrative density and analytical rigor that neither the popular literature nor the commemorative tradition has previously brought to bear on the full record of what the Wahoo achieved, what it cost, and why it matters.The aggressive doctrine won the Pacific War's commerce-destruction campaign. The Wahoo proved it was possible. This is the complete account of how.
AmazonPages: 130, Paperback, Independently published
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