Days before the 72nd anniversary of the Pearl Harbor
attack, the secret weapon of the Japanese admiral who planned the "Day of
Infamy" has been found and positively identified at 2,300 feet in waters
off Oahu.
The wreck on the Pacific bottom was the I-400, a
submarine aircraft carrier that was the brainchild of Isoroku Yamamoto, the
Japanese Marshal Admiral and commander-in chief of the Combined Fleet during
World War II.
Yamamoto was the architect of the carrier attack
that killed 2,300 and devastated the U.S. Pacific fleet at Pearl Harbor on Dec.
7, 1941.
That attack brought the United States into World War
II and triggered major innovations in military technology that included
Yamamoto's vision of a fleet of super subs that would hit the Panama Canal and
even New York to demoralize Americans and slow or even stop the U.S. advance
across the Pacific.
"Had they been able to affect those strikes, it
would have been a different war," said James Delgado, director of the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Maritime Heritage Program.
Yamamoto wanted a fleet of 18 super subs but the
I-400 and two sister ships were the only ones ever built. At 400 feet, the
Sen-Toku class 1-400 dwarfed all other submarines of the age and its range of
37,500 miles was not matched until nuclear subs were developed in the 1960s.
The 1-400 and its sister ship the I-401 each had
150-foot hangars built into the hull to accommodate three folding-wing M6A1
Seiran bombers for hitting the U.S. mainland with a 1,800-pound bomb. The
pontoon-equipped Seirans were to be launched by catapult from the sub's deck
and then be hauled back aboard by crane.
However, the subs were never used as intended and
were mainly consigned to hauling fuel to Japanese bases. U.S. prize crews were
stunned to come across the super subs when Japan surrendered to end the war.
"We never knew they existed," said Kerby,
operations director of the Hawaii Undersea Research Laboratory (HURL).
The 1-400 was one of five Japanese subs brought back
to Pearl Harbor at the end of World War II to be studied by the Navy, but they
were soon caught up in the just-beginning Cold War with the Soviet Union.
When the Soviets in 1946 demanded access to the subs
under terms of the treaty that ended the war, the U.S. Navy sank the subs off
the coast of Oahu and claimed to have no information on their precise location.
"The innovation of air strike capability from
long-range submarines represented a tactical change in submarine
doctrine," he said. "The large I-400, with its extended range and
ability to launch three M6A1 Seiran strike aircraft, was clearly an important
step in the evolution of submarine design."
Today’s Reflection:
Living on Earth is expensive, but it does include a
free trip around the sun.
Live Long and Prosper…
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