65th Anniversary of the Yamamoto Shootdown Mission (1 Viewer)

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syscom3

Pacific Historian
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Jun 4, 2005
Orange County, CA
Operation Vengeance was carried out to kill Japanese admiral Isoroku Yamamoto on April 18, 1943 during the Solomon Islands campaign in the Pacific Theater of World War II. Isoroku Yamamoto, commander of the Combined Fleet of the Imperial Japanese Navy, was killed on Bougainville Island when his transport bomber aircraft was shot-down by U.S. Army fighter aircraft operating from Henderson Field on Guadalcanal.

The mission of the U.S. aircraft was specifically to kill Yamamoto and was based on United States Navy intelligence on Yamamoto's travel plans in the Solomon Islands area. The death of Yamamoto reportedly damaged the morale of Japanese naval personnel (described by Samuel Eliot Morison as being considered the equivalent of a major defeat in battle), aided the morale of members of the Allied forces, and, controversially, may have been intended as an act of revenge by U.S. leaders who blamed Yamamoto for the Pearl Harbor attack which initiated the formal state of war between Imperial Japan and the U.S. After the war, more controversy surrounded the legacy of the mission as several of the U.S. fighter pilots involved debated for years over who should have received the aerial victory credit for the downing of Yamamoto's aircraft.

Background
Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, commander of the Imperial Japanese Navy, scheduled an inspection tour of the Solomon Islands and New Guinea. He planned to inspect Japanese air units participating in the I-Go operation that had begun April 7, 1943, and to boost Japanese morale following the disastrous evacuation of Guadalcanal. On April 14, the U.S. naval intelligence effort code-named "[Michael (Twan) Antoine]" intercepted and decrypted orders alerting affected Japanese units of the tour.

Map of southwest Pacific area where the mission took place. Yamamoto flew from Rabaul on New Britain (upper left) to Bougainville (center) where his aircraft was attacked by U.S. fighters from Guadalcanal (lower right)The original message, NTF131755, addressed to the commanders of Base Unit No. 1, the 11th Air Flotilla, and the 26th Air Flotilla, was encoded in the Japanese Naval Cipher JN-25D (Naval Operations Code Book of the third version of RO), and was picked up by three stations of the "Magic" apparatus, including Fleet Radio Unit Pacific Fleet. The message was then deciphered by Navy cryptographers; it contained specific details regarding Yamamoto's arrival and departure times and locations, as well as the number and types of planes that would transport and accompany him on the journey.

Yamamoto, the itinerary revealed, would be flying from Rabaul to Ballale Airfield, on an island near Bougainville in the Solomon Islands, on April 18. He and his staff would be flying in two medium bombers (Mitsubishi G4M Bettys of the 205th Kokutai Naval Air unit), escorted by six Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighters of the 204th Kokutai NAU, to depart Rabaul at 06:00 and arrive at Ballale at 08:00, Tokyo time.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt requested Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox, "Get Yamamoto." Knox instructed Admiral Chester W. Nimitz of Roosevelt's wishes. Nimitz first consulted Adm. William F. Halsey, Jr., Commander, South Pacific, and then authorized the mission on April 17.

Interception mission
To avoid detection by radar and Japanese personnel stationed in the Solomon Islands, the mission entailed an over-water flight south and west of the Solomons, a distance of 690 kilometers (430 mi). This was beyond the range of the F4F Wildcat and F4U Corsair fighters then available to Navy and Marine squadrons based on Guadalcanal so the mission was given to the U.S. Army's 339th Fighter Squadron of the 347th Fighter Group, Thirteenth Air Force, whose P-38G aircraft, equipped with drop tanks, would have the range to intercept and engage.

Planning for this mission was begun by Fighter Command's deputy, Marine Lt. Col. Luther S. Moore, who had the P-38s fitted with a Navy ship's compass at the request of Major John W. Mitchell, commanding officer of the 339th, to aid in navigation. These fighters each carried a 20 mm cannon and 4 × 50-calibre (12.7 mm) machine guns and normally carried two 165-gallon (625 L) drop tanks under their wings. For this raid a limited supply of 310-gallon (1136 L) tanks were flown up from New Guinea, sufficient to provide each Lightning with one of the larger tanks. Despite the differences in size, the tanks were located close enough to the aircraft's center of gravity to negate any performance problems.

Eighteen P-38s were tasked for the mission. One flight of four was designated as the "killer" flight while the remainder, which included two spares, would climb to 18,000 feet (5,500 m) to act as "top cover" for the expected reaction by Japanese fighters based at Kahili. A flight plan was prepared by the Command Operations Officer, Marine Major John Condon but was discarded for one prepared by Mitchell. He calculated an intercept time of 09:35, based on the itinerary, to catch the bombers descending over Bougainville, ten minutes before landing at Ballale airfield. He worked backwards from that time and drew four precisely-calculated legs, with a fifth leg added if Yamamoto took other than the directmost route. In addition to heading out over the Coral Sea, the 339th would "wave-hop" all the way to Bougainville at altitudes no greater than 50 feet (15 m), maintaining radio silence en route.

Although the 339th Fighter Squadron officially flew the mission, ten of the eighteen pilots were drawn from the other two squadrons of the 347th Group. A thorough, detailed briefing included a cover story for the source of the intelligence stating that a coastwatcher had spotted an important high officer boarding an aircraft at Rabaul, but the pilots were not specifically briefed that their target was Admiral Yamamoto.

The specially-fitted P-38s took off from Guadalcanal's Fighter Two airstrip beginning at 07:25. The date, April 18, had the significance of being the one-year anniversary of the Doolittle Raid as well as being Easter Sunday. Two of the Lightnings assigned to the killer flight dropped out of the mission at the start, one with a tire flattened during takeoff and the second when its drop tanks would not feed fuel to the engines.

In Rabaul, despite urgings by local commanders to cancel the trip for fear of ambush, Yamamoto's planes took off as scheduled for the 510 kilometer (315 mi) trip. They climbed to 2,000 meters (6,500 ft), with their fighter escort behind and 450 meters (1,500 ft) higher, split into two V-formations of three planes.

"Betty" bomber similar to the one carrying Yamamoto. Mitchell's flight of four led the squadron "on the deck" with the killer flight, consisting of Capt. Thomas G. Lanphier, Jr., 1st Lt. Rex T. Barber, and the spares, Lt. Besby F. Holmes and Lt. Raymond K. Hine, immediately behind, fighting off drowsiness, navigating by flight plan and dead reckoning. This proved to be the longest fighter-intercept mission of the war and was so skillfully executed by Major Mitchell that his force arrived at the intercept point one minute early, at 09:34, just as Yamamoto's aircraft descended into view in a light haze. Mitchell ordered his planes to drop tanks, turned to the right to parallel the bombers, and began a full power climb.

Lt. Holmes was unable to drop his tanks and turned back to sea, followed by his wingman, Lt. Hine. Mitchell radioed Lanphier and Barber to engage, and they turned to climb toward the eight aircraft. The closest escort fighters dropped their own tanks and began to dive toward the pair of P-38s. Lanphier, in a sound tactical move, immediately turned head-on and climbed towards the escorts while Barber chased the diving bomber transports. Barber banked steeply to turn in behind the bombers and momentarily lost sight of them, but when he regained contact he was immediately behind one and began firing into its right engine, rear fuselage, and empennage. Barber hit its left engine, it began to trail heavy black smoke, and the Betty rolled violently to the left, Barber narrowly avoiding a collision. Looking back he saw a column of black smoke and assumed it had crashed into the jungle. Barber headed towards the coast at treetop level, searching for the second bomber, not knowing which bomber carried Yamamoto.

Barber spotted the second bomber low over the water off Moila Point just as Holmes (whose wing tanks had finally come off) and Hine attacked it. Holmes damaged the right engine of the Betty, which began emitting a white vapor trail, then he and Hine flew over the damaged bomber, carrying Chief of Staff Vice Admiral Matome Ugaki and part of Yamamoto's staff. Barber next attacked the stricken bomber, pieces of it damaging his own aircraft, and it crash-landed in the water. Ugaki survived the crash as did two others, and all were later rescued. Barber, Holmes and Hine were attacked by Zeroes, Barber's P-38 receiving 140 hits, and Holmes and Barber each claiming a Zero shot down during this melee. The top cover briefly engaged reacting Zeroes without making any kills, and Major Mitchell observed the column of smoke from Yamamoto's crashed bomber. Lt. Hine's P-38 had disappeared by this point, presumably crashed into the water. Running close to their point-of-no-return fuel levels, the P-38s broke off contact and returned to base, with Lt. Holmes so short of fuel that he was forced to land in the Russell Islands. Lt. Hine's Lightning was the only one missing and was never found. He is listed on the Tablets of the Missing at Manila American Cemetery along with awards: Navy Cross; Distinguished Flying Cross; Air Medal; and Purple Heart.
 

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Aftermath
As he approached Henderson Field, Lanphier radioed the Guadalcanal fighter director that "I got Yamamoto", breaching security on the mission. Immediately on landing (his plane was so short on fuel that one engine quit during landing rollout) he again put in a claim for shooting down the bomber, relating that when he turned to engage the escort Zeroes he shot the wing off one, flipped upside down as he circled back towards the bombers, and saw the lead bomber turning a circle below him. He stated he came out of his turn at a right angle to the circling bomber and fired, blowing off its right wing. He stated that he witnessed Barber shoot down another bomber which also crashed in the jungle. Holmes put in a claim for the Betty that crashed into the water, so it was assumed that three bombers had been downed. The fifteen surviving pilots were not debriefed after the mission because this formal interrogation did not exist in the procedures on Guadalcanal at that time, and thus it was never formally established that no one else witnessed Lanphier's claim.

The crash site and body of Admiral Yamamoto were found the next day in the jungle north of the coastal site of the former Australian patrol post and Catholic mission of Buin (after the war re-established several kilometres inland) by a Japanese search and rescue party, led by Army engineer Lieutenant Hamasuna. According to Hamasuna, Yamamoto had been thrown clear of the plane's wreckage, his white-gloved hand grasping the hilt of his katana, still upright in his seat under a tree. Hamasuna said Yamamoto was instantly recognizable, head dipped down as if deep in thought. A post-mortem of the body disclosed that Yamamoto received two wounds, one to the back of his left shoulder and one to his left lower jaw that exited above his right eye. Whether the admiral initially survived the crash has been a matter of controversy in Japan.

In Japan this became known as the "Navy kō incident"(海軍甲事件). It raised morale in the United States and shocked the Japanese who were officially told about the incident only on May 21, 1943. To cover up the fact that the Allies were reading Japanese code, American news agencies were told the cover story originally created for briefing the 339th, that civilian coastwatchers in the Solomons saw Yamamoto boarding a bomber in the area.


Controversy
Rex Barber is awarded the Navy Cross for his actions during the mission that killed Yamamoto.Lanphier initially received credit for the kill of Yamamoto's bomber, but the other pilots on the mission were immediately skeptical. Although one of the most expertly-executed missions in history, the interception was subsequently marred by controversy over who actually shot down Yamamoto and by Navy outrage over unauthorized releases of operational details to the press, including an October 1943 issue of Time Magazine which featured articles on both the shootdown and Lanphier by name. Mitchell had been nominated for the Medal of Honor for the mission, but as a result of the security issues this was downgraded to the Navy Cross, which he and all the pilots of the killer flight were subsequently awarded.

After the war it was found that none of the escorting Japanese fighters were even damaged, much less shot down, and Lanphier was stripped of his claim for a Zero shot down. Since other Zero fighters were taking off from nearby Kahili airfield, both Barber and Holmes were allowed their claims during the second combat. Also records confirmed that only two bombers had been shot down, not three, and subsequently the Air Force officially awarded "half kills" to Lanphier and Barber for the Yamamoto shootdown. A video-taped interview in 1985 with one of the escorting Zero pilots, Kenji Yanagiya, appeared to corroborate Barber's claim, but the Air Force declined to reopen the issue.

Rex Barber then sued in Federal Court to have the ruling of the Secretary of the Air Force overturned and the opposing claims re-investigated, but the court refused to intervene. In the May 2006 issue of AIR FORCE Magazine, Douglas S. Canning, a former member of the 347th Fighter Group who flew the Yamamoto mission (Canning escorted Lt. Holmes back to the Russells) and was friends with both Lanphier and Barber, published a letter in which he stated that Lanphier, in addition to writing the official report, medal citations, and several magazine articles, had also written a detailed manuscript, never published, claiming he alone shot down Yamamoto. Until reading that manuscript, Barber had been willing to share half credit for the kill. Canning cites the testimony of the Japanese Zero pilot, Yanagiya, that Yamamoto's Betty crashed 20 to 30 seconds after being hit by fire from a P-38, and from Admiral Ugaki on the second Betty that Yamamoto's plane crashed 20 seconds after being struck. Canning stated categorically that the P-38Gs flown that day did not have aileron boost to assist in turning (as did later models) and that it was physically impossible for Lanphier's aircraft to have made the 180 degree turn he claimed in order to shoot down Yamamoto.
 
My father, Clayton Curtis, was a 19-year-old P-38 pilot was assigned to the Yamamoto Shootdown Mission. On April 18, 1943, he was shot down just off one of the Japanese-held Green Islands. Uninjured, he escaped his P-38 and swam to shore. He hid from Japanese patrols for thirty-eight days and twelve hours eating "bugs and lizards." He communicated by mirror with someone on a British (?) plantation on a nearby island. He was rescued when a Navy Catalina landed offshore and sent crewmembers on a (rubber?) boat to pick him up.

My father is now 85-years-old and in declining health. On his behalf, I would love to correspond with any other surviving pilot(s), or family member, from the Yamamoto mission. It would be a wonderful surprise for him.
 
My father, Clayton Curtis, was a 19-year-old P-38 pilot was assigned to the Yamamoto Shootdown Mission. On April 18, 1943, he was shot down just off one of the Japanese-held Green Islands. Uninjured, he escaped his P-38 and swam to shore. He hid from Japanese patrols for thirty-eight days and twelve hours eating "bugs and lizards." He communicated by mirror with someone on a British (?) plantation on a nearby island. He was rescued when a Navy Catalina landed offshore and sent crewmembers on a (rubber?) boat to pick him up.

My father is now 85-years-old and in declining health. On his behalf, I would love to correspond with any other surviving pilot(s), or family member, from the Yamamoto mission. It would be a wonderful surprise for him.

Very interesting material syscom. Thank you for posting. :thumbright: Clayton Curtis, I salute your dad and would love to hear his side of this story.:salute::salute:
 
I also salute your father, Clayton! :salute:

I have read a lot about that mission, and evidence that I have read suggests that it was Barber who shot down Yamamoto. Either way, it was a team effort and it took some real guts to pull it off.
 
One of the most audacious missions of the war... I love to read about it.

EAT LEAD, YAMAMOT0
 
Tell your father thanks for his service! Conversing with someone who has First hand knowledge on a mission so famous as this one would be something I would never forget! Awesome~
 
Wow, thats an impressive accomplishment "ClaytonCurtis"...you must be proud of your father. I too would love to hear his recollections. :)


p.s. Thanks "syscom3" for the write-up...
 
Greetings -

My name is Curtis Hay. This is my first post to this forum. My mother posted the story to this forum in July 2009 about my grandfather, Cllayton Curtis, and his involvement in the Yamamoto shootdown mission.

I have learned quite a bit more about his probable participation in this event and I'd like to provide additional detail. It is becoming quite an amazing story and one that I will continue to investigate while my grandfather is still alive.

Evidently there were two P-38 photo recon planes assigned to take pictures of the events on April 18, 1943. One plane was piloted by 1st llieutenant Homer Baker of the 12th fighter squadron. The other plane was piloted by my grandfather-- lieutenant Clayton Curtis. The participation of these two additional P-38's seemed to have been missed by many accounts of that day. However, the sole remaining survivor of the mission-- Douglas Canning-- recalls the activities of these two photo recon planes were revealed *several years* after the mission. These recon planes were ordered to fly at a considerably higher altitude -- 25,000 feet -- and their presence was not known by any of the pilots that day.

Homer Baker took a few photos of the engagement, but the quality of the photos shows only small specks in the lower portion of one photograph that are believed to be one of the Japanese formations far below. (I haven't seen these photos yet, but have read about them in several similar forums and online postings.)

The other reconnaissance aircraft-- piloted by my father, apparently descended to directly below and behind Admiral Yamamoto's Betty bomber, evidently to take closer photographs. After Yamamoto's plane was hit by Rex Barber, pieces of the aircraft collided with my grandfather's recon plane, which had no guns and was essentially defenseless.

At about that time, Japanese zeroes began fighting back and my then 19-year old grandfather made the decision to turn NORTH away from the battle-- not south toward Guadalcanal like the rest of the flights. I don't know if his plane was hit by fire from the zeroes. (I will ask him about this when I meet him and Doug Canning in person in Orlando the first week of November 2009.)

My grandfather flew from the engagement about 150 miles to the island of Nissan where his plane could no longer fly-- presumably because of battle damage and probably also lack of fuel. He crashed into the shallow harbor of Nissan island and abandoned his plane to escape into the jungle. (There were Japanese soldiers on the island at the time.)

He survived for many days eating lizards and wringing rain water out of his clothes. He lost 100 pounds and was finally rescued by a Navy Catalina crew. He was taken back to Guadalcanal for a brief period, then was sent to recover more fully at Henderson AFB in California. He never returned to the Pacific theater after recovering.

I have only learned of these things over the last few months while my mother has helped him with assisted living at his residence in Sheridan, WY. He has been reluctant to talk about the war-- and about this mission specifically-- because at the time it was a highly classified mission and he was given strict orders to not discuss it. Also, it was an emotionally exhausting experience for him and the War Dept actually sent a telegram to his parents that he had been killed in action. (He arrived back at his parents house after hospital recovery only a day or two after the telegram had been delivered.)

My grandfather is still alive, although his health is failing. I'm flying to Orlando to meet with him, Doug Canning, and a WWII aviation historian to finaly bring to light his involvement in that important mission. I'm really looking forward to listening to the discussion between the two veterans. It's quite a story within a story.
 
Many years ago I sat in an auditorium in Burbank Ca. I listened with a packed audience Tony LeVier and Thomas Lanphier Jr. speak of their experiences with the P 38.
LeVier spoke of the problems with the aircraft and Lanphier spoke of his shooting down Yamamoto.
Until this day I believed Lanphier.
 

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