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From an Army and RAF perspective this does seem the case. But the RN assigned both their latest battleship and aircraft carrier to Singapore, AIUI due to Churchill's insistence. So, if Churchill didn't underestimate the Japanese threat, why send your latest capital ships but only a token RAF force? Makes one wish Churchill had exclaimed "forget the navy's latest and greatest ships, get some tanks and first-rate aircraft to Malaya now!". Of course this has to happen we'll before Churchill's September decision to send Force Z.Regardless of the importance the UK seemed to place on the defense of Malaya and Singapore, the actuality seems to be that the UK badly underestimated the threat of the Japanese.
From an Army and RAF perspective this does seem the case. But the RN assigned both their latest battleship and aircraft carrier to Singapore, AIUI due to Churchill's insistence. So, if Churchill didn't underestimate the Japanese threat, why send your latest capital ships but only a token RAF force? Makes one wish Churchill had exclaimed "forget the navy's latest and greatest ships, get some tanks and first-rate aircraft to Malaya now!". Of course this has to happen we'll before Churchill's September decision to send Force Z.
You can fly the airframes (with some losses on the way) but all the ground crew etc. and supporting spares, jigs, tools etc. have to go by sea so the aeroplanes may as well accompany them. "Oh dear my magneto has failed. Where can I get another'? 'They are somewhere off West Africa at the moment but they will be here in a couple of months'....Good idea. Must we use ships to get them to Malaya?
Nothing short of a Sunderland is really going to add anything to the defences. They will increase the numbers of aircraft and increase the maintenance load and amount of fuel required to keep them flying.
You already have "the poor bastards in the Vildebeests ", sending more aircraft of the same general "abilities" isn't going to get you much except more dead poor bastards in plane XXXXX.
What Might have worked (and been available) were Blenheims. But you need at least 4-6 squadrons. A couple of Squadrons of Blenheim fighters fly CAP over the Prince of Wales and Repulse might have made a difference. The Japanese bombers had no fighter escorts of their own. Blenheim fighters could strafe landing ships and beaches (and carry a few small bombs. They could conduct recon and have some chance of escaping Ki.27s flying low level with engines running 9lb boost.
Blenheim bombers could do low level strikes against landing ships and small escorts/warships. How much good they would be in land jungle warfare I don't know but they can't be any worse than the Vildebeests.
As always, the real problem is getting the air and ground crew for such a force.
So roughly our fleet needs to be twice the size we had, basically the combined size of the RN and USN. So we need to dissolve the Indian Empire between WW1 and WW2, give India its independence, and grant full access to the Commonwealth and remainder of Empire to the USA in return for American assistance.Hi
Just to reminder of what the air strength the 'British' had in Malaya at the time, Volume 1 of the Official History 'The War Against Japan' has the following detail:
View attachment 578264
Reference Royal Navy analysis of what vessels were needed in a war with the Japanese, in the late 1920s early 1930s the estimate as mentioned on p.333 of the Official History, Volume 1 of 'Grand Strategy' it mentions that:
"Making allowence for docking and refitting British ships, the force required to be sent to the Far East was estimated at:
12 Capital ships
5 aircraft carriers
46 cruisers
9 flottillas of destroyers
50 submarines
51 minesweeper sloops
It was further accepted that three more capital ships and four more cruisers would be needed for home waters.
These totals were in fact met by the existing British fleet. The weakness of that fleet lay in the proportion of old ships which it contained-the product of the big building programmes of the First World War-ships which would nearly all need to be replaced at the same time. Since, however, war then seemed so remote, a very slow rate of replacement was accepted in the 1930 London Naval Treaty."
Also:
"In the designs of ships the emphasis was placed on suitability for use in a war against Japan in which a general fleet action was still considered a possibility. The Southampton type cruisers were primary designed to match the Japanese Mogami class, the Tribal destroyers to counter the Fubuki class, together with large submarines for service in the Far East where long endurance was essential."
It appears pre-WW2 the Japanese 'threat' was not totally ignored, however, by the time WW2 started for 'Britain' in the Far East many of those vessels were busy elsewhere.
Mike
So roughly our fleet needs to be twice the size we had, basically the combined size of the RN and USN. So we need to dissolve the Indian Empire between WW1 and WW2, give India its independence, and grant full access to the Commonwealth and remainder of Empire to the USA in return for American assistance.
Alternately, the French stick with us, the Dutch aren't invaded and proving the French convert all their Normandie class battleships to carriers and we retain and modernise the Iron Duke class, Tiger, Agincourt and Erin then we all stand a chance of retaining our Far East colonial Empires.Hi
I don't quite understand the comment. In the inter-war years the Royal Navy was basically saying it could take on the Italian and maybe German navies or the Japanese Navy, not all three. The strength of the British Empire navies at the outbreak of war in 1939, according to 'Conway's All the Worlds Fighting Ships 1922-1946' p. 4, is as follows:
"12 battleships, 3 battlecruisers, 7 aircraft carriers, 15 8in cruisers, 22 modern 6in cruisers, 27 older cruisers, 2 monitors, 1 minelayer, 184 destroyers, 57 submarines, 32 sloops, 6 patrol vessels and 47 minesweepers (a few older sloops and patrol vessels are excluded)."
So in the range of what was needed to combat the Japanese navy but not three navies, in 1939 the French Navy was also allied so the British were not alone to fight at the time.
Mike
Indeed, that estimate seems intentionally huge to make any effort seem pointless.So roughly our fleet needs to be twice the size we had, basically the combined size of the RN and USN.
Such a huge proposal would result in the admirals and politicos throwing their arms in the air and exclaiming, well that's that, we'll send nothing instead - which is exactly what they did until Churchill demanded Force Z sail in October 1941. The British admirals even withdrew Malaya's submarine flotillas. The French Navy were even more neglectful, sending essentially nothing to FIC.So in the range of what was needed to combat the Japanese navy but not three navies, in 1939 the French Navy was also allied so the British were not alone to fight at the time
So what are the French able to send to FIC?Indeed, that estimate seems intentionally huge to make any effort seem pointless.
Such a huge proposal would result in the admirals and politicos throwing their arms in the air and exclaiming, well that's that, we'll send nothing instead - which is exactly what they did until Churchill demanded Force Z sail in October 1941. The British admirals even withdrew Malaya's submarine flotillas. The French Navy were even more neglectful, sending essentially nothing to FIC.
But it doesn't matter, this isn't a naval affair; outside of amphibious assault, the Malayan campaign was an army and air power contest. The IJN surface and submarine fleet played very little part. In the late 1930s and in 1940 Malaya Command accurately reported how the IJA would attack and listed what was needed to counter it. Malaya Command didn't ask for battleships and carriers, but for tanks, artillery, better and many more aircraft and first line troops, and permission to take the initiative into Thailand.
Ships.So what are the French able to send to FIC?
How? Maybe troops from French Somalia, but they turned down Roosevelts off to transport them.Ships.
Not troops, ships. France fights on.How?
I like the idea, but they didn't. Petain and the French Establishment took a business decision that not only did they not to fight to the last French man to save the British Empire, but that they regarded the USSR as the bigger threat.Not troops, ships. France fights on.
But I'll reply no more about France or its navy as that's just taking us off topic.
It's relevant because Britain can't defend its colonial interests in the Far East by itself.Not troops, ships. France fights on.
But I'll reply no more about France or its navy as that's just taking us off topic.
As Shortround notes the M20 wasn't designed to be cheap, it was designed to get into production quickly. The construction was wood because thats how Miles built their aircraft. Similarly the Rolls Royce power egg was already in production for the Beaufighter. As a matter of fact Rolls Royce controlled Powell and Powis (aka Miles) until 1943.People seem to think that all US factories/aircraft companies in 1940-41 were huge and ready to go.
Curtiss was one of the largest Aircraft companies in the US in 1939 and had made quite a number of airplanes during the 20s and 30s. They had an existing plant and work force.
The fighter production figures for 1940 tell part of the story
Bell...................24 planes, including 11 YFMs
Curtiss............1259 planes, Hawk 75s and 81s
Curtiss S.L......27 planes (CW-21s)
NA....................6 planes
Republic........104 planes, most EP-1s for Sweden
Lockheed......1 plane
Brewster.........160 planes
Grumman.......103 planes.
Now some companies were building other types of aircraft, but for some, like Bell, the 1940 production was the majority of the aircraft they had built in their history. NA had a large trainer program going, Lockheed was building Hudsons. Republic/Seversky had only built a few prototypes/racers and the initial P-35 order. it had taken Seversky 15 months to deliver 76 aircraft in 1937-38, that is from first delivery to last , not start of work. perhaps another 2 dozen 2 seat aircraft?
President Roosevelt had called for a 50,000 plane airforce in the middle of 1940, it was going to take a while to get going. See plans for Packard production of Merlins, Ford produciton of R-2800s, Studebaker production of R-1820s and all of the rest of it. You are simply not going to get many more planes built in the year between the summer of 1940 and summer of 1941 than were built historically no matter what you do. While the Flying Tiger Airplanes had a particularly hard trip the were put on board ship in June of 1941 and went into combat in late Dec. 1941. By the time any US (or British) planes are shipped, unloaded, assembled, test flown and ground and air crew given even a modest amount of training it is going to be 5-6 months.
Local production requires machinery that either doesn't exist locally or is already committed to other programs. Any machinery will have to be imported. Britian is already walking a tight rope for machinery. They were importing machine tools from germany during the mid to late 1930s. The Huge US expansion strained the machine tool industry. At one point Allison was short over 800 machine tools and they had an A1A priority rating.
The whole "cheap empire fighter" thing is an illusion, 2nd rate fighters are only cheap if your opponent is also using cheap/obsolete fighters. Once your opponent shows up with 1st class equipement your "cheap" equipment becomes very expensive target practice supplied to you opponent.
The Western powers underestimated the Japanese and thought that small numbers of 2nd rate (or 3rd rate) equipement would be enough. It wasn't.
I have no idea why people think the M-20 was "cheap". It used a Merlin XX engine, the best and most complicated Merlin of the time, it used a constant speed prop, best and most expensive fighter prop in England at the time. It used the same armament as a Hurricane or Spitfire, no savings there, it used the same radios and instruments. Only savings is the lack of retracting landing gear and possibly the airframe being made of wood. Cost of airframe depends on the woods used and the time needed to assemble the wooden pieces. Wood needs a lot of careful selection for aircraft use, each board/piece of wood needs careful inspection. Scrap rate/rejection is going to be higher than a metal airframe, If you don't have enough aluminum it is one thing. But it may not be as "cheap" as some people think. yes, wood may not require the investment in tools to work it. Or tools suitable for working with wood may be in greater supply in some areas/colonies.
In any case, why the M 20 is considered cheaper or better than a Hurricane II using the same engine, prop, guns, radio and instruments is a mystery to me.
Alternately, the French stick with us, the Dutch aren't invaded and proving the French convert all their Normandie class battleships to carriers and we retain and modernise the Iron Duke class, Tiger, Agincourt and Erin then we all stand a chance of retaining our Far East colonial Empires.
That's my thinking behind positioning British forces from Malaya in FIC to bolster French deterrence to Japan.Perhaps it's more accurate to say the British stick with the French.
At the time that estimate was made the German navy was a coast defence force (2 old pre Dreadnought battleships with four large caliber guns each) and the Italian navy was not very formidable either. It was thought to balanced (most of the time) by the French. The Italians in the 1920s and most of the 30s had 3-5 Battleships in service at one time, the oldest was scrapped in 1928 and the Cavour started a nearly 4 year refit in 1933. The Unrefitted ships would have had a very hard time against even the R class.So roughly our fleet needs to be twice the size we had, basically the combined size of the RN and USN. So we need to dissolve the Indian Empire between WW1 and WW2, give India its independence, and grant full access to the Commonwealth and remainder of Empire to the USA in return for American assistance.
That's my thinking behind positioning British forces from Malaya in FIC to bolster French deterrence to Japan.
As for when Japan does move in.... the French had fighters and other aircraft in FIC, did any aircrew or even aircraft make it to British or Dutch territory after Vichy gave Japan the okay to move in? Not that their rubbish Farman F.220, Potez 25 or Potez 540 will be of any use. The Loire 130 flying boats and Ms.406 fighters are competitive but in small numbers, and all without parts availability. But any willing Free French pilots and ground crew will likely be welcomed in Malaya or DEI.