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A few years ago I went to a discussion on Pearl Harbour at the RUSI. What was interesting was that if you worked on the assumption that the Japanese attacked as and around the time they did. Then the best outcome for the USA was exactly what happened.I've been thinking about this and would like to present some more candidates for the worst Allied defeats of WW2;
Pearl Harbor - the carriers survived, but US losses in other surface units, personnel, and aircraft were heavy and required significant investment to repair. Obviously, these lost assets could not be deployed to assist the fight against the Japanese advance in early 1942.
Without an escort carrier PQ 17 was always going to suffer very heavy losses.PQ-17 - a needless waste of lives and resources, IMHO, in a convoy that could (and should) have been saved.
True to a point but at the end of the operation both vessels were damaged by mines so it wasn't a total disasterThe Channel Dash - The British missed a brilliant chance to knock the two most powerful survivor of the Kriegsmarine out of the war, and avert the danger of another PQ-17 type disaster. Inexcusable given the level of British control over the Channel.
Force Z - a needless squandering of two very powerful fleet units due to an institutional inability to grasp the significance of air power in naval warfare. Again, inexcusable given the lessons of Taranto, Bismarck and Pearl Harbor that should have already been learned.
So, as I said, the whole concept of 'destruction' of the BEF depends on there being a credible risk to the British Isles after Dunkirk. BoB notwithstanding, there was no credible threat of invasion at any time after Dunkirk and therefore the loss of equipment is a militarily moot point, although the need to rearm obviously delayed the redeployment of the army into other theatres.
A military unit without equipment has been rendered combat ineffective. From a military perspective it has been destroyed, no matter how many or few personnel casualties were sustained.
I've been thinking about this and would like to present some more candidates for the worst Allied defeats of WW2;
The Channel Dash - The British missed a brilliant chance to knock the two most powerful survivor of the Kriegsmarine out of the war, and avert the danger of another PQ-17 type disaster. Inexcusable given the level of British control over the Channel.
Force Z - a needless squandering of two very powerful fleet units due to an institutional inability to grasp the significance of air power in naval warfare. Again, inexcusable given the lessons of Taranto, Bismarck and Pearl Harbor that should have already been learned.
Actually the institution (The Admiralty) DID understand the need to have a carrier operating with Force Z, but were overruled by the Minister of Defence, who was responsible for quite a few bad plans during the war.
Freebird,
The intent was to provide Force Z with carrier support in the form of HMS Indomitable but she was damaged when she ran aground in the Caribbean. A fallback plan to use HMS Hermes instead of Indomitable was scuppered because she was too slow. The argument between Churchill and the Admiralty was over the despatch of Force Z (Churchill wanted it, the Admiralty didn't) not the actual composition of the force.
Admiralty plans relating to the Far East centered arounfd a build up of the slow battleships at Ceylon, with a gradual upgrading of these ships in terms of their traqining and their AA capabilities, mostly. The Admiralty was loathe to adopt a forward defence strategy and was loathe to commit much in the way of carriers and very reluctant to commit fast battleships.
The general idea, as far as i can tell, is that the RN wqas going to base its defence around a fleet in being principal. It was believed that Singapore would hold, and could be re-supplied by sea.
No I don't agree. The Americans British dropped the ball, but the tools were there.Admiralty plans were more conservative than Churchills ideas,, but based on similar faulty assumptions about Japanese capabilities and in the end just as flawed as Churchills. The reality was that the British could not mount an effective defence in the far East, and prosecute the war in the far East, even defensively.
After the loss of the Prince Of Wales and the Repulsive, the british pretty much adopted the Admiralty plan, which the Japanese tore through with ease in April 1942. Truth was, with the forces aavailable and the forces the British were wiling to commit, there was no solution to the problem.
The loss of the two BBs off the malaysian coast was only avoidable, if the British were prepred to abandon the whole of the Far east and retreat back to India.
As Churchill well realized, this was politically and militarily unnacceptable. Hence, he was prepred to risk these high value ships, in an effort to contain Japanese agression as far forward as posible.
What the British underestimated (not just Churchill, but the whole command) was the effectiveness of the japanese air arm. It outnumbered the CW by a considerable margin, in terms of local supariority, and enjoyed huge training advantages. The efficiency of the Japanese air forces had not been anticipated. For that matter the efficiency of all arms of the Japanese military had been underestimated.
In just the same way as it is wrong to blamer Hitler for all the failings of the german armed forces, it is equally wrong to blame Churchill for the British failings in East Asia. He had other fish to fry, and did an excellent job overall, in my opinion.
No, I'm putting the blame for the Force z debacle squarely on his shoulders. It was his plan, and pushed forward over Admiralty objections.
So Adm Phillips' refusal to contact Singapore and seek air support after he knew Force Z had been spotted had nothing to do with the loss of PoW and Repulse?
Hi FB
Now your supposition that a withdrawal of Fce Z to Java would have made a big difference....well we will never know for sure....i'll concede that, but I have participated in so many simulations of that particular scenario, and it hardly ever turns out well for the allies. The basic mistake you are making in your calculations is that whereas the allies are permitted to make variations to their plans and force structure, the japanese are not.
Whereas the Japanese are being strait jacketed into acting historically, the allies are given a free hand to react in the best way to the historical threat.
Churchills insistence on sending the ships to singas was a calculated risk, and a bad one in the finish, but there was no other alternative, realistically that I could see prior to 1941.
Freebird
The only suggestion I would make is that once they heard the news re Pearl Harbour they should have been sent to join the US fleet. They would have been of assistance if only as additional escorts to the US carriers until the USA could get their fleet back together again.
Both ships were pretty fast and despite the headline top speeds being slower than the US Carriers, their cruising speeds would have been similar. If nothing else they would have taken some of the heat out of the attacks by the Japanese aircraft..