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- #21
Well, the US would have had one of the Midway carriers, the Saratoga, and the Wasp. We also may have seen the Ranger transferred over from the Atlantic.
That would have been 4 functioning carriers. I know the Wasp and Ranger were lighter, but in terms of aircraft capacity they were as good as anything the Japanese had. Survivability may not have been great, but they were as survivable as the Soryu and Hiryu at least, and with the superior US damage control.
I think at that point it would be 4 fleet carriers each.
The USN can throw in the Battle of E. Solomons 3 CVs (Wasp, Saratoga, Midway survivor). IJN can throw 4 fleet and one light CV. This requires that Wasp is not, as historically, detached due to low fuel situation (a direct consequence of it's small size?). If things play out as historically, it is is 2 USN CVs against 4.5 IJN carriers. So USN looses both carriers in the battle, Japanese 1 big and 1 small? Hopefully the Wasp will not get hit by sub's torpedoes...
Pulling the Ranger from A/C transportation duties means that less P-40s made it to N. Africa and Burma. Allies are also one CV short during operation Torch.