This is the 2nd day I have noticed P38's being mentioned in SW Pacific operations. This fighter radically changed the course of fighter ops in this location. A Bad omen for the Japanese!
ALEUTIAN ISLANDS: The USAAF Eleventh Air Force weather aircraft which crashlanded on Atka Island yesterday is sighted on the west end of the island, its fuselage broken off aft of the wings. The crew, later brought back, is unharmed except for light injuries to Lieutenant General William Lynd, who was observing weather conditions in the Aleutians for General Henry H. "Hap" Arnold, Commanding General, USAAF. General Lynch sustained a cracked collar bone. A PBY lands and rescues the crew.
An uneventful reconnaissance covers Attu, Kiska and the Semichis Islands.
Four B26s and six P-38s abort a bomb run to Kiska due to weather.
AUSTRALIA: SOUTHWEST PACIFIC THEATER OF OPERATIONS (Fifth Air Force) The detachment of the 33d Troop Carrier Squadron, 374th Troop Carrier Group with C-47s operating from Cairns, Queensland, Australia returns to their base at Brisbane, New South Wales preparatory to moving to New Guinea.
NEW GUINEA: In Papua New Guinea, the Japanese remaining on the coast northwest of Gona, now greatly depleted in strength by air attacks as well as pressure of the Australian 39th Battalion, 21st Brigade, 7th Division, are ordered to establish a defensive perimeter around Napapo and await reinforcements. On the Sanananda front, a Allied supply party reaches the roadblock and finds the garrison in desperate need of relief.
On the Urbana Force front, the 3d Battalion, 127th Infantry Regiment, U.S. 32d Infantry Division, begins the relief of the 2d Battalion, 126th Infantry Regiment, which by now is also greatly understrength. The Warren Force continues to bombard and probe the Japanese line in an effort to soften it.
The Australian 2/6th Independent Company is detached and returns to the Australian 7th Division.
The Japanese are again supplied by air.
Australian Brigadier George Wootten, General Officer Commanding 18th Brigade, 7th Division, reports to General Thomas Blarney, Commander-in- Chief of the Australian Military Forces and Commander of Allied Land Forces, Southwest Pacific Area.
Six Australian (A-20) Bostons bomb Japanese positions at Buna.
SOLOMON ISLANDS: Eleven B-17s escorted by eight P-38s of the 339th Fighter Squadron, 347th Fighter Group, attack ships in Faisi Harbor; one tanker is hit; six Zekes are claimed destroyed, five by P-38s and one by a B-17.
UNITED STATES: The War Relocation Authority (WRA) establishes a "Citizens" Isolation Camp" at Moab, Utah, located about 195 miles (314 kilometers) southeast of Salt Lake City, for recalcitrant Japanese-American inmates. This camp, and one at Leupp, Arizona, are designed to hold troublesome individuals from the Japanese Relocation Camps in the western part of the U.S. It was found that in each relocation camp, a small number of men, mostly young Kibei (a person born in the U.S. of Japanese immigrant parents and educated chiefly in Japan) became uncooperative and caused trouble and had to be separated from the general camp population. In June 1943, it is decided to move the prisoners from these two camps to Tule Lake, California, a former relocations camp that had been converted to house the trouble-makers, dissidents and renunciants. After they are moved, the camps at Moab and Leupp are closed.