syscom3 said:The Japanese never had the sea lift or aircraft carriers available to invade Hawaii.
Their priority targets were in Malaya, Indonesia and the PI.
Even if they wanted to Invade hawaii at any time following Dec 7,they would have been repulsed.
If they had a tough time invading tiny Wake island even when they had total supremecy over a lightly defended force, then what in the world could they have done against a huge defending force with room to maneuver and defend in depth.
Think SYSCOM has it. The Imperial Japanese were an offensive military. They, as a matter of course, never developed the logistical trail that became commonplace amongst the USN during the Pacific War. As such, they really weren't up to sustained operations against a fixed enemy base. When they tried, the battle turned into a morass for Japanese Naval and Air power (Guadalcanal '42-'43). They were more of a raiding arm than a "come to stay and slug it out" type. There were no support carriers to fly in replacement aircraft and crews, a limited seaborne resupply capacity and usually a small amphibious force. They weren't a "bombard then land" kind of force but a "sneak in late at night and rush ashore" type. Wake Island is a good example of this.
Whereas the US Navy could and did show up, shell, bomb and support invasions for upwards of 2-3 months under heavy attack losing a ship every two days (Okinawa). It was a Doctine for which the Japanese had no answer, even when using suicidal attacks.
Also, the Japanese Army was not a mechanized force to any extent. The battles that were fought in the Pacific played to the strengths of the Japanese Army. If the war between the US (plus allies) and the Japanese had been fought out in a dessert, the results would've been much different. The US Military drove everywhere (for the most part). The Japanese walked. That gives the US military a huge advantage.