Originally posted by wpurdom
At Midway, the US knew from code-breaking the forces they would face at Midway, the exact vector of the invasion fleet and the approximate vector and morning the Striking Force would approach Midway from the NW. The U.S. had two weeks to prepare for the early morning ambush theyy were preparing. As was pointed out they did a very good job laying out the abundant searching assets they had to catch the Japanese right where they expected them as well as taking precautions against inccorect information.
The difference between the attempted ambush by the USN at Midway and IJN attacks at Pearl, Darwin, and Midway is quite simple and can be expressed in two words:
moving targets. The US knew roughly from what direction the FCSF (and other elements of the plan) intended to approach, which allowed them to preposition their own CVs and deploy search aircraft to improve their chances of finding and hitting the Japanese first. But that's
not the same thing as hitting a fixed target - ports and airfields don't maneuver. That was part of the problem the US had at Midway.
There's another thing, too. US preparations for Midway could not begin until Japanese radio traffic was intercepted and deciphered - meaning the the IJN got rather more time to prepare than the Americans did. And that's not even going into the
months of detailed planning and preparations, including full-on
rehearsals for the air groups involved, which the First Air Fleet benefitted from at Pearl Harbor.
But how did their attack go? Each element attacked separately and without coordination. First the Midway TBD's and B-26's made a torpedo attack without fighter cover. 5 of 6 TBD's and 2 of 4 B-26's were shot down and they didn't come close to endangering a Jap CV. Then 16 SBD's attacked, all missed, 8 were shot down and 6 of the surviving planes never flew again. Then 15 B-17's attacked from 20,000 feet, all missed. Then 11 Vindicators attacked, all missed but 9 returned safely.
Was the CV strike any better coordinated? No. The Hornet SBD's and fighters got lost and eventually most of them made it to Midway. The Hornet TBD's attacked by themselves and all 15 were shot down with no hits. Enterprise's fighters got separated from her planes and though they followed the Hornet TBD's for a while did not participate in the battle. the 14 TBD's from Enterprise attacked by themselves, scored no hits and 10 were shot down. Yorktown's fighters went in with the torpedo bombers, all but two were shot down, no hits. So of the 41 TBD, they all attacked at separate times, got no hits and all but 6 were shot down. These various attacks lasted from 710 to 1015.
The biggest factor you're overlooking is weather, which had a serious impact on both visibility and radio communication. US airgroups which launched together and intended to proceed to the target in company got separated in the clouds; squadrons which planned to make a "running rendezvous" en route to the target never spotted each other because the visibility was so poor. On top of that, the Japanese CVs had changed course during the morning, so that the strikes from
Enterprise and
Hornet had to
find Nagumo's ships before they could attack them. (Fletcher waited longer to launch his strike from
Yorktown, and was rewarded with a later sighting report reflecting the turn. This is how VB-3 could attack at the same time as VB-6 and VS-6, despite having launched considerably later - perfectly mundane, no supernatural intervention - aka "miracle" - required.)
Of course what happened then was that the Enterprise SBD's and the Yorktown SBD's (launched one hour and 40 minutes later)miraculously arrived at the same time and although they had no fighter cover got an unimpeded attack on the Jap force, "encountering no interference from fighter planes and very
little from anti-aircraft fire." Under these ideal conditions, the 37 planes from the Enterprise scored 7 hits. The 17 SBD's from Yorktown scored 3 hits. Due to the incredible fortune of timing, these hits were enough to make each carrier into a raging inferno.
For one thing, the number of hits credited to EAG is probably low. Most of VB-6 joined VS-6 in attacking
Kaga, and it is quite likely that they scored significantly more than the "official" tally of four hits. (The three hits on
Akagi were made by just
five SBDs.) For another thing, you're ignoring the defective bomb arming switches in VB-3's aircraft, which caused 4 SBDs to jettison their bombs prematurely, and the fact that the last two sections of VB-3 were waved off of
Soryu as that carrier was clearly a loss by the time they were ready to push over - so that's actually three hits out of
nine dropped, not seventeen. Later that day, the EAG/YAG attack on the
Hiryu netted 4 hits of 13 bombs dropped on that ship.
Just to make it clear, when you speak of the "incredible fortune of timing," what you really mean is the incredibly poor plane handling aboard IJN CVs, which resulted in large quantities of HE lying around the hangar deck at the least opportune moment. Compare that to the DC procedures initiated on
Yorktown as the first strike from
Hiryu approached. Tell me again,
which navy had sound doctrine?
In response, Yamaguchi, freed up to do want he wanted to do earlier, got off 18 Vals and 6 fighters in a first wave from the surviving carrier Hiryu. He also sent 2 recon planes in advance to lead the strike in. In a second wave, he scrounged up 10 Kates and 6 fighters. Of the first wave, 6 planes were able to penetrate into diving position and 3 got hits on the Yorktown. The 10 Kates in the second wave did a coordinated anvil attack, 4 were able to to get into launching position and 2 hit the Yorktown.
Yamaguchi couldn't have launched much earlier, no matter how much he wanted to. His carrier was busy maneuvering to avoid attacks from land- and carrier-based bombers; in between attacks his flight deck was busy servicing CAP aircraft. He never had time to bring a strike up on deck, warm up the engines, and launch it until after the US attacks ceased. Had he tried to make his CAP gut it out while he got his strike off, his fighters would have been out of ammunition by the time the VT squadrons attacked, giving Torpedo Eight, Six, and Three a virtual free pass.
Though the Vals did well to hit with 3 of 7, the performance of the Kates would be more impressive had
Yorktown been able to maneuver at full speed to avoid their torpedos, as she'd done quite successfully at Coral Sea a few weeks earlier.
Some days you're the windshield.
Some days you're the bug.