ORIGINAL: PresterJohn
Bullwinkle,
I don't think that my position being that Japan contributed to the demise of its own Merchant marine by poor planning and operations especially through lack of properly planned and escorted convoys is controversial. It may help if you state your view on the Japanese convoy system or lack therof. Including Island supply.
Thanks for the links, fascinating read...
I've been in several of these threads over AE's life, and I find that often the difference comes down to definitions, especially of "convoy." Many of the opponents to my views tend to have an ETO-centric view of what a convoy must consist of in order to merit the definition. IOW, very large gaggles of merchants escorted by coordinated numbers of ASW-equipped escorts, mostly moving from large sources of logistics to either consumers of those products or industrial centers for further processing.
That description does not fit well with the PTO. The Japanese did not have a few (NYC, Halifax, Hampton Roads, etc.) shipping points, and only a few (Portsmouth, Murmansk, etc.) destinations. They also had both production-oriented shipping (SRA to HI for example) and a myriad of forward bases needing end product re-supply, a feature not present in the land-oriented ETO. As such, their shipping was more dispersed, in smaller formations, and covered a much greater body of water, making naval operations systematically different on both offense and defense. In that theater, a formation of 3-5 merchants and 2-3 escorts of varying quality constituted a "convoy." The flip-side of that was not an 80-ship, Atlantic-type monster, but 1-2 merchants traveling without escort. When commentators speak of "no convoys" here it is important to define whether they mean "no escorts", in which case Allied submarine ops should have been as easy as falling off a log, or that they mean "no ETO-style mega-formations" which pretty much didn't exist, or need to exist, in the PTO.
I do not and have never claimed that there were not lone-ship merchant movements in the PTO. Clearly there were. USS Pollack's 1st patrol report at yesterday's link showed this to be the case, at least early and at least deep in home waters. But I do claim that most merchant ships moving during the war years in the PTO had SOME level of escort. I also acknowledge, without having deep factual support, that this level of escorting probably varied by location. A convoy moving from Saigon to the HI in mid-1942 did not rate the escorts that a re-supply convoy bound for the Marshalls would rate. There were fewer patrols into the resource areas in the early months of the war than later when forward basing and advanced submarine support was achieved. But I would be very surprised if it were the case that MOST resource center movements of oil and ore and other raw material moved with no escorts, even early.
My reading over the years of scores of patrol reports tells me that, except for the first months' patrols, most approaches and attacks by USN subs encountered some kind of escorts. How efective they were is another story, but even a badly managed escort could get lucky and kill you. At minimum they could disrupt the attack and allow the merchants to take evasive actions. The JAANAC summaries point to a large numebr of escort-type combatants sunk by subs. Most, from patrol reports, were sunk in the course of attacks on convoys, not in single-ship actions against independent ASW operations. Some were, but the majority were not.
I appreciate you taking the time to read the links. Similar reports aren't readily available for large, surface fleet actions. The nature of submarines' size and independent operation makes their reports, to me, much more personal and real. The CO fought his ship very directly, through fewer levels of command, and also wrote the report himself, usually on the transit home. As such, they contain a fascinating account not ony of the dry facts, but what he was thinking or balancing in his mind during the battle.