USN Submarine vs IJN Antisubmarine Escort

Regular price €19.99
1941
1945
2
20th
A01=Mark Stille
A12=Ian Palmer
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anti-submarine
antisubmarine
ASW
Author_Ian Palmer
Author_Mark Stille
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Category=JWCK
Category=JWMV
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Christie
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combatants
driver
engine
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escort
Gato
Gato class
historical
II
IJN
illustrated
Imperial
Imperial Japanese Navy
Japanese
Lockwood
machine
maritime
Mark
Mark XIV torpedo
naval
Navy
P
P class
pacific
pacific theater
pacific theatre
pilot
radar
Salmon
Salmon class
Sargo
Sargo class
Second
ship
SJ
SJ radar
SS
SS radar
States
submarine
tactic
Tambor
Tambor class
theater
theatre
torpedo
twentieth
United
United States Navy
US
US Navy
USN
war
warfare
warship
World
WW2
WWII
XIV

Product details

  • ISBN 9781472843050
  • Weight: 260g
  • Dimensions: 182 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Jan 2022
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This fully illustrated study examines and compares the roles of the US Navy submarines and the Imperial Japanese Navy’s anti-submarine warfare capabilities during World War II.

In 1941 and 1942, US Navy submarine operations in the Pacific were largely ineffective, hampered by faulty torpedo design, conservative tactics, and insufficiently aggressive submarine captains. Eventually, though, a new generation of wartime submarine commanders, combined with reliable torpedoes, new generation boats, improved intelligence, and advanced radar, inflicted devastating losses on Japanese shipping. Antisubmarine warfare was initially accorded a low priority by the Imperial Japanese Navy; the lack of ASW escorts and modern weaponry, and an inability to develop tactics, resulted in devastation to vital convoys, and hampered its ability to deter and destroy enemy submarines.

This book explores all these factors, and the role that US submarines played in supporting the major fleet operations in the Pacific Theater, notching up almost 500 patrols by war’s end for the loss of 52 submarines to the Japanese. The technical and tactical developments implemented by the opposing sides are documented in detail, including US improvements to submarine design and weaponry and more aggressive tactics, and the Japanese development of destroyer escorts, changes to depth charge design, and improved submarine detection capacity.

Mark Stille (Commander, United States Navy, retired) received his BA in History from the University of Maryland and also holds an MA from the Naval War College. He recently concluded a nearly 40-year career in the intelligence community including tours on the faculty of the Naval War College, on the Joint Staff, and on US Navy ships. He is the author of numerous Osprey titles focusing on naval history in the Pacific.