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Operation Starvation was an American mining operation conducted in World War II by the Army Air Force, in which vital water routes and ports of Japan were mined by air in order to disrupt enemy shipping.
The mission was initiated at the insistence of Admiral Chester Nimitz who wanted his naval operations augmented by an extensive mining of Japan itself conducted by the air force. While General Henry H. Arnold felt this was strictly a naval priority, he assigned General Curtis LeMay to carry it out.
Instead of one group, LeMay assigned the entire 313th Bombardment Wing (four groups, about 160 planes) to the task, with orders to plant 2,000 mines in April 1945. The mining runs were made by individual planes at night at moderately low altitudes.1 Radar provided mine release information.1 The 313th Bombardment Wing received preliminary training in aerial mining theory while their B-29 aircraft received bomb-bay modification to carry mines.1 Individual aircrew were then given four to eight training flights involving five radar approaches on each flight and dummy mine drops on the last flight.1
Beginning on March 27, 1945, 1,000 parachute-retarded influence mines with magnetic and acoustic fuzes were initially dropped, followed up with many more, including models with water pressure displacement fuzes as well. This mining proved the most efficient means of destroying Japanese shipping during World War II.2 In terms of damage per unit of cost, it surpassed strategic bombing and the United States submarine campaign.2
Eventually most of the major ports and straits of Japan were repeatedly mined, severely disrupting Japanese logistics and troop movements for the remainder of the war with 35 of 47 essential convoy routes having to be abandoned. Operation Starvation sank more ship tonnage in the last six months of the war than the efforts of all other sources combined. The Twentieth Air Force flew 1,529 sorties and laid 12,135 mines in twenty-six fields on forty-six separate missions. Mining demanded only 5.7% of the XXI Bomber Command's total sorties, and only fifteen B-29s were lost in the effort. In return, mines sank or damaged 670 ships totaling more than 1,250,000 tons.1
After the war, the commander of Japan's minesweeping operations noted that he thought this mining campaign could have directly led to the defeat of Japan on its own had it begun earlier. Similar conclusions were reached by US analysts who reported in July 1946 in the United States Strategic Bombing Survey (Pacific War) that it would have been more efficient to combine the United States's effective anti-shipping submarine effort with land- and carrier-based air power to strike harder against merchant shipping and begin a more extensive aerial mining campaign earlier in the war. This would have starved Japan, forcing an earlier end to the war.3
References
- ^ a b c d e Caldwell, Hamlin A., Jr., "Air Force Maritime Missions", United States Naval Institute Proceedings, October 1978, p. 33.
- ^ a b Caldwell, Hamlin A., Jr., "Air Force Maritime Missions", United States Naval Institute Proceedings, October 1978, p. 34.
- ^ United States Strategic Bombing Survey, Summary Report (Pacific War). July 1, 1946
External links
- Mines Away!, by Major John S. Chilstrom, USAF, 1992 (PDF)
- Operation Starvation, by Captain Gerald A. Mason, USN, 2002 (link to PDF)
Wikipedia content modification information:
- This page was last modified on 21 September 2008, at 00:07.
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