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THE DOOLITTLE RAID
U.S. Defense Watch ^ | April 19, 2018 | Nolan Nelson

Posted on 04/19/2018 11:46:39 AM PDT by Retain Mike

One week after Pearl Harbor, President Roosevelt began pressing the U.S. military to immediately strike the Japanese homeland. The desire to bolster morale became more urgent in light of rapid Japanese advances. These included victories in Malaya, Singapore, the Philippines, Wake Island, Guam, and the Dutch East Indies, as well as sinking the British battleships Prince of Wales and Repulse.

Only improbable, audacious ideas warranted consideration, because submarines confirmed Japan placed picket boats at extreme carrier aircraft range. One idea even involved launching four engine heavy bombers from China or Outer Mongolia to strike Japan and fly on to Alaska. Captain Francis Low, a submariner, first broached to Admiral Ernest King the idea of flying Army Air Corps medium bombers from an aircraft carrier.


TOPICS: History; Military/Veterans
KEYWORDS: b25; doolittle; japan; wwii
This essay reminds me of the extraordinary men I met growing up; men who seemed to consider their WW II service as a common rite of passage. My contact with these men started about age ten when my dad began taking me out golfing on the weekends. One day Don had his brother Ken with him at the golf course. That seemed no big thing until someone mentioned he was an ace with the Flying Tigers. Here in real life was the character I saw John Wayne play in the movie. Later I often ended up as a dishwasher at the country club and noticed the chef always limped as he moved around the kitchen. He saw my puzzled look, and said he got the limp from a wound received when he was with the Rangers at Pointe De Hoc. Here was one of the men portrayed in the Longest Day. Those are just a couple of the stories I remember among so many others I could tell or have forgotten.
1 posted on 04/19/2018 11:46:39 AM PDT by Retain Mike
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To: Retain Mike

The generation that saved the world from a new dark ages. Thank you!


2 posted on 04/19/2018 12:15:50 PM PDT by Midwesterner53
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To: Retain Mike

I was told one of my neighbors, growing up, was on the raid on the Norwegian heavy water plant.

He was recruited because he spoke fluent Norwegian.

I do not know if it was related, but a ski resort in the area was named Telemark.


3 posted on 04/19/2018 12:20:52 PM PDT by marktwain (President Trump and his supporters are the Resistance. His opponents are the Reactionaries.)
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To: Retain Mike

The school printer at my grade school in the early ‘60s was one of Merril’s Marauders.

Never heard a bad word from him or talk about it. His son was a good friend, he told me. Worked in his print shop a bit, easiest guy to work for/with.

Gone of course now. Don’t think he could imagine the country as it is.


4 posted on 04/19/2018 12:28:09 PM PDT by Regulator
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To: Retain Mike

The Doolittle raid marked the long and strong recovery from the stock market great depression. Morale victory indeed.


5 posted on 04/19/2018 12:58:41 PM PDT by Professional
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To: Retain Mike

We’ve got a B-29 pilot alive and kicking at my church. Just turned 100. Great man, great stories.


6 posted on 04/19/2018 12:58:55 PM PDT by keat
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To: Retain Mike

When I was working my way through college at a Sears appliance repair center in the mid 1970s, one of the fellow parts men had been a Marine infantryman in the invasion of Okinawa. When he found out that I had lived in Japan in the late 60s, he gave me a set of penpal letters he had received from a Japanese young man in the late 30s, before both of them ended up on opposite sides of the war in the Pacific. He had never hated the Japanese, but knew what was necessary to save the world from Axis tyranny.

He told a story once about the first Japanese captured by his platoon. After all of the bloodshed they had seen, the men screamed and hollered all sorts of ugly things they were going to do to the prisoner. Then one of them said, “C’mon, guys, someone give him a cigarette,” and immediately the tenor changed, and everyone wanted to help the evidently scared, starving Japanese.

Like Henry V’s men on St. Crispin’s Day, they could show their wounds, and men like me hold our manhood cheap. I often wish I could have been one of them.


7 posted on 04/19/2018 1:04:51 PM PDT by chajin ("There is no other name under heaven given among people by which we must be saved." Acts 4:12)
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To: Retain Mike

A great story well worth another read.


8 posted on 04/19/2018 1:05:16 PM PDT by colorado tanker
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To: Retain Mike
Admiral Chester Nimitz, in charge of the Pacific Fleet, had now risked two of his four aircraft carriers in this venture along with 14 escorts and 10,000 total crew members.

Admiral Nimitz was not enthusiastic about the project. He wanted Enterprise and Hornet to Join Lexington and Yorktown in the South Pacific for what became the Battle of the Coral Sea. As events would show at Midway, Hornet's flight crews needed more training too.

9 posted on 04/19/2018 1:15:05 PM PDT by InABunkerUnderSF (Time to BLOAT again.)
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