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To: BuffaloJack
GMTA, BuffaloJack. I wrote this post sometime back:


The scale of the battle was huge. The stakes were high. The sub-plots were astounding.

Halsey, itching for a fight, taking the bait, and through a common clerical error which threw gasoline on the fire, ends up to his dying days fighting what he viewed as slander by people who questioned his actions, all under the shadow of the words "The world wonders".

On the other side, almost simultaneously, the Davids of the US Navy in Taffy3 against the Goliaths of the Imperial Japanese Navy and their battleships, darting in, really, the unbelievable parallel to "The Charge of the Light Brigade".

The destroyers of Taffy 3 with bones in their teeth sailed directly at the Japanese battlewagons, their five inch guns like the sabres of the Light Brigade being flashed in the air, they "Volley'd and thunder'd" like hooves, as the superstructures of the battleships flashed with impacts. They sailed under full steam to what many of them, like the calvary in Tennyson's poem, assumed was going to be their certain death..."Someone had blunder'd".

Halsey, in full pursuit to the north, gets the communication from his boss who is trying to discreetly ask what Halsey was up to without ruffling his feathers, ending with Halsey losing it on the bridge of the New Jersey and throwing his hat to the floor in white hot anger and shame as "All the world wonder'd" in Hawaii what was going on.

You could not make this up.

And then, Typhoon Cobra just a month or two later.

With the way they could use computer graphics to recreate that, with the real, unadulterated story line from history, that would be quite the production.

"The Battle of Leyte Gulf".

68 posted on 11/11/2019 12:06:16 PM PST by rlmorel (Finding middle ground with tyranny or evil makes you either a tyrant or evil. Often both.)
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To: rlmorel

Yes, and now you’re using eyesearing font size and BOLD to repeat yourself. UGh.


71 posted on 11/11/2019 12:12:47 PM PST by Spktyr (Overwhelmingly superior firepower and the willingness to use it is the only proven peace solution.)
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To: rlmorel; BuffaloJack

My grandfather was in a tin can at Surigao Strait. That was the last opposing battleships action in naval history. Leyte Gulf indeed would make a great movie.


82 posted on 11/11/2019 12:51:39 PM PST by lodi90
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To: rlmorel

Best imagery I have ever read. If you do not write for a living....you should.

Stirring stuff. That.

FREEP on!


101 posted on 11/11/2019 2:51:04 PM PST by Lowell1775
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To: rlmorel

My dad was an ensign aboard the destroyer USS Heermann, DD532, part of Taffy 3, during the Battle of Leyte Gulf. USS Heermann sank the Japanese Heavy Cruiser Chikuma after pounding it out with the cruiser using only its smaller 5 inch guns.


140 posted on 11/12/2019 6:56:24 AM PST by BuffaloJack ("Security does not exist in nature. Everything has risk." Henry Savage)
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To: rlmorel

I’m confused. What you talk about is like the Battle of Samar with the Sammy B Roberts and Johnston and Jeep carriers but you call it Battle of Leyte gulf.


149 posted on 11/13/2019 5:28:04 PM PST by Portcall24
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