字幕列表 影片播放 列印英文字幕 [cannons firing] NARRATOR: By October 1944, the American and Japanese aircraft carrier forces have been slugging it out for three years. [gunfire] And now, following the recent clash over the Philippine Sea in which 400 planes were lost, the enemy's carrier force is a shadow of its former self. Their carriers at this point are empty. They have vessels, but they don't have planes or pilots to put on those vessels. NARRATOR: Just over 100 planes remain to distribute amongst the surviving carriers. Even so, the Japanese Navy has another skilled and menacing combat arm. JONATHAN PARHALL: The remaining strength of the Japanese navy at this point is in its battleships and its heavy cruisers. They still have a very formidable array of heavy gun warships that they can bring to bear. NARRATOR: Among the warships are Japan's two super battleships, the monsters Musashi and Yamato. The biggest battleships ever built. They were massive battleships. 863 feet long, 172 foot beam, weighing 72,000 tons. The Yamato and the Musashi both had a main battery of nine 460 millimeter guns. That's 18.1 inches. The largest naval guns used in combat. They're extremely heavily armored, yet relatively fast. Very powerful, graceful warships. And they're able to sustain a level of punishment that was considered inconceivable even at the beginning of the war. NARRATOR: Japanese admirals must now rely on these large surface warships to stop the American advance through the Pacific. They believe the best way to do it is to disrupt the American beach landings. It's recognized at this point in the war that it's important to hit the American invasion forces. So the point of attack for the Japanese battleships, for the first time, is not their American opposite numbers, but it's rather the beachhead itself, and the transports, and the logistical apparatus that are supporting this invasion. NARRATOR: On the opposite side of the equation, the American carrier forces are holding their own-- so far. They still have plenty of carriers and aircraft. US admirals also have battleships and cruisers at their disposal. They feel they have enough strength at this point in the war to finally target the Philippines. Taking the Philippines will place US forces between Japan and its navy's oil supply in Indonesia. But any attempt at landing in the Philippines will be hotly contested. Japanese occupiers will defend this crucial ground to the death. The American strategy for taking back the Philippines calls first for the capture of the centrally located island of Leyte. It's felt that Leyte needs to be captured so that we can put air bases into operation. And then we'll extend our air umbrella over further portions of the Philippines, and go on eventually to the liberation of Luzon, which contains the capital of Manila. NARRATOR: Japan's battleships and cruisers will steam north toward Leyte from Singapore. The warships will split into two groups, one for sailing through the Sulu Sea and Surigao Strait, and approaching Leyte Gulf from the south. The other half sailing through the Sibuyan Sea and San Bernardino Strait, and coming down on Leyte from the north. JONATHAN PARHALL: They have a southern and a northern pincer composed of battleships and cruisers that will hopefully meet up off of the island of Leyte, and there crush the invasion convoys. NARRATOR: When Japanese and American forces collide, the numbers of ships involved, and the hundreds of miles separating major battle areas will distinguish the struggle for Leyte Gulf as the largest naval battle in the history of mankind. [explosion] [gunfire]
B2 中高級 二戰最大的海戰(第一部分)。萊特灣之戰|戰鬥360|歷史篇 (BIGGEST NAVAL BATTLE OF WWII (Part 1): The Battle of Leyte Gulf | Battle 360 | History) 13 1 林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日 更多分享 分享 收藏 回報 影片單字