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A veteran of Japan’s crushing defeat of the Russian Navy in the Tsushima Strait in 1904, he was wounded in combat, losing two fingers and suffering abdominal scars from shrapnel. Given his naval experiences, Yamamoto believed that a single decisive battle was the only way to secure a Japanese victory.
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Yamamoto, commander of the Combined Fleet of the Imperial Japanese Navy, was killed near Bougainville Island when his G4M1 transport aircraft was shot down by United States Army Air Forces fighter aircraft operating from Kukum Field on Guadalcanal.
Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto in dress whites, photographed on the morning he was killed, addresses a group of pilots at Rabaul, April 18, 1943. His death came as a tremendous blow to the Japanese. We dropped our belly tanks. We put our throttles to the firewall and went for altitude.
Yamamoto, the man who was instrumental in executing the attack on Pearl Harbor, had been killed instantly by a direct hit from a P-38 shell. The Betty slammed into the jungle canopy, ploughing to a halt in a cacophony of cracking branches and tearing metal.
After the crash, an Imperial Japanese Army patrol under the command of Lt. Mitsuyoshi (Tsuyoshi) Hamasuna from the 17th Army at Aku observed smoke rising from the jungle. At first, they believed an American aircraft had crashed.
Mar 28, 2024 · A photo illustration depicts U.S. Army Air Forces Lt. Rex Barber's P-38 Lightning, immediately after firing the fatal blow that sent Japan's Imperial Navy Chief Adm. Isoroku Yamamoto to his death at Bougainville Island during Operation Vengeance, on April 18, 1943.
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Feb 18, 2020 · According to a special report from Michael Peck for the National Interest, in early 1943, Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, commander in chief of the Japanese Navy, was one of the most hated men in America. He was seen as the Asian Devil in naval dress, the fiend who treacherously struck peaceful, sleeping America.