The musings of a politically incorrect dinosaur from a forgotten age where civility was the rule rather than the exception.
Webster
The Constitution was made to guard the people against the dangers of good intentions." --American Statesman Daniel Webster (1782-1852)
Sunday, March 29, 2020
I got the movie I was waiting for from Amazon...
Yeah I know that there were some some inaccuracies in the movie, but overall I thought it was a good movie and the Actors they had mirrored the real life people pretty good, Woody Harrelson even Played a good Admiral Nimitz. There was one person that I heard a bit about a long time ago in a book I read then I forgot about it, until I saw it in the Movie, was the Machinist Mate running into the back of a Dauntlass and shooting down a twin engine bomber and it missed the carrier and tore the tail off his plane. Then I saw it in the movie.
Disregard the Cheesy Music, was the only clip I could find on youtube that wasn't tied up in trailers.
On 1 February 1942, five Japanese twin-engine bombers made it through the USS Enterprise (CV-6)
combat air patrol (fighters) defenses following the U.S. carrier raid
on the Japanese-held Marshall Islands. All the bombers missed and
turned away, except the badly damaged lead plane, piloted by Lieutenant
Kazuo Nakai, which turned back in an attempt to crash on the
Enterprise. As the aircraft neared the ship and anti-aircraft fire
seemed ineffective, Aviation Machinist Mate Third Class (AMM3/C) Bruno
Gaido leaped out of the catwalk, climbed into the back seat of a parked SBD Dauntless dive bomber
(his normal position as radioman-gunner when the plane was airborne),
and swiveled the plane’s aft twin .30 caliber machine guns and opened
fire, standing while pouring accurate fire down into the low-flying
bomber’s cockpit, causing it to lose control. The bomber barely missed
the flight deck, its wingtip cutting the tail off the SBD Gaido was in
and spinning the parked aircraft. Gaido continued firing on the bomber
throughout, until it crashed in the water on the opposite side of the
ship. Gaido then calmly grabbed the fire bottle from the SBD and
extinguished a pool of flaming gasoline on the flight deck left over
from the crashed bomber. Thereafter, he disappeared into the ship,
worried that he would get in trouble for leaving his watch station. Vice
Admiral William F. Halsey, the task group commander, ordered that the
unidentified gunner be found. A search party eventually located Gaido
and brought him to the bridge, whereupon Halsey spot-promoted him to
First Class, as everyone who observed the event credited Gaido with
keeping the Enterprise from being hit in the extremely close call.
USS ENTERPRISE (CV-6) flight
deck scene, 1 February 1942, during the raids against the Japanese-held
Marshall Islands. Note belts of .50 caliber ammunition being carried
around by the crewman in the foreground. The aircraft in the background
are part of the carrier’s air group Douglass SBD-3 Dauntlesses.
A
damaged U.S. Navy Douglas SBD-2 Dauntless of bombing squadron VB-6 on
the flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS Enterprise (CV-6), 1
February 1942. With the date of the pic and the missing tail, I surmise that this is the actual plane that Gaido used.
Gaido already had a reputation on Enterprise for his mental and
physical toughness. In June 1941, newly reported pilot Lieutenant
Junior Grade Dusty Kleiss got into his SBD to make his first carrier
landing, expecting to fly solo, only to find Gaido, who identified
himself as Kleiss’s radioman-gunner, sitting in the gunner’s seat
instead of the usual pile of sandbags for initial carrier qualification
flights. Kleiss tried to talk Gaido into getting out of the aircraft for
his own safety, but Gaido persisted, responding, “You got wings, don’t
ya?” Buoyed by Gaido’s confidence, Kleiss made several perfect landings
with Gaido as a passenger.
At the subsequent battle of Midway on 4 June 1942, Gaido was a gunner in an SBD piloted by Ensign Frank O’Flaherty,
one of 28 planes that dive-bombed the Japanese carrier IJN Kaga (the
bomb just missed, possibly because smoke and flames from four previous
hits obscured the target). While returning to the Enterprise in a group
of a six stragglers led by Lieutenant Charles Ware, the flight was
jumped by six Japanese “Zero” fighters that broke away from Japanese
carrier IJN Hiryu’s dive-bomber counterstrike that was heading toward
the carrier USS Yorktown (CV-5).
Ware had earlier improvised a tactic of turning into the attacking
Japanese Zeros, and did so again, creating an arc with the trailing
SBD’s that enabled all rear seat gunners to concentrate their fire on
the leading Zeros. Two Zeros were so badly shot up they had to return to
Hiryu; one ditched en route and the other barely made it to the
carrier. Although it is impossible to tell which SBD gunners did the
damage, given Gaido’s previous history of accuracy, it is possible he
did his fair share. The remaining four chastened Zeros broke off, but
were unable to catch up with Hiryu’s dive bombers before they were
intercepted by F-4F Wildcat fighters from the Yorktown, which shot down
most of the undefended dive bombers (the seven bombers that got through
scored three severe direct hits and two damaging near-misses on
Yorktown, so every Japanese plane lost was critical to Yorktown’s
survival at that point in the battle.)
Unfortunately, Gaido’s plane had been holed in the wing during that
or an earlier encounter with the Zeros, and was losing fuel. O’Flaherty
had to ditch in the open sea. Of the other five SBD’s, one was able to
ditch near the Yorktown for rescue, but the other four, including
Ware’s, missed the U.S. carriers and disappeared without a trace into
the Pacific. O’Flaherty and Gaido were picked up by the Japanese
destroyer IJN Makigumo, interrogated and probably tortured. The Japanese
claimed to have gotten useful information from them about the defenses
of Midway Island, but the two provided nothing of value regarding the
U.S. carriers. However, neither had been to Midway Island so neither had
any way of knowing what was on the island (even the skipper of USS
Hornet’s torpedo bomber squadron did not know that a detachment from his
own squadron, which had been left behind in Norfolk to transition to
the new TBF Avenger, had arrived on the island). My assessment is that
O’Flaherty and Gaido, under torture, gave up plausible but phony
information. Certainly everyone who knew Gaido adamantly believed that
he would not have cracked. However, on 15 June 1942, the Japanese
decided the two aircrewmen were no longer of use. Weights were tied to
both and they were thrown over the side to drown. Japanese accounts
state that both met their end with stoic and dignified defiance. Gaido’s
fate was not known by the U.S. until after the war. None of the
responsible Japanese officers survived the war, so there was no war
crime prosecution. Gaido was subsequently posthumously awarded the
Distinguished Flying Cross.
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I had to change the comment format on this blog due to spammers, I will open it back up again in a bit.