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Battle of Midway

ConflictWorld War II, Pacific War
DateJune 4June 6, 1942
PlaceVicinity of Midway Island
ResultDecisive American victory
Combatants
United States Japan
Commanders
Frank J. Fletcher, Raymond A. Spruance Chuichi Nagumo, Isoroku Yamamoto
Strength
Three carriers, (approx) 50 support ships Four carriers, (approx) 150 support ships
Casualties
1 carrier, 1 destroyer, 307 men 4 carriers, 1 cruiser, 2,500 men
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The Battle of Midway, fought in World War II, took place on June 5, 1942 ( June 4 in US time zones). The United States Navy defeated a Japanese attack against Midway Atoll, marking a turning point in the war in the PacificFor other meanings of pacific see pacific (disambiguation). The Pacific Ocean (from the Spanish Pacifico meaning peaceful is the world's largest body of water. It encompasses a third of the Earth's surface, having an area of 179. 7 million km˛ (69. 4 mill theatre.

Fought just a month after the Battle of the Coral SeaThe Battle of the Coral Sea in early May 1942, was the first major aircraft carrier engagement of World War II, and one of the half-dozen most significant battles of the Pacific War. It was also the first naval battle to take place at long distance: neith, Midway was the turning point of the Pacific Campaign. Skill, daring, and luck all played a part. The attack on the island of Midway, which also included a feintFeint to fake something, to decive someone else. There are roughly two types of feint, in military tactics Feint Attack A attack designed to draw defensive action away from an intended target. Example: Attacking an enemy's city (A), as to make the enemy's to Alaska by a smaller fleet, was a ploy by the Japanese to draw the American carrier fleet into a trap. With the remaining American ships destroyed, the Japanese hoped to avenge the bombing of the Japanese home islands during Tokyo Air Raid, finish off the US Pacific Fleet, and perhaps even invade and take Hawaii.

In addition, considerable academic debate has centered on whether Japan could or would have threatened attack against the US West Coast. Had the Japanese achieved their objective at Midway of a quick knock-out of the US Pacific Fleet, the US West Coast would have been substantially defenseless against the Japanese Navy. The remaining US naval ships were fully deployed halfway around the world in the North Atlantic. One academic camp stresses that regional conquest, and not conquest of North America, was the Japanese objective; another argues that is irrelevant, and that threatened or actual attacks on the US West Coast would have caused the US to divert military assets away from Europe, thereby at best lengthening the war in the European theater, and at worst allowing Germany to prevail.



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