First Offensive: The Marine Campaign for Guadalcanal
Gelesen von Aaron Bennett
Henry I. Shaw, Jr.
In the early summer of 1942, intelligence reports of the construction of a Japanese airfield near Lunga Point on Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands triggered a demand for offensive action in the South Pacific. Completion of the Guadalcanal airfield might signal the beginning of a renewed enemy advance to the south and an increased threat to the lifeline of American aid to New Zealand and Australia. On 23 July 1942, the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) in Washington agreed that the line of communications in the South Pacific had to be secured. The Japanese advance had to be stopped. Thus, Operation Watchtower, the seizure of Guadalcanal came into being. - Summary by Henry I Shaw (2 hr 50 min)
Chapters
SIDEBARS: First Marine Utility Uniform Issued in World War II; LVT (1)—The ‘Amt…
18:43
Read by Aaron Bennett
SIDEBARS: Sergeant Major Sir Jacob Charles Vouza; M3A1 37mm Antitank Gun; Dougl…
7:28
Read by Aaron Bennett
SIDEBARS: 75mm Pack Howitzer—Workhorse of the Artillery; The Japanese Model 89 …
5:00
Read by Aaron Bennett