Spruance: Picture of the Admiral
Transcription
Spruance: Picture of the Admiral
Spruance: Picture of the Admiral By Fletcher Pratt From Harpers Magazine, August, 1946 Articles from Harpers Magazine archives are made available to the WW2 History Club for educational purposes and can not be reproduced or used for any commercial purpose. SPRUANCE: . . PICTURE 'OF THE ADMIRAL FLETCHER HE late war was on so wide a scale as to have been conducted almost exclusively by specialists-not in one arm alone, but in one of the tasks performed by that arm. Thus Eisenhower, King, Marshall, and Nimitz confined themselves to broad strategic decisions; the conduct of operations in contact with the enemy lay in the hands of Halsey, Simpson, Patton, MacArthur, Vandegrift. Only two men succeeded in crossing _ the shadow-line that separates the two arts of war and emerged from the conflict with the reputation of being capable of anything-General Omar Bradley by land and Admiral Raymond Ames Spruance by sea. It is too early yet to call them the prime movers of victory or even the best men in their respective fields, but it is significant that no other leaders have been so highly regarded in the professional circles of their own service. Yet the true homologue of Admiral Spruance is not the amiable Bradley, with his patient smile and Will Rogers-like voice, but an earlier American soldier. When one places them side by side, there is a striking similarity between the face that "looks out at us from the Gilbert Stuart portraits of George Washington and the published photographs of the victor of Midway and the Philippine Sea. The nose of the General is slightly wider T PRATT than that of the seaman but in both there are the same firm lips and thinking forehead, the same cant of the ears and solid chin. In both cases the eyes are calm, fixed inward rather than outward, seeing yet not seeing, so that sailors laboring among the litter of a newly-won beachhead on Iwo Jima or Kwajalein would hardly be conscious of the tall, lonely, striding figure till it had passed and memory reported there had been four stars on the collar. "Why, that must be that great big admiral, the boss of the whole show." The resemblance is more than picturedeep, and deeper still than such externals as the fact that the official presence of both men brought upon them the imputation of frigidity, contradicted by their personal lives. It extends into careers which are curiously parallel in beginning, so to speak, at the top. Both men "were held in enormous respect by their contemporaries at the time they attained high command; but it was a respect for character and general intellect rather than for achievement. There was no more in Spruance's record in 1941 to show that he would become the great exponent of carrier war than there was in 1775 to show that the Continental Congress was appointing one of the ablest strategists of history to command its armies. The Admiral was neither an aviator nor This is the third study of an individual admiral to appear in Mr. Pratt's series on naval operations in the Pacific. The other two were Nimitz, in Harper's for February 1945, and Callaghan, September 1944. SPRUANCE: PICTURE a "Pensacola admiral" (the term applied to high-ranking officers who take their wings after reaching a stage where it is certain that they will one day command fleets) when suddenly, and rather surprisingly for the wiseacres of the Navy, he succeeded to the command of the most important of all the carrier task forces in May 1942. He had not even worked very much with carriers save in the rather brief period when, as commander of Cruiser Division 5, he had accompanied Halsey in raids tc the Marshalls, Wake, and Marcus. All of his previous service afloat had been in destroyers and battleships, and all through the war he had to fly his flag in a vessel whose. primary weapon was her guns. When he selected a chief of staff it was not an aviator but an officer who had been an engineer under him in one of the old ~'Delilah type" destroyers in the Philippines. If ever there was a commander who deserved the usually derisive epithet of "battleship admiral" it was Raymond Ames Spruance. The results are now in and they support the thesis that what is needed for high command is a good level of general intelligence rather than experience with, or a bias toward, any particular type of weapon. That Spruance possessed the former there was no doubt at any time. Indeed, one may hypothesize this as one of the main reasons why he received the cruiser command as second to the flamboyant Halsey, with reversion of the chief place if anything should happen to the latter in action. The question of who will lead if the admiral is killed must always be a consideration in making appointments for naval war, and it seems to have been felt both in Washington and at Pearl Harbor that while Halsey's vivid leadership and fighting spirit were exactly the qualities necessary to take a fleet into battle, the cool judgment and the broad mind of Spruance would be particularly useful in getting the ships out again if things went so wrong that he had to assume command. II 1'WAS thus less as a leader than as a kind of staff officer and one-man brain 1 OF THE ADMIRAL 145 trust that Spruance received command of Cruiser Division 5 and went with Halsey on the first of the carrier raids-the attack on the Marshalls of February 1, 1942. Some aggressive action on the part of the fleet, both for its own morale and that of the American people, was clearly needed at the time, just after Pearl Harbor, when the news from the Philippines clearly meant they could not be- held, when the J aps were closing in on Singapore and pouring down into the Java Sea. Australia was evidently next on their list, and the fact that the carrier cover for the first convoy of the war in that direction would cross the carrier cover for the second on its return, gave Nimitz, always an aggressive thinker, the idea that something might be attempted on the enemy. Nevertheless, there seems to have been some very reasonable doubt as to the advisability of the step. It will be remembered that our heavy cruisers and carriers (only four carriers, and the Japs were known to have ten) were the fleet in those days, and if anything were to happen to them the goose would be well cooked. The strength of the Marshalls was utterly unknown; and as to what happened to carriers within reach of land-based air, there was only the testimony of the battering HMS Illustrious took in the Strait of Sicily, which suggested that something very serious indeed would happen to them. The carrier admirals still favored the attack, as demonstrating their point that a cruiser-carrier force contained its own protection and need fear nothing that flew or swam, but there were doubts elsewhere all the way back to Washington, and it must have been with something approaching surprise that the others heard Spruance, the battleship admiral, pronounce in favor of making the attack. Not that he had a casting vote, being quite junior at the time. But his opinions OQ matters of strategy carried weight. He was one of the few officers who had been three times to the Naval War College; at first as a student, when he had an outstanding record, and later for two terms on the staff, where his record was still more remarkable and might have earned him a wide reputation as a naval thinker if he could have conquered an inherent dislike 146 HARPER'S' for writing and an invincible repugnance to seeing his own name in print. In fact, it was his capacity for thinking in strategic terms that had brought him to his rank. His only command among large ships had been the battleship Mississippi, and he had had her for just the length of time conventionally necessary to permit promotion to flag rank. When he received that promotion he had chosen his staff from a list of names on a piece of paper without ever having met the men before, which is to say that he lacked the interest in the personnel factor which is one of Nimitz' characteristics. He also knew what the fleet would be up against in the Marshalls, in a psychological sense if not in a mechanical. Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto had been on duty as naval attache in Washington when Spruance was in Naval Intelligence, and the latter rated him as one of the most capable officers he had ever met-certainly the best of the Japanese. Yet Spruance's voice' was unhesitatingly in favor of the calculated risk in the .Marshalls. Later at Midway, of course, he had no choice; the risk was imposed upon him from without-doubly, because the strategy that produced the battle was Japanese and the American tactics of at least part of it belonged to Admiral F. J. Fletcher, who arrived on the scene aboard the Yorktown just as the action began, and as senior officer present of course had Spruance's force under his general direction. AT THE time of Midway Spruance was still very junior, and indeed, only accidentally a task force commander. He was still iii command of the cruiser division when Halsey ran his task force, built round the carriers Enterprise and Hornet, down to the south to try to catch the enemy in retreat from the Battle of Coral Sea in 'early May of 1942, It would be at the ,end of this long voyage that code intercepts began to warn our high command of the forthcoming attempt on Midway, and the reports of the scouting submarines began to confirm it. The Halsey force came racing north to parry the blow, when itsadmiral fell ill. The loss of Lexington had left one ranking officer marooned in southern n MAGAZINE waters, while two others had temporarily gone back to the Coast; there was quite literally no one to take command of the force but Spruance. HE picture of the Admiral as a cold, hard, ruthlessly efficient leader, "the thinking machine," was already being assiduously spread"by the correspondents, whom he refused to interview or to permit aboard his flagship on the ground there was' no room for them. As in the case of the first President, those who saw him under conditions that did not require him to answer every question with "no'? had a somewhat different impression. On the bridge or striding back and forth along the deck in one of those famous constitutionals that lasted for hours and wore out two or three sets of companions, he could be impassive as granite; and also below, when he would often stand before a map for thirty minutes on end, thinking, thinking, thinking,' without moving a muscle except to wave away interruptions. Then the decision would be made, the Admiral would emerge from his brown study to talk and listen with the small mannerisms of an intensely nervous mind intensely held under control-sometimes the chin resting on the back of a hand with one finger running up the long jaw, or again the fingers of both hands interlaced and gripping till the knuckles whitened. He has a habit of opening his eyes wide and shooting up his eyebrows as he makes a point, usually with a good deal of that wit which it is impossible to reproduce because it depends upon the whole run of the conversation. The decision reached before dawn on June 4 off Midway (Fletcher had not yet arrived, and aboard the other carriers they did not know he was near till Yorktown's planes streaked past in"the first attack) was to run the carriers up northeast of Midway. There was no question but that here was the crisis of the war and the whole fleet might be considered expendable; but there was also no doubt that we were heavily outnumbered, with no reserves, and that attrition on a one-for-one basis would be fatal. Our forces that morning were faced with the insoluble problem war often imposes on the weaker party- T SPRUANCE: PICTURE that- of hurting without being hurt, of hitting without being allowed to take blows in return. The only countervailing advantage possessed by our side was a knowledge of the enemy's strength and approximate position. ""J"HE fact that the latter piece of knowl- 1. edge was only approximate led to the most celebrated incident of the battle, the incident that apparently confirmed the diagnosis of Spruance as a model of the icy efficiency usually associated with the Teuton in war--his famous "Attack at once" order when Torpedo Squadron 8 discovered the Japanese carriers under their blanket of cloud, but also, finding themselves low on gas and without fighter cover, asked permission to withdraw and refuel. Spruance's answer Hashed so instantly over the radio that then and later it was assumed to have been a product of impulse-a double injustice to the Admiral. His impulse in an emergency is to make a joke, the point of which is that the questioner has been placed in a responsible position because he was supposed to possess judgment and should go ahead and use it. In the present instance it struck Spruance as merely astonishing that anyone could make such a request-hence the note of brusqueness. He himself had long ago reasoned out the idea that the J aps set so high a valuation on surprise in war because their own reactions to surprise are those of confusion and error. (He believes this is fundamentally due to the Ian. guage in which they think, a language poor in the means for rapid ratiocination.) He had led the carriers to an abnormal position for the purpose of obtaining surprise. The logical position for them would have been south of Midway or between it and Hawaii. The surprise was now obtained; most of the enemy planes were on their carrier decks. The one essential was to hit them, both to give the tardy Japanese intellect a problem beyond its powers, and to damage their ships so their positions would be relatively fixed for the succeeding waves of assault. "Attack at once." Torpedo 8 had only one survivor but the Japanese were lost. One of their carriers, Hiryu, escaped OF THE ADMIRAL 147 and late in the afternoon her planes disabled Yorktown. Hiryu herself was heavily hit in return, but no one quite knew how heavily, and there was a good deal of confusion in our fleet as to the results. Especially, there was no certainty that the Japs' spirit had been broken, that they might not find means and courage for another attack. Spruance got in touch with Fletcher as the latter's damaged flagship was being dragged out of action and asked whether there were any orders. No, replied Fletcher, there was no reason to change the original plan for the night. That plan was for the American carrier force to stearn a course north (the Japanese were expected to be searching west or south), then east, then south and west around a lopsided square which should. never pass twice through the same spot (in order to avoid possible submarines), but would end up at dawn with the carriers running west toward the enemy's fleet of transports. At the end of the northward leg, however, the fleet had a radar contact-on what, not even postwar analysis has revealed. It might have been a surfaced submarine; and with his miserable complement of destroyers, of which two had already been detached to aid the damaged Yorktown, Spruance hardly dared close a submarine in the dark. Still less anxious was he to encounter the Japs' surface craft, among which were four' battleships; for a carrier, though queen of the sea by daylight, is not much better than a good destroyer by night. Moreover .his objective was to protect Midway Island and he felt he could not go far wrong as long as he stayed close to it. He turned away forthwith-the famous southeasterly turn about which so much has been written. Dawn of June 5 saw him swinging west again, but at dawn there was a report from a long-range search plane that Hiryu had been spotted out to the northeastward, damaged but still afloat and making ten knots. Search strikes were flown off; at the same time a flight of Army B-l7's went over in that direction. Actually the J ap carrier had been stopped when seen and she went down before any of our planes got to her, but this did not become certain till thrf'''' """.".!c-. hot".,. mhA'" 148 HARPER'S MAGAZINE Under the clouds of the weather front miral's function was that of a strategic the search for her took nearly all day and censor-s-listening quietly to the presentaby that much still further delayed the tion of a plan, and in one or two succinct pursuit. At evening came two more fine sentences bringing up some feature that examples of the temptation to lose the had been overlooked. main thread that besets an admiral in "Oh, but that's no objection," the action. The crew of a forced-down PBY proponent would reply: "Why, see ... " remembered several hours after they had But next morning (says the informant) been rescued that their precious secret there would be a little clearing of throats, bombsight had been left aboard. Spruance and a confession: "Do you know, Admiral had to detach one of his few remaining Spruance, I believe you were right." destroyers to go find it; they wanted him This is stating the matter in unsatisto send three. Two more destroyers ran factory general terms. I t appears more Iowan fuel; and just at twilight there was clearly and specifically in the planning an apparently reliable "recon" report that for the attack on the Japanese-held Gilfar to the west, at the edge of the retreating berts, scheduled for November of 1943. weather front, an air battle was going on The original design was for simultaneous between J ap fighters and our land-based attacks on Tarawa and Nauru. The latter bombers, with an enemy battleship help- had been a thorn in the flank of American ing out their planes. strategy for some time, since from it J apaSpruance sent the fuelless destroyers nese search planes operated over the whole home, evaluated the battle report as non- area to the Solomons and beyond, while sense, and pursued at his best speedin our hands it would be a watchtower with the result that he caught and sank towards the Carolines. Spruance offered one of the J ap heavy cruisers and so badly an objection to striking Nauru along with battered another that she had to stay in Tarawa; despite its strategic and ecodock nearly two years. But the point was nomic importance, Nauru would be too that in every phase of the action from the .tough a nut. Behind the low foreshore, very beginning, when he sent the Entercliffs rose a hundred feet; they would be prise and Hornet fliers out with orders not filled with J ap gun positions impervious to try to slow up the enemy by hitting to anything but a direct hit, and direct many ships but to pile damage on the hits would be hard to get in view of the cripples till they sank, his analysis had distance of the encircling coral reef, .proved correct in the large terms of strat- through which there was, by the way, only a single entrance, probably well egy. calibrated by the shore guns. We had III learned something of Japanese defensive IMITZ, a specialist in human relations, methods in the Solomons but on these . recognized that he needed a brain comparatively large land masses it had like that at headquarters, particular! y been possible to set up supply dumps since his own strategic thinking tended in ashore and to make a systematic land the direction of an offensive so vigorous campaign. Anything of the kind attempted that he sometimes failed to balance all the from the sea against small islands would factors involved in an operation. After pin the fleet and supporting vessels to a Midway he accordingly brought Spruance narrow area for some time and offer ideal ashore with an appointment on the staff, opportunities not only to Jap submarines and kept him there for a year and a and aircraft, but also to their surface quarter. Just what Spruance's influence fleet, which could come down through was on the strategy of the long campaign the Carolines at the most inappropriate up the Solomons, which fell in that period, moment. We had not yet learned how to it would be' impossible to tell without a conduct a fast campaign in these islands, stenographic transcript of the conversa- and defects' of technique would undoubttions at headquarters. We have the word edly show up during an operation. of one officer who was present at a good "What would you substitute for N • _1 "tT:_ •..••• uh 'aF":lIl! !::t SPRUANCE: PICTURE OF ... ENIWETOK THE ADMIRAL 149 . I;' Q) ~ ~ KWAJALEIN ".. . •. " W,gTJE ~ .~:",,~ MARSHALL ~ f,' .0 ISLANDS • "MAKIN ABAIANG •• .MARAKEI a.TARAWA GILBERT MAIANA;" I<URIA 0 ABE MAMA .: NONOUTI'lo ISLANDS TAilITEUEA"" "OCEAN TtY New Cah.darua \ o .~ .SOLOMON ISLANDS :;4~" •••~ ~~ 6 o "~b. GUADALCANA~ Co ~ THE '" .. o NEUTRALIZATION OF NAURU Spruance proposed to attack Makin, rather than Nauru, believing that Nauru could later be eliminated by shuttle-bombing between Makin and the Solomons. party to the conference with Nimitz. "Makin," said Spruance; and added, in effect, .that with airfields on Makin, at Tarawa, and in the central Solomons, it would be possible to neutralize Nauru by shuttle bombing. was decided, and Spruance himself received command of the expedition. Halsey was due for a rest; he was very tired after the long campaign up the O IT S Solomons ladder. In any case, it was an operation that called for a sense of strategy of the widest kind. It called for rejecting even the long-desired general action with the Japanese fleet unless it could be brought about under conditions that guaranteed that the enemy would not interfere with our beachheads while it was in progress. Not only was Halsey less likely to make the beachhead his primary concern (in which, incidentally, he would 150 HARPER'S MAGAZINE probably have had the full support of or X to the beach command, do this or Mahan), but there seems also to have that. Spruance heard them all in silence been a Turner question. and when they had finished said, "GentleVice-Admiral Richmond Kelley Turner men, on that beach are Marine officers in was certainly our ablest amphibian com- whom I have the utmost confidence. We mander, but his opinions were decided will proceed with the plan." and his method of expressing them, to put it mildly, vigorous. Halsey was another IV of the same stamp and there is no doubt that the fur occasionally flew between the HERE were no changes. The Marines two men. Spruance, on the other hand, picked themselves up from the beach had been closely allied with Turner at the and swept the island. But the operation as Naval War College and later in Washing- a whole was, so far from satisfactory that ton, when one was in Intelligence and the considerable alterations were made in the other in War Plans; they liked and thor- planning for the next operation, the attack oughly understood one another and got on the Marshalls, which fell in February along (the phrase keeps recurring) as of 1944, or as soon after the MakinWashington had with such explosive char':' Tarawa attack as possible in view of the acters as Hamilton and Anthony Wayne. time needed for assembling men and It was the mildest-mannered staff ever materials. It may be considered characteristic of assembled; they achieved the odd feat of conducting a war for survival in an the Admiral's strategic ideas, which atmosphere of reasonableness and kindly throughout the phase of island warfare had the fixed purpose of eliminating risks geniality. We have a picture of the Admiral as to beachheads, that he did not at first like the idea of going to Kwajalein. To be he moved down toward Tarawa aboard his flagship, the cruiser Indianapolis; chosen sure, the possibility of interference from because, although fast, she was an old the Japanese fleet had been practically ship that would not be too much loss to eliminated by the two great.air raids on the fleet if she were badly hurt by being Rabaul, just before the Tarawa operataken in as close as he proposed to have tion in November 1943. The enemy had her. The operation orders for the offensive gathered their heavy cruiser squadron at , had been drawn in detail by the task group Rabaul, with attendant destroyers, in the commanders with whom he had previ- intention of wiping out our then-new ously talked things over, and now these beachhead on Bougainville. Our carrier orders were in the staff cabin-a three-foot air groups had surprised them in the shelf of top secret volumes. (Those for the harbor with such damage that all but one ,'Normandy invasion ran to a matter of of the ships had to go back to Japan for tons.) "Thank you," said Spruance when major repairs, which meant that the they arrived, and continued poring over enemy fleet lacked a screen. But the Japs had good airfields in the his charts. "Don't you want to check them or look eastern Marshalls; they could stage planes down to them through Eniwetok. Unat them?" said the chief of staff. doubtedly they would do so as soon as "No. That's your job. Go to it." our ships penetrated the island screen The point was emphasized after that first bloody day at Tarawa when the east of Kwajalein, with results that were higher officers gathered for a conference likely to be hard on the beachhead there. in the flag cabin. There were lines of In addition, we knew from intercepts that strain on every face as details piled up of Japanese submarines had located the area frightful casualties, with the Marines cling- out east of the Gilberts where our ships ing to thirty yards of beachhead by their were meeting their tankers for refueling. eyebrows and every likelihood that they A new area would have to be found, probwould be pitched into the sea before ably still further east, which meant longer another dawn. One after another the runs from fueling point to combat area, all officers put forward suggestions-send A the way under the threat of air attack. The T PICTURE SPRUANCE: OF THE commander of the 5th Fleet (this was now the designation for Spruance's command) was for an attack on Wotje or Maloelap, where we could obtain surprise by coming up out of the sea. Nimitz and King overruled him; whether on the political-military ground of protests against "island hopping" that were rising back home or on the straight military consideration of taking the more aggressive action it is not clear-and Spruance went for one of those famous eighteen-mile walks. When he came back the broad lines of the solution were laid down. The fleet would not move through the island screen at all,"but would run up the western flank of the Gilberts direct to Kwajalein and thus gain their surprise. One carrier group would run fast for Eniwetok and hold it under attack to cut off the enemy's aerial reinforcements. The refueling area would not be moved east but west, west of the Gilberts, right under the nose of Nauru. It was the trick of Poe's "Purloined Letter" THE ADMIRAL 151 (as the Admiral commented in explaining the plan). Furthermore, there would be air cover from the little field at Nanoumea and from the carriers of the moving fleet. There would be twice as much preparation fire on the Kwajalein beaches as had been given at Tarawa, and this fire was to continue till the landing craft were actually in the water, giving the shellshocked enemy no chance to recover. There was a revamping of the areas of command between the amphibian forces and those fighting ashore. AS the Admiral held a series of commanders' conferences at which the plan was explained; then he left to group and unit staffs the task of drawing specific operations orders. For morale reasons there was a special effort with the tanker skippers, who have an unappetizing job; instead of summoning them to his headquarters Spruance went to theirs, described the whole operation, and told n USUAL, "PuRLOINED LETTER" When the Japanese located our refueling area east of the Gilberts, Spruance deliberately placed the new area under the very nose of enemy-held Nauru. To-Japan \ MARSHALL ~" "ISLANDS Ma-UaYlo& ~ B(K~I UT1ll'K A" ENIWETOK WOTHO .TAKA AILUK(" MEJIT ~WAJALEIN I~., a EASTERN '.LIKIEP :WOTJE. Q-MALOELAP MARSHALL ISLANDS ~ERIKU9 tNAMU "AUR • MAJURp>ARNO JALUIT Mill N;MORIK (JAP- HELD) r > " •• •• NARIK 'KILI "EBON, "}MAKIN '~: GILBERT ~." ISLANDS NAURU • (JAP'HELD)O '.•'., -- ".'" .,- .. PHOENIX ISLANDS . NLW Rt!Jut1.lM~ AUa. NANOUMEA .~" 'ELLICE ISLANDS .,•• .. 152 HARPER'S them its success depended upon the way they carried out the purloined letter concealment. The Admiral's staff were still checking details of the orders as the fleet got under way. Even in the Tawara operation they had learned that it was normally quite useless to bring before the "old man" items in these plans that might strike them as badly arranged. "No," Spruance would say with an impatient gesture; "they have understood their orders. The details are their business. I will not interfere," and would go back to his contemplation of the charts; his study of times, speeds, distances. Later in the war, being informed that a plan called for the bombardment of Peleliu by a six-inch gun cruiser "and you know the J aps have eight-inch in there," he would snap his fingers in vexation, remark, "Guess I'll have to do something about that," and unhappily dictate an order. On the march up to the Marshalls there was something really worth an interruption. The general orders said very clearly that each of the fast carrier groups was to detach one of its accompanying battleships for the preliminary shelling, but among the files of orders from one of the carrier groups there was no record of any such assignment having been made. "It ·was the only time I ever saw the Admiral really angry," said one of his staff afterwards, and the reason is not hid under a bushel. The "utmost confidence" that he delighted to place in his subordinates in order to leave his own mind free for larger problems had been violated. The battleship was detached on orders from the flag and shortly afterward the offending rearadmiral was relieved. . The Kwajalein operation was the most nearly perfect of all those in the central Pacific. The fire was such that the only J aps who came out of their holes to meet our men at the beaches were idiots and the whole business was completed many days ahead of schedule. Of course this produced a reaction from the top brass, who began to send through dispatches suggesting that we get on with the war, step up the Eniwetok attack ahead of schedule. Spruance consulted everybody, especially the logistics officers, and replied simply that the Eniwetok at- MAGAZINE tack would be carried out ·"as planned." In the meanwhile, Willis Lee had run down with the fast battleships to give Nauru that tremendous shelling which so crippled it that the shuttle bombers thenceforward had no difficulty in keeping it out of business, as Spruance had predicted. Now it was decided to use the extra time for the sweep to Truk. TRATEGY at sea is always a matter which includes dealing. with the ideas of the S home authorities as well as those of the enemy, and since the American forces found themselves strong enough for major offensives the operating officers in the west had been forced to throw a series of body blocks in the direction of more remote planners to keep them from setting up an expedition against Truk-toward which all American naval thought for a generation had been directed. The Spruance sweep was designed to show the ancient menace of Truk for the fake it was; but the Admiral, for the first and last time, flew his flag in the battleship New Jersey, since there was some chance of action against the enemy heavy ships. We know now that the Japanese admiral had called in his guards just the day before the attack fell on him, so that it not only succeeded in revealing Truk- as an empty Halloween bogy but also produced a slaughter of planes and shipping that was not a bad comparison with Pearl Harbor. In the personal history of Raymond Spruance, however, this was less important than a small incident during the expedition. A Japanese destroyer, crippled by our carrier planes, was lying nearly dead in the water north of the atoll. The Admiral led the two new battleships in to give the boys a little gunnery practice by finishing her off, and everything was going nicely when a torpedo came zipping through the water from the dying ship to miss both battleships by so little that they were saved only through quickness at the helm. At the time Spruance said nothing but "Wouldn't my face have been red if 1 got the Iowa torpedoed by a single destroyer in daylight?" But on the next prospective contact he turned to Admiral Giffen, who stood on the bridge beside him, and re- - SPRUANCE: PICTURE marked, "You assume tactical command." He had recognized the fact that modern war is conducted by specialists-not in one type of arm alone, but even specialists in a particular form of operation within the framework of various arms. His own thinking was in the strategic domain, though he is recorded as responsible for one tactical innovation of importance-the system of control by which all the ships of an armada comprising several carrier groups, a battle line, and any number of light craft, move, turn, and maneuver as a single unit by always keeping a specified bearing and distance from a designated vessel. v HE strategic quality of Spruance's thinking shows up as clearly in the Marianas campaign of 1944 as it does anywhere. It appears on a low level; in the first days the J aps came down through the Bonins with their bombers by night. It seemed to the staff that the Admiral might like to know about it and they roused him from sleep to say: "We have Jap planes forty miles away and they are likely to attack." "What the hell can I do about it?" "Why-nothing, I guess." "Then come tell me when I can." He turned his back and went calmly to sleep, as far aloft the night fighters' guns began to pound like distant riveting hammers. It appears also at a high level. Already by June·16, 1944, which was D plus 1 day on Saipan, word was in from the submarine scouts that the Japanese fleet was working through the barrier of the Philippines, bound north and east for the relief of hard-pressed Saipan, The object of every American commander throughout the war was to draw that fleet into a general action which would solve all strategic problems thenceforward. The news of its approach came late at night, but Spruance Went at once to see Turner of the Amphibs and asked him to get all the "stuff" -transports, supply vessels, assorted landing craft, and Marine whatnots-well out to the east of Saipan, to lend the fighting fleet all the cruisers and destroyers he T OF THE ADMIRAL lS3 could spare, and to let them go for the Japanese navy. Turner said no. The battle ashore was not going well, he had already been forced to commit some of the troops previously destined for Guam, the 27th Division was looking bad, the supply dumps ashore were not yet adequate to let the campaign stand on its own legs, and the closest kind of support in all forms was needed. Spruance sighed, but he really had expected nothing else than that the overall strategy of winning the war would require him temporarily to adopt the doctrine Mahan had so often condemnedthat of subordinating the destruction of the enemy's battle fleet on the sea to the certainty of gaining and holding an objective ashore. A German officer might not have minded sacrificing the three divisions on the beach for the chance of wiping out the Japanese fleet; an American could not. It was accordingly necessary to stay close to Saipan and guard the beachhead area while Jacko Clark ran north at the head of two carrier groups for a blow at Iwo Jima to keep planes from staging in along that route. The precaution paid off when Clark caught a big group of bombers coming down and cut it to pieces. In the meanwhile it was becoming of the utmost importance to locate the Japanese fleet and determine what they were really up to. The submarines that had furnished the original information were, of course, unable to trail .fast surface vessels by daylight. On the 18th one of the Japs incautiously opened up his radio and a compass fix on him was secured. It seemed to show the enemy still slanting toward the Marianas without altering course or speed. But at that distance there is an error of 50 miles in radio compass fixes and in any case there was no information on the arrangement of the ships from which that one flashing message had gone out into the dark. Even the fact that the J apanese progress was regular aroused suspicion. The attempted surprise, the element of trickery so seldom absent from Japanese plans, seemed lacking. To Spruance this meant that the situation-had not yet resolved itself. HARPER'S 154 scouting was the obvious need, but the carriers must still be kept close to the islands. Now there were waiting down in Eniwetok several squadrons of the giant PBY planes which have so enormous a range and would be just the thing for the job; but a PBY must be worked from a tender, and precisely the same reasons that had prevented Turner from taking his supply ships out to the eastward had thus far made it impossible , for him to allot any spac~ for tenders in the crowded anchorage. At the same time it was pointed out that if the 27th Army Division had performed as desired ashore, Magicienne Bay on the east side of Saipan would now be open with its thoroughly adequate anchorages'. Turner and General Holland Smith of the Marines, in charge of ground operations, pressed their case on this issue and Spruance reluctantly signed an order relieving the Army Smith of his command of the division. He did it reluctantly, because of his belief that subordinates are entitled to work things out in their own way; but he signed, because the Army man's way had in this case violated the AIR fi TIm STRAncy MAGAZINE confidence and jeopardized the success of the general undertaking. Turner made room for one small tender. That night five of the PBY's arrived from Eniwetok and four of them immediately went out again to seek the J ap fleet. They got a radar fix on it, discovering it in two widely separated groups on courses carrying them still further apart. Spruance was roused from sleep to hear the news. He made himself some coffee (no matter how many cooks he has around he prefers to brew his own from French high roast coffee, and of a consistency sufficient to float an iron wedge); after a period of brown study he believed he saw the J ap trick. They were going to fly planes in against the supply ships and beachhead from a range where our carriers could not hit back, landing them on the Marianas fields afterwards; and when our fleet pursued, they would slip their second squadron around in an end run to complete the destruction of the beachhead. This diagnosis turned out to be perfectly correct as of the hour when it was made, and the next day was the famous "turkey shoot" when over 400 planes of the Jap OF THE "TURKEY SHOOT" , To defend the Saipan beachhead, Spruance imported scouting PBr's from Eniwetok, sent carriers against the bomber bases on Itoo Jima, and refrained from surface engagement with the Japanese fleet. • ,~ BONIN:, t. ISLANDS lARK'S TWO I. CARRIER (jROVPS .. .: ~ ' - .~ M. ARIANAS : ISLANDS f ,SAl PAN ,..-....-; ~ -,--1>\ ••. \ '_ ,/aUAM. OUR PLANES INTERCEPT '-.JAP I=LEET I=OR THE . "TURKEY SHOOr I ' PBY's FROM ,ENIWETOK (ENIWETOK _----C'I SPRUANCE: PICTURE naval air service were knocked down. Later there was criticism of the Admiral for not pursuing at once when the last flaming trail slid down the horizon under the guns of the battleships. But his first objective was and still had to be that 'of barring the gate to the beachhead where Turner's transports lay. the Japanese might not still have attempted their end run in spite of their appalling losses in planes is uncertain. They had snoopers around our fleet during the afternoon of the 19th and though most of them were shot down it is probable that they got off their reports, and anyhow the strategic situation required our leaders to assume that they had done so. During the night, however, the strategic situation again changed when the submarine Cavalla, called from normal patrols to lie in ambush across the line of advance of the enemy fleet, found them and put three torpedoes into their big carrier Shokaku, The sub was counter-attacked and did not see the results, but when she reported toward morning, Spruance knew that the Japs had a cripple and his freedom of action was by that much increased. (Shokaku had gone down and the submarine Albacore hit anothercarrier, Taiho, but apparently her report did not get through.) His deIay in pursuing the Japanese fleet thus had two favorable effects in spite of the fact that it was a delay. For one, when the pursuit was actually begun, it carried our fleet out along a line that kept it between Saipan and the Japanese, making any end run virtually impossible save for forces so light that Turner's covering ships could easily handle them. For the other, when the]aps learned from their snoopers that our ships were still off the Marianas on the afternoon of the 19th and not worrying about pursuit, they slowed up to refuel. In spite of the enormous distances and the unfavorable wind which forced our carriers to turn in the wrong direction every time they launched or took in planes, these factors were enough to bring the air groups down on the enemy in that famous "mission beyond darkness" which completed the wreck of .the carrier force that had been the leading menace to W HETHER OF THE ADMIRAL 155 America since December 1941. The long pursuit also afforded a couple of further demonstrations of the Admiral's singleness of strategic purpose. Quite early in the run the staff began to worry about the destroyers, which were getting low on fuel. "What shall we do?" "Send them back one by one as fast as it becomes dangerous for them to go on," said Spruance. "We will proceed without destroyers if necessary; I am going to strike that fleet and I will not be distracted by details." Afterward, when the planes and survivors were all in, before the fleet turned back eastward, the dynamic Clark appeared with a request to take his carrier group down and throw a little jar into the minds of the enemy by a strike on their installations at Manila Bay, explaining how easy it would be to do. Spruance agreed that it could be done but said no, the fleet's first mission was still the protection of the beachhead and the ships gathered there; we must save our bombs, torpedoes, and reserve strength for that. Clark was sent back to Iwo Jima instead. Fortunately, as it turned out, since he arrived just in time to intercept the enemy's last gasp surprise rush of 75 bombers down through the Bonins. VI time the Admiral had worked out some fairly clear ideas of J apaB nese command psychology, which he estiy THIS mated as being conveniently typical now that Yamamoto, the individualist, was gone. They operated (he decided) as a gang, a committee with a tricky but almost mulishly persistent collective mind; and they were now, thanks to the failure of their navy in its own field, completely under the domination of the military authorities. It followed that as long as there was any chance whatever of success in any land campaign going on, their navy would be used to the hilt in its support. Our advantage over this system of trick and persistence lay chiefly in flexibility, which does not consist merely in "being ready for anything," as the old loose phrase has it, but in giving all plans a dogree of adaptiveness that would permit 156 HARPER'S MAGAZINE rapid changes, like those that Washington the front were so extreme that there was made for his Yorktown campaign. hardly a day when the anchorage failed This was the basis for the planning to be crowded. Day and night the Japaagainst Okinawa in 1945-the last great nese hurled their suicides against picket campaign. Every plan was drawn in three line and supply ships, and there were conor even more versions and the signals ar- siderable casualties. ranged so that the transmission of a single word would bring a complete shift in asHIS situation built up to the last of the signments. The preliminary air strikes great sea battles, so confused and against Japanese ships in the Inland Sea dubious an affair that it has never received during March were a return to the plan a 'name and has hardly even been recogfollowed against Rabaul; designed to crip- nized a sea battle-the action of April ple them all and keep them home rather 5-6, 1945. The background was that the than to work complete destruction on a . airfields on Kyushu, southernmost of the few; (They succeeded so well that when main islands of Japan, had been let alone most of those ships again put to sea it was by the B-29's for a fortnight or more, and under the American flag.) Particularly there was reason to believe that the J apaelaborate precautions were taken against nese were assembling Kamikazes there for .Kamikaze attacks on the craft off the pro- a major operation instead of feeding posed beachhead, including greatly in- them through piecemeal as they had precreased complements of fighters for the viously. Spruance took the fleet north to major carriers and a radar picket line of hit these fields with carrier planes. ships equipped with this device all round His judgment of Japanese reaction was the landing area to give warning of at- exquisitely correct. They had assembled tack. their Kamikazes in K yushu, to the numAs a matter of fact the campaign turned ber of several hundred, and they had out ·to be much more difficult than any- planned exactly this date for their opera. one could have imagined after the first tion. It was simple and in two parts. First: the great force of planes was to attack our Japanese trick of giving us an unopposed landing in order to make their stand fleet, in which they reckoned on administering crippling damage to at least twenty deeper inland. Since the war Admiral Spruance has paid high tributes to the major units. They were aware of the work of the B-29's, but these tributes are American penchant for getting such ships to the manner in which they executed home where they themselves would have their plans, and there is reason to believe left them to their fate or scuttled them, that at the time he was not very well satis- and they conceived that twenty damaged battleships and carriers would require the fied with the way these plans were drawn. The big bombers were too interested in escorting services of practically all the rest achieving the ultimate strategic objective of the fleet. Second: while the hospital march was in progress their battleship of putting Japan out of the war through Tomato (with Nagata and Haruna if they attacks on basic industries, and not enough concerned with the immediate business of could be repaired in time) and a light keeping Kamikazes away from the beach- cruiser and ten destroyers were to run heads. Those Kamikaze attacks were the down the Western flank of the R yukyu most serious problem the fleet had to Islands to wipe out the Okinawa beachmeet during the entire war. The opera- head and its transports. (It is a tribute to Spruance's constant preoccupation with tions ashore were on a larger scale than anything else in the island war and were the safety of the beachheads that the enconducted by the Japanese with a skill, emy was just as constantly concerned with. especially in the use of artillery, well attacking them.) Spruance's carrier strikes on Kyushu above what they had shown elsewhere. This made it impossible to follow the took the Japanese by surprise, added to logical plan of running supply ships in the damage of Haruna and Nagato, immobilizing them, and smashed up a lot of small groups, unloading them rapidly, and getting out again. The demands of Kamikazes on the ground-just how many T as SPRUANCE: PICTURE is a matter of dispute between the Admiral and his staff. The rest of the Kamikazes came boiling out in a day-long attack on our fleet which produced a butchery second only to the turkey shoot of Saipan; and though we did have damaged ships, it was nowhere near twenty and only one was a major unit. That night the Admiral was roused from his bunkone of the only two occasions when they turned him out during this Okinawa campaign, though when there was a night attack he often roused himself, came up for a look around, and then returned. "The Tomato is out, sir," they told him. He glanced at the flag chart. He was a battleship man and here was the opportunity for which every battleship man had been waiting for years-the chance of trading strokes with the Japanese giant that had slipped away from them at Leyte. But Mitscher with the carriers was nearer. "Tell Admiral Mitscher to go take 'em," he said simply. Mitscher did take 'em, and the troops did take Okinawa after six weeks more of ordeals. But Spruance had been withdrawn before the finish; he was back at .Guam, planning the invasion of homeland Japan, for which he was to furnish the support with the 5th Fleet while Halsey with the 3rd Fleet ramped along the coast flexing his muscles. The Admiral's own opinion is that he was rather lucky not OF THE ADMIRAL 151 to be forced to undertake that final operation, but that it became unnecessary when the Japanese could find no means of getting supplies past our submarines. "The submarines beat Japan.". ow he has returned to Newport, to the big building overlooking the bay where the frigate Constellation lies, as President of the Naval War College, living with his nice wife, whom he affects to browbeat. The success of the latter operation may be judged by the fact that although he is a Californian, with the prejudices of that race in favor of the celebrated climate, they are planning to do a little traveling when he reaches retirement age, and then settle in New England, which is her part of the country. Their son is grown now and has aNa vy career of his own in the submarine service; at Pearl Harbor he was able to show his father over a gigantic Japanese plane-carrying undersea craft, which the younger Spruance had brought in as skipper of the prize crew. The Admiral worries a good deal over a feeling of uselessness at the approaching retirement. Certainly there ought to be a place for him in the councils of the nation; but it is perhaps characteristic of a democracy that has swollen beyond a hundred and thirty millions that it has difficulty in recognizing the value of specialists, except those in politics. N