Neptune's Inferno: The U.S. Navy at Guadalcanal
Rate it:
Open Preview
Kindle Notes & Highlights
Read between November 16 - December 26, 2017
3%
Flag icon
Public opinion was increasingly in favor of pursuing the fight in the Pacific. In January 1942, a Newsweek editorialist wrote, “Congressmen are receiving a growing stream of mail from constituents condemning the conduct of the war. The writers demand to know why Wake, Guam, and Midway garrisons were neither reinforced or rescued, why the Philippines were left with only a meager force of fighter planes while hundreds were sent to Europe, why the Navy has not laced into the Japanese fleet, etc.” The answer was the political clout of America’s Atlantic ally. “King’s war is against the Japanese,” ...more
39%
Flag icon
This lesson was being learned the world over in more than a dozen languages. The rigmarole of military life, after all, was designed in part to shape the character of men to respond effectively in that half second where a vital decision must rise instantly from habit.