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Скачать или смотреть Why Mitscher Launched at Maximum Range — and Refused to Turn Back

  • Frontline America – WWII
  • 2026-01-16
  • 170
Why Mitscher Launched at Maximum Range — and Refused to Turn Back
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Описание к видео Why Mitscher Launched at Maximum Range — and Refused to Turn Back

June 20, 1944.
Two hundred miles west of Guam, American carrier pilots watched their fuel gauges fall toward empty as the sun slipped below the horizon. They had already flown past the point of no return. Night was coming. And carrier landings after dark were still considered nearly suicidal.

On the bridge of USS Lexington, Vice Admiral Marc Andrew Mitscher faced a decision no carrier commander had ever taken this far. Launch at extreme range and risk losing an entire air group—or turn back and let the Japanese fleet escape intact.

He launched.

What followed was one of the most dangerous air operations in naval history. Aircraft returned in total darkness. Engines flamed out. Pilots ditched into the Pacific. Then Mitscher broke doctrine again—ordering every carrier to turn on its lights, exposing the fleet to submarine attack to save his men.

This film traces how that moment was not an accident, but the result of a doctrine Mitscher had spent months forging—through the Marshalls, Truk Lagoon, and the destruction of Japan’s land-based air power. It examines the cost of that doctrine, the lives it saved, the lives it spent, and why historians still argue over whether the decision was brilliance or recklessness.

This is the story of the night carrier warfare changed forever.

Why this matters
The carrier tactics developed by Mitscher in early 1944 still shape modern naval aviation. This was the moment when calculated risk replaced caution—and when command responsibility meant choosing who might die.

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