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LTC Stephen F.
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Thanks for reminding us TSgt Joe C. that on March 28, 1941 Royal Navy Admiral Andrew Browne Cunningham's fleet destroyed three major Italian cruisers and two destroyers in the Battle of Cape Matapan in the Mediterranean.
The tide had begun to turn against the Axis in 1941 in Africa and the Mediterranean. After Hitler launched Operation Barbarossa against his former ally Stalin and the USSR, German's focus was on the east which depleted their ability to support the west - which they mistakenly thought was sown up - despite the Balkan campaign which lasted until June 1941, etc..
LTC Stephen C. CPT (Join to see) Capt Seid Waddell Capt Tom Brown CW5 Charlie Poulton SGM David W. Carr LOM, DMSM MP SGT SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL SFC William Farrell SSgt Robert Marx SSG James J. Palmer IV aka "JP4" SSgt (Join to see) SCPO Morris RamseyCPL Eric Escasio SGT John " Mac " McConnell SP5 Mark Kuzinski SP5 Robert Ruck SPC (Join to see) SrA Christopher Wright
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SSgt Robert Marx
SSgt Robert Marx
>1 y
Admiral Cunningham ensured through the destruction of much of the Italian fleet that the Mediteranean would remain a British lake along with its imperial life line through the Suez canal.
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SP5 Robert Ruck
SP5 Robert Ruck
>1 y
I love these history lessons. Couldn't get a better education from college.
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SSgt Robert Marx
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The British attack at the Italian battleships at Taranto convinced Admiral Yamamoto that an air assault by the Imperial Japanese Navy by its Combined Fleet could be successful. A key ingredient in aiming torpedoes in the shallow drafts of harbors would be the use of wooden fins in the aiming structure of torpedoes. This alteration to Japanese ordinance was accomplished and the dead end talks by the foreign ministries of both Japan & USA in Washington by Nov. 30, 1941 set the Combined Fleet into northern waters of the Pacific Ocean to attack Pearl Harbor for perhaps history's most decisive sneak attack by naval air forces. Yamamoto's decision led to his personal death at the hands of American naval aviators, the crushing defeat of every major Japanese warship afloat, and the loss of many millions of Yamamoto's country men in the ensuing war. The morale of this experience would be to not pick a fight with another country that will go to no ends to achieve an unconditional surrender of what remains of your smoking country.
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SFC George Smith
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thanks for the Info and Share...
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