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Battle of Tassafaronga

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USS Minneapolis at Tulagi with torpedo damage
USS Minneapolis at Tulagi with torpedo damage, 1 December 1942
Battle of Tassafaronga
ConflictWorld War II, Pacific War
Date30 November 1942
Placeoff Tassafaronga, Guadalcanal
ResultJapanese victory
Combatants
United States Japan
Commanders
Carleton H. Wright Raizo Tanaka
Strength
4 heavy cruisers, 1 light cruiser, 4 destroyers 8 destroyers
Casualties
1 heavy cruiser sunk, 3 damaged 1 destroyer sunk
Solomon Islands campaign
GuadalcanalSavoEastern SolomonsCape EsperanceSanta CruzNaval GuadalcanalTassafarongaRennellBlackett Strait – New Georgia – KulaKolombangaraVellaHoraniuVella Lavella – Bougainville – Empress Augusta BayCape St. George

The Battle of Tassafaronga was a naval battle fought between United States and Japanese forces on 30 November 1942. The last of the series of sea fights in the months-long Battle of Guadalcanal, US cruisers were badly mauled by a squadron of destroyers. The battle occurred in the channel between Guadalcanal and Savo Island, and was named after the Japanese base Tassafaronga on Guadalcanal, the destination of the destroyer squadron; this battle has also been called a later "Battle of Savo Island" or the "Battle of Lunga Point".

Contents

Background

Following the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal the Japanese command doubted their ability to retake the island and began to look at New Georgia, to the north of Guadalcanal, as a base from which they could thwart the American advance in the Solomons. The bombardments of Guadalcanal stopped but the Tokyo Express still made frequent supply and evacuation runs at night to the island and one of these runs led to the last major naval battle of the campaign.

On November 30 1942, Rear Admiral Raizo Tanaka led a force of eight Japanese destroyers. Six of the destroyers were acting as transports, heavily loaded with supplies. Only Tanaka's flagship Naganami and Takanami were fully combat ready.

Task Force 67, a recently formed cruiser/destroyer force that comprised the heavy cruisers Minneapolis, New Orleans, Pensacola, and Northampton, the light cruiser Honolulu, and four destroyers (Fletcher, Drayton, Maury, and Perkins under the command of Rear Admiral Carleton H. Wright, steamed north from Espiritu Santo. Destroyers Lamson and Lardner returning from a escort assignment to Guadalcanal were ordered to join up with Task Force 67. Lacking the time to brief the commanding officers of the joining destroyers they were assigned a posistion behind the cruisers.

Combat

Minneapolis made radar contact with the Japanese ships and, just after 23:00, three US destroyers launched twenty torpedoes while the American cruisers opened fire. The Takanami was hit by shells and sank but the American torpedoes missed and the gun flashes lit up the American ships and provided a clear target for the Japanese squadron, which quickly replied with twenty torpedoes of their own and turned to escape in the darkness. The American ships failed to manoeuvre to avoid the long lances and Minneapolis was hit by two 24-inch torpedoes, New Orleans was hit by one torpedo which severed her bow, Pensacola was also torpedoed and damaged but Northampton received two hits which caused her to sink later. The damaged heavy cruisers managed to reach Tulagi harbor where emergency repairs were carried out but all three were out of the war for more than nine months.

Aftermath

This battle underlined the American inferiority in night actions and led to much discussion in the Pacific Fleet about changes in tactical doctrine.

It is a painful truth that the Battle of Tassafaronga was a sharp defeat inflicted on an alert and superior cruiser force by a partially surprised and inferior destroyer force. - Samuel Eliot Morison

References

External links



pl:Bitwa pod Tassafaronga

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