From the Japanese Viewpoint “The first major Allied offensive in the Solomons began on 21 June 1943, and was directed toward the capture of the Munda airfield. If Munda fell, then the Japanese would be backed up to Bougainville, and everything south of there would be under constant air attack. The airfields at Munda and Vila had already been subjected to frequent air raids for some time, and by 21 June they could offer little or no opposition. The first step in the Munda invasion was to secure beachheads on nearby islands, and finally at Rice Anchorage, New Georgia for an overland assault on Munda. Thus, a major burden now fell on the Navy to reinforce Munda by landing troops at Vila on the southern tip of Kolombangara. “Vice Admiral R. Kusaka, commander-in-chief of Air Flotilla 11, did not have enough planes to stop the capture of beachheads near and on New Georgia; thus his resistance was relatively weak and ineffectual. But Munda had to be reinforced quickly, and so some 4,000 Japanese troops were to be landed at Vila. The first echelon was carried on 5 July by destroyers Niizuki (equipped with radar), Yunagi and Nagatsuki. Nearing Kolombangara at the same time that a strong US naval bombardment force had just concluded shelling Vila and Bairoko Harbor, the three destroyers (using Niizuki’s radar) launched a torpedo attack at 0015, at the range of 11 miles. The destroyer Ralph Talbot’s radar detected the ships to the northwest at 0040, but before the American ships could react, one torpedo had hit the destroyer Strong, which sank an hour later. The source and nature of the explosion that ripped Strong apart mystified the American command. They could not believe that a torpedo fired from the distance their radar indicated could be responsible. The blips on the US ships’ radar screens disappeared as the three Japanese destroyers, rather than tangle further with light cruisers and destroyers, went back to Buin with their troops still on board.” Source: Dull |