A
Short
History
4-7
June
1942
The
Battle
of
Midway,
fought
over
and
near
the
tiny
U.S.
mid-Pacific
base
at
Midway
atoll,
represents
the
strategic
high
water
mark
of
Japan's
Pacific
Ocean
war.
Prior
to
this
action,
Japan
possessed
general
naval
superiority
over
the
United
States
and
could
usually
choose
where
and
when
to
attack.
After
Midway,
the
two
opposing
fleets
were
essentially
equals,
and
the
United
States
soon
took
the
offensive.
Japanese
Combined
Fleet
commander
Admiral
Isoroku
Yamamoto
moved
on
Midway
in
an
effort
to
draw
out
and
destroy
the
U.S.
Pacific
Fleet's
aircraft
carrier
striking
forces,
which
had
embarrassed
the
Japanese
Navy
in
the
mid-April
Doolittle
Raid
on
Japan's
home
islands
and
at
the
Battle
of
Coral
Sea
in
early
May.
He
planned
to
quickly
knock
down
Midway's
defenses,
follow
up
with
an
invasion
of
the
atoll's
two
small
islands
and
establish
a
Japanese
air
base
there.
He
expected
the
U.S.
carriers
to
come
out
and
fight,
but
to
arrive
too
late
to
save
Midway
and
in
insufficient
strength
to
avoid
defeat
by
his
own
well-tested
carrier
air
power.
Yamamoto's
intended
surprise
was
thwarted
by
superior
American
communications
intelligence,
which
deduced
his
scheme
well
before
battle
was
joined.
This
allowed
Admiral
Chester
W.
Nimitz,
the
U.S.
Pacific
Fleet
commander,
to
establish
an
ambush
by
having
his
carriers
ready
and
waiting
for
the
Japanese.
On
4
June
1942,
in
the
second
of
the
Pacific
War's
great
carrier
battles,
the
trap
was
sprung.
The
perserverance,
sacrifice
and
skill
of
U.S.
Navy
aviators,
plus
a
great
deal
of
good
luck
on
the
American
side,
cost
Japan
four
irreplaceable
fleet
carriers,
while
only
one
of
the
three
U.S.
carriers
present
was
lost.
The
base
at
Midway,
though
damaged
by
Japanese
air
attack,
remained
operational
and
later
became
a
vital
component
in
the
American
trans-Pacific
offensive.