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Hashimoto's submarine then returned to Japan, one of the few Japanese submarines to survive the war. Hashimoto was called to testify on behalf of the prosecution at the court-martial of Charles B. McVay III , the commanding officer of Indianapolis , a move which was controversial at the time.
The Yanagi missions (柳作戦, Yanagi sakusen), or more formally the Submarine Missions to Germany (遣独潜水艦作戦, Kendoku sensuikan sakusen), were a series of submarine voyages undertaken by the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) during the Second World War, to exchange technology, skills and materials with Japan's Axis partners, principally Nazi Germany.
Japanese Navy Ships -- Ha-19 (Midget Submarine, 1938-1941) Archived 2006-09-09 at the Wayback Machine at The Naval Historical Center; Japan's War in Colour, captured sub in surf, during 31:08-45; Monroe County (Florida) listings at National Register of Historic Places; USS Helm, Report of Pearl Harbor Attack Archived 2020-05-02 at the Wayback ...
The Type D Modified ((潜)丁型改, (Submarine) Type D Modified) (I-373-class) submarine was designed as a tanker submarine based on the Type D1 but with no torpedoes. I-373 – sunk in the East China Sea on August 14, 1945, by USS Spikefish. I-373 was the last Japanese submarine sunk in World War II.
On Sept. 21, 1943, at the height of World War II, a Japanese submarine was parked on the street just south of where the ... 80 years ago, thousands flocked to downtown Fargo to see a captured ...
A Japanese midget submarine grounded on Oahu Beach, Hawaii, 1941. Japanese submarines in the Pacific War consisted of 176 boats of the Imperial Japanese Navy. During the war Japanese submarines sank two US aircraft carriers, a cruiser and numerous other warships. Later they became used to resupply isolated island garrisons.
An expedition to test a new seafloor mapping technology has given the world a startlingly clear image of a World War II Japanese submarine that split in half when the U.S. sunk all captured ...
The Japanese submarine I-23 was supposed to station herself just south of Oahu as a "lifeguard" and weather spotter for the flying boats, but was lost sometime after 14 February. [3] Japanese cryptanalysts had broken the United States Navy weather code, but a code change on 1 March eliminated that alternative source of weather information over ...