地狱的代价:垮台行动和入侵日本,1945-1947

IF 0.3 Q4 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Naval War College Review Pub Date : 2009-01-01 DOI:10.5860/choice.47-7008
D. Giangreco
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引用次数: 11

摘要

《地狱的代价:1945-1947年入侵日本的行动》是对构成美国入侵日本战略计划的无数复杂问题的最全面的研究。美国对日本帝国的入侵和军事占领计划始于1943年,也就是在广岛和长崎投下原子弹的两年前。最终,“毁灭行动”要求盟军进行大规模入侵,其规模使“诺曼底登陆”相形见绌,并分两个阶段进行。在第一阶段“奥林匹克行动”中,在投下多颗原子弹后,美国第6集团军将率领最南端的部队进攻九州本岛,以确保机场和锚碇的安全,为第二阶段“皇冠行动”提供支持。第二阶段“皇冠行动”将由第1集团军和第8集团军领导,通过向北500英里的东京平原,对日本的工业中心地带进行决定性的入侵。这些事实是众所周知的,并在各种书籍和文章中以不同程度的准确性进行了叙述。这些工作的一个共同主题是,它们依赖于相对较少的解密高级规划文件。在这些书中,除了美国在最初的陆战开始前9个月、在东京附近预期的一系列高潮战役开始前一年多制定的大纲外,没有涉及到全面了解美国和日本计划如何在最初的登陆之后进行大规模战斗的努力。在日本方面,Ketsu-go行动的计划,即在本岛的“决定性战役”,在战略层面之下未经审查,很少包括美国情报部门对九州防御可用的神风特攻队飞机的重新评估。《地狱的代价》根据大量新资料,从熟悉的和不为人知的档案中挖掘出来,审视了对日本的侵略,并带来了巨大的伤亡和物资损失的政治和军事后果,试图通过对该岛的军事入侵来结束太平洋战争。这段开创性的历史反驳了质疑使用原子弹理由的修正主义者的解释,并表明美国的决定是基于对常规入侵日本的真正可怕代价的非常真实的估计。
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Hell to pay : Operation Downfall and the invasion of Japan, 1945-1947
"Hell To Pay: Operation Downfall and the Invasion of Japan, 1945-1947" is the most comprehensive examination of the myriad complex issues that comprised the strategic plans for the American invasion of Japan. U.S. planning for the invasion and military occupation of Imperial Japan was begun in 1943, two years before the dropping of atom bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. In final form, Operation Downfall called for a massive Allied invasion--on a scale dwarfing "D-Day"-- to be carried out in two stages. In the first stage, Operation Olympic, after the dropping of multiple atom bombs the U.S. Sixth Army would lead the southern-most assault on the Home Island of Kyushu to secure airfields and anchorages to support the second stage, Operation Coronet, a decisive invasion of the industrial heartland of Japan through the Tokyo Plain, 500 miles to the north, led by the First and Eighth armies. These facts are well known and have been recounted-- with varying degrees of accuracy-- in a variety of books and articles. A common theme in these works is their reliance on a relatively few declassified high-level planning documents. An attempt to fully understand how both the U.S. and Japan planned to conduct the massive battles subsequent to the initial landings was not dealt with in these books beyond the skeletal U.S. outlines formulated nine months before the initial land battles were to commence, and more than a year before the anticipated climactic series of battles near Tokyo. On the Japanese side, plans for Operation Ketsu-go, the "decisive battle" in the Home Islands, have been unexamined below the strategic level and seldom consisted of more than a rehash of U.S. intelligence estimates of Kamikaze aircraft available for the defense of Kyushu. "Hell To Pay" examines the invasion of Japan in light of substantial new sources, unearthed in both familiar and obscure archives, and brings the political and military ramifications of the enormous casualties and loss of material projected by trying to bring the Pacific War to a conclusion by a military invasion of the island. This ground breaking history counters the revisionist interpretations questioning the rationale for the use of the atom bomb and shows that the U.S. decision was based on very real estimates of the truly horrific cost of a conventional invasion of Japan.
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Naval War College Review
Naval War College Review INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
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