Operation Storm: Japan's Top Secret Submarines and Its Plan to Change the Course of World War II

Front Cover
Crown Publishers, 2013 - History - 478 pages
The riveting true story of Japan's top secret plan to change the course of World War II using a squadron of mammoth submarines a generation ahead of their time

In 1941, the architects of Japan's sneak attack on Pearl Harbor planned a bold follow-up: a potentially devastating air raid--this time against New York City and Washington, DC. The classified Japanese program required developing a squadron of top secret submarines--the Sen-toku or I-400 class--which were, by far, the largest and among the most deadly subs of World War II. Incredibly, the subs were designed as underwater aircraft carriers, each equipped with three Aichi M6A1 attack bombers painted to look like US aircraft. The bombers, called Seiran (which translates as "storm from a clear sky"), were tucked in a huge, water tight hanger on the sub's deck. The subs mission was to travel more than half way around the world, surface on the US coast, and launch their deadly air attack. This entire operation was unknown to US intelligence, despite having broken the Japanese naval code. And the amazing thing is how close the Japanese came to pulling off their mission.

Meticulously researched and masterfully told, Operation Storm tells the harrowing story of the Sen Toku, their desperate push into Allied waters, and the dramatic chase of this juggernaut sub by the US navy. Author John Geoghegan's first person accounts from the last surviving members of both the I-401 crew and the US boarding party that captured her create a highly intimate portrait of this fascinating, and until now forgotten story of war in the Pacific.
 

Contents

FACEOFF
3
Chapter 7
56
Chapter 8
77
Chapter 9
83
Chapter 10
90
Chapter 12
100
Chapter 17
141
THE 631ST
163
Chapter 32
279
Chapter 33
288
Chapter 34
302
Chapter 36
315
Chapter 37
325
Chapter 38
333
Chapter 40
342
Chapter 42
352

FULP ON PATROL
174
Chapter 21
197
Chapter 13
204
Chapter 23
214
Chapter 25
227
Chapter 26
235
Chapter 27
244
Chapter 29
261
Chapter 30
267
Chapter 43
358
EPILOGUE
367
Acknowledgments
383
Notes
389
Chapter 15
412
Sources
449
Index
461
Copyright

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About the author (2013)

John Geoghegan has written extensively about aviation history, underwater exploration and marine engineering for the "New York Times" Science Section, Smithsonian Air & Space, WIRED, Popular Science, Aviation History, Military Heritage, Flight Journal and the San Francisco Chronicle Sunday Magazine.

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