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RE: Small Ship, Big War

 
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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/7/2008 2:03:49 AM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
Joined: 1/24/2007
From: Oregon, USA
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September 17, 1944

Location: Osaka/Kobe
Course: None
Attached to: Disbanded in port
Mission: None
System Damage: 0
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 475

Orders: Escort Hiyo to Tokyo

---

Shun sits at a back corner table in Sugai’s bar with his old friend Nonaka. Behind the bar Sugai is putting away some clean shot glasses, placing them in precise rows on the shelf like sailors in line for review. There are a couple of other solitary drinkers in the place, both of them Navy men, but otherwise the place is empty.

“You must be getting old,” says Nonaka, his eyes bright and alert despite his many wrinkles, “to let someone put a bullet into you like that.” Shun shrugs.

“The assassin was good,” he says. “It’s nice to know Du still cares enough to send his best men after me.”

“Do you think he’ll try again?” Nonaka asks.

“I doubt it,” says Shun. He sips his drink. “Not with the Rickshaw Man gone. He’ll probably wait and see if the Americans or the British can do the job for him.”

Nonaka chuckles, a dry and raspy sound. “And after the war he may have bigger problems to worry about,” he says. “It will be a new world whoever wins and Du will have to scramble to stay on top of it.”

Shun nods agreement. “I have not thanked you yet for your help,” he says.

“Ah, that is not necessary,” says Nonaka. “I just wish I could have done more. But I’m getting old.”

“You don’t get older, you just get more gnarled and tough, like an old tree root,” says Shun. The two men sit quietly and drink for a time. Finally Nonaka speaks again.

“Do you remember what I used to tell you, back aboard Hirado?” he asks Shun.

“Of course. It was ‘move your lazy ass, you great hulking idiot’.”

Nonaka chortles. “Not that,” he says. “The other thing.”

“Ah,” Shun says, “You mean ‘after the rain, earth hardens.’”

“Yes,” says Nonaka. “You have survived many rains, my friend. You have done well.”

“Heh,” says Shun. “You were a brutal tyrant of a petty officer. After surviving you everything else seemed easy.”

“No need to thank me,” says Nonaka modestly, taking another drink.


(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 3691
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/7/2008 11:25:48 AM   
rjopel

 

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So what did the tough elder petty officer do for the tough old petty officer that he couldn't do himself...

The world wonders.

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Post #: 3692
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/7/2008 7:40:27 PM   
Marc gto

 

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From: Batavia,ohio,usa
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What great writing...i can hardly wait for the next turn

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/7/2008 8:51:47 PM   
whippleofd

 

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Joined: 12/23/2005
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quote:

ORIGINAL: rjopel

So what did the tough elder petty officer do for the tough old petty officer that he couldn't do himself...

The world wonders.


Navy training. Sailors aren't born, they're made.

Whipple

_____________________________

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1981 RTC, SD
81-82 NPS, Orlando
82-85 NPTU, Idaho Falls
85-90 USS Truxtun (CGN-35)
90-93 USS George Washington (CVN-73)
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96-01 Navsea-08/Naval Reactors

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Post #: 3694
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/8/2008 12:18:56 AM   
Marc gto

 

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amen

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Post #: 3695
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/8/2008 12:55:59 AM   
Cuttlefish

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Whipple


quote:

ORIGINAL: rjopel

So what did the tough elder petty officer do for the tough old petty officer that he couldn't do himself...

The world wonders.


Navy training. Sailors aren't born, they're made.

Whipple


Very true. For all his physical gifts Shun was something of a wild man when he enlisted in the navy in order to escape from Shanghai back in 1920. His transformation from raw recruit into the disciplined, consummate professional he became is probably an interesting story in itself.

Rjopel may have been asking, however, what Nonaka had done more recently that Shun was thanking him for. The old sailor alerted Shun that the Rickshaw Man was in town in the first place, and after Shun was shot he found the Rickshaw Man and alerted the crew (via Shiro) where he was hiding.

_____________________________


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Post #: 3696
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/8/2008 12:58:13 AM   
Cuttlefish

 

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September 18, 1944

Location: Osaka/Kobe
Course: None
Attached to: TF 41
Mission: Air combat
System Damage: 0
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 475

Orders: Escort Hiyo to Tokyo

---

The work on Hiyo is finally completed. Hibiki and destroyer Akebono are detailed to escort the carrier to Tokyo. Once the brief journey is completed Hibiki is to remain at Tokyo and await further assignment.

Two destroyers are a slender escort for a carrier but no other suitable ships are available. The journey is not a long one, fortunately, and there have been relatively few submarines sighted right off the coast recently. The plan is to stay close to shore and go as fast as Hiyo’s inadequate engines will allow. With any luck it will be a quick and easy journey.


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Post #: 3697
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/8/2008 1:00:47 AM   
Cuttlefish

 

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September 19, 1944

Location: 60 miles southwest of Tokyo
Course: Northeast
Attached to: TF 41
Mission: Air combat
System Damage: 0
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 431

Orders: Escort Hiyo to Tokyo

---

The three Japanese ships are still outside Tokyo Bay as darkness starts to fall. On the bridge Captain Ishii stands impassively. Only the slow tapping of one finger along the outside seam of his trousers betrays any impatience.

Lieutenant Miharu comes onto the bridge. “Good evening, sir,” he says, then checks the ship’s position. “We get to make the run into the bay in the dark, I see.”

“Yes we do, Exec,” says Ishii. “I don’t know what work they did on her but Hiyo is still far from the fastest ship in the navy.”

“No other problems, though, sir?”

“No,” says Ishii. “No sightings and no reports of submarines in the area. The ship is yours. Check the new minefield charts carefully as we enter the bay and alert me when we have arrived. I will be in my cabin.”

“Yes sir,” says the lieutenant. Ishii retires as Hibiki leads the small task force towards the shelter of Tokyo Bay.


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Post #: 3698
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/8/2008 2:07:44 AM   
John 3rd


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Keep it rolling CF!  I look forward to the new entries...

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Post #: 3699
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/8/2008 2:34:32 PM   
Marc gto

 

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you have inspired me to start my own war in the pacific campaign..it has always intimidated me

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/8/2008 7:36:07 PM   
Onime No Kyo


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Done catching up.

I loved the Halloween Special!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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Post #: 3701
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/9/2008 12:47:33 AM   
MkXIV


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Cuttlefish

September 19, 1944

Location: 60 miles southwest of Tokyo
Course: Northeast
Attached to: TF 41
Mission: Air combat
System Damage: 0
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 431

Orders: Escort Hiyo to Tokyo

---

The three Japanese ships are still outside Tokyo Bay as darkness starts to fall. On the bridge Captain Ishii stands impassively. Only the slow tapping of one finger along the outside seam of his trousers betrays any impatience.

Lieutenant Miharu comes onto the bridge. “Good evening, sir,” he says, then checks the ship’s position. “We get to make the run into the bay in the dark, I see.”

“Yes we do, Exec,” says Ishii. “I don’t know what work they did on her but Hiyo is still far from the fastest ship in the navy.”

“No other problems, though, sir?”

“No,” says Ishii. “No sightings and no reports of submarines in the area. The ship is yours. Check the new minefield charts carefully as we enter the bay and alert me when we have arrived. I will be in my cabin.”

“Yes sir,” says the lieutenant. Ishii retires as Hibiki leads the small task force towards the shelter of Tokyo Bay.




Not to not nitpik, but I am curious. Would Ishii really turn over the ship right before entering harbor? GREAT story CF!!

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/9/2008 2:56:47 AM   
Capt. Harlock


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quote:

ORIGINAL: MkXIV

Not to not nitpik, but I am curious. Would Ishii really turn over the ship right before entering harbor?


Given Hiyo's less than impressive speed, I'm guessing Ishii left the bridge with at least three hours still to go before reaching the harbor.


_____________________________

Civil war? What does that mean? Is there any foreign war? Isn't every war fought between men, between brothers?

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Post #: 3703
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/9/2008 11:17:35 AM   
tocaff


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C'mon stop the nitpicking and let CF tell the story as he sees fit. 

After all these years Capt Ishii knows that the exec is a capable officer, don't you think so?


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Post #: 3704
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/9/2008 8:21:50 PM   
Cuttlefish

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: MkXIV

Not to not nitpik, but I am curious. Would Ishii really turn over the ship right before entering harbor? GREAT story CF!!


It's a fair question. I think it depends largely on the relationship between the skipper and the xo. There are ships where it would not happen. In this case Captain Ishii and Lieutenant Miharu have now worked as a team for over three years and there is very little Ishii does not trust him to handle. Ishii is the better ship handler of the two, no question, but Tokyo Bay is very familiar territory and not exactly confining, even with all the traffic.

For Ishii it is not just a matter of knowing the lieutenant can do the job. He knows that it is entirely possible that a situation might arise where Miharu has to take over the ship, and that if that happens the ship is probably going to be in combat and under fire. By letting the crew know that the executive officer has his complete confidence he is giving them confidence in the executive officer, so that they will not hesitate or falter if he has to take command.

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/9/2008 8:24:45 PM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
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September 20, 1944

Location: Tokyo
Course: None
Attached to: Disbanded in port
Mission: None
System Damage: 0
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 475

Orders: Await further orders

---

Morning finds Hibiki anchored alongside much of the rest of the Japanese fleet in the wide and sheltered waters of Tokyo Bay. Ship's boats crisscross the water as they ferry men and officers to and from the many vessels and here and there tenders and patrol craft go about their business. Around the bay other warships are berthed or in dry dock at Tokyo, Yokohama, and other ports. Dozens of merchant vessels are also present.

This bay and the cities surrounding it are the heart of Japan. This is true not only in a military sense but in a spiritual and cultural sense as well. Japan’s capitol is here, the Emperor and his palace are here, major institutions of learning and commerce are here. This has been true for almost 500 years, ever since the Tokugawa shogunate was established at what was then known as Edo, turning an obscure fishing village into a center of government.

With the fall of Tinian enemy forces are now based less than 1500 miles away. This is a long way by the standards of Europe or even America, but as distance is reckoned in the Pacific it is very close indeed. Close enough that the air defenses of the city are on alert and on edge, expecting at any time to see waves of the enemy’s bombers appearing overhead. It hasn’t happened yet, but those who understand the situation believe it is only a matter of time. This is the heart, and it is here that the enemy will strike.

For today, however, it is a pleasant and sunny autumn day. The skies are clear of even clouds and Hibiki rides placidly at anchor in the calm waters. Her crew is rested and ready for whatever will come next. What that might be is unknown, of course. The enemy now dictates the course of the war and the Japanese must react as best they can.


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Post #: 3706
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/11/2008 11:42:40 PM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
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From: Oregon, USA
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September 21, 1944

Location: Tokyo
Course: None
Attached to: Disbanded in port
Mission: None
System Damage: 0
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 475

Orders: Await further orders

---

Captain Ishii returns from a trip ashore. A short while later he assembles his senior officers in the wardroom. Not only are Miharu, Sakati, Sugiyura, and Kuwaki there, but Kataoka and Nakagawa are also present. Their presence is unusual for an operational briefing, the paymaster and medical departments being outside of the regular command structure. The men had thought that their captain was going announce the ship’s new orders but it seems that something else might be going on.

Ishii stands at the head of the table, deep in thought. When everyone is seated he looks up.

“These are troubled times,” he says. “When I arrived at fleet headquarters this morning there was a banner hanging in the briefing room. It said that Tojo should be killed and the Navy put in charge so peace can be made. It was ordered taken down a short time later. But there was no effort to find or discipline whoever put it up and I continued to hear people talking like that while I was there.” He looks down at the table for a moment, his hands clasped behind his back. Then he looks up once again.

“You all know I do not talk about politics much,” says Ishii. “I have opinions, to be sure. But as an officer in the Imperial Japanese Navy I feel it is my duty to obey orders, not offer opinions on matters outside my area of responsibility. Yet the current climate makes this very difficult.

“Perhaps this is not surprising. The war is not going well and people’s thoughts and feelings are inflamed. They seek someone to blame for the mistakes of the past and opinions are deeply divided on what should be done next.” He falls silent for a moment.

“Sir, may I speak?” asks Lieutenant Miharu. Ishii nods. “It is no secret that since well before the war the Army has controlled national policy. No government can be formed without their support and they can control the course of events by withdrawing that support at any time. In such a case is there really any distinction between politics and military affairs?”

Kuwaki nods. “That is why we are in such a position,” he says. “It was folly to attack both Britain and America. Only the Army possessed the arrogance and foolishness to embark on such a course.”

“And what do you think we should have done?” says Sugiyura indignantly. “Just left China and wasted the sacrifice of one hundred thousand lives? How could we…”

“It was the absurd tolerance and admiration of acts of gekokujo before the war that led us here,” says Kataoka. “The Army could not even command itself, how did they…” Within seconds everyone is talking at once.

“Gentlemen!” says Ishii forcefully, holding up a hand. The men around the table immediately fall silent. Ishii smiles slightly. “You see how easily passions are stirred when discussing these matters,” he says. “This is why I wanted to speak with all of you. As I said at the beginning, these are troubled times. But whatever you may encounter I want each of you to remember this: our job, our only job, is to fight this ship. Remember that you are officers aboard one of the finest destroyers in the fleet and conduct yourselves accordingly.”

This pronouncement is met by a chorus of acknowledgements. Ishii looks around the table, catching the eye of each man in turn. Satisfied, he nods his head slightly.

“That is all,” he says. Thus dismissed the men push back their chairs, rise, and file out of the room, all except for Lieutenant Sakati. The ship’s engineer goes to a cabinet and unlocks it. He retrieves a bottle and pours himself a small drink, then replaces the bottle and relocks the cabinet.

“It’s to get the digestive juices flowing before I eat dinner,” he tells the captain.

“Of course,” says Ishii with amusement. Sakati looks at him over his glass.

“I hope,” he says, “that you can achieve your determination to remain above politics, sir. But Miharu was right when he said politics and the military have gotten all mixed up. The day may come when you cannot separate the two. If that happens you might have some hard choices to make.”

Ishii frowns. “I hope it does not come to that,” he says, then glances at his officer. “You know, Sakati, in all the time we have served together I don’t think I have ever heard you mention politics or even discuss the war.”

Sakati sips his drink. “I believe you are right,” he says after a moment’s thought. He drains the glass and sets it down. “Good evening, sir,” he adds, then follows the others out of the room.



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Post #: 3707
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/12/2008 10:37:34 PM   
Cuttlefish

 

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September 22, 1944

Location: Tokyo
Course: None
Attached to: Disbanded in port
Mission: None
System Damage: 0
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 475

Orders: Await further orders

---

“Welcome aboard Hibiki, Mr. Hiroo,” says Lieutenant Miharu, shaking the hand of a slender young man in a brown suit. A boat has just delivered him to the destroyer.

“Thank you, thank you,” says Tomofusa Hiroo. “It is a rare treat these days for me to actually get to talk to the men I am writing about!” He claps a hand on top of his hat to keep an errant breeze from blowing it away.

“Indeed?” says the lieutenant. “Well, the Navy has asked us to extend you all due cooperation and courtesy, so you will be able to talk to as many of us as you wish. Captain Ishii asked me to personally take charge of your visit.”

“Splendid!” says Hiroo. He has a round, pleasant face and his eyes sparkle with enthusiasm behind his round glasses. “I have never been aboard a destroyer before. Not that that would stop me from writing about one! My last series of articles, for example, were dispatches from the battlefront at Tinian.”

“How did you escape when the island fell?”

“I didn’t! I was never there. I just made it all up at my desk.” He shakes his head. “I don’t take pride in this, mind you. Before the war I was a real reporter. I investigated, I asked questions, I wrote about what I found. Now…well, we all write what we are told to write.” He glances up at Miharu. “I probably should not speak so frankly.”

“Don’t worry, I understand,” the lieutenant assures him. “I was a teacher and scholar before I entered the Navy. Many of my friends are writers and I understand what things are like these days. Now, shall we begin the tour?”

Hiroo looks eagerly up at the torpedo deck and forward and aft at the ship’s bristling weaponry. “By all means!” he says, taking out a notebook.

---

“Lieutenant Miharu, the ship’s executive officer, is emblematic of the new breed of Japanese fighting man. The former professor is cool and unflappable in the face of even the gravest perils. He eyes his foes with the level gaze of a shogi champion, which he is, methodically plotting ways to sweep the enemy’s pieces from the board.”

---

“Captain Ishii, may I present Mr. Hiroo of the Asahi Shimbun. Mr. Hiroo, Captain Ishii.” Ishii looks up from the dispatches he is reading.

“What?” he says. “Oh, the reporter. Welcome aboard and all that. Sugiyura! Where is he? Ensign, find Lieutenant Sugiyura and have him report to me immediately.”

“Yes sir!”

“Captain,” says Hiroo, “I can see you are busy but I have a question for you, if you would be so kind.”

Ishii sighs. “Certainly,” he says with only a trace of impatience.

“Your ship has compiled an enviable record during the war,” Hiroo says. “What do you think is the secret to your success?”

“The secret?” says Ishii. “Hm. I would say the biggest thing is that we’ve been lucky. Damned lucky, in fact.”

---

“Lieutenant Commander Ishii, the ship’s captain, runs his ship with a hand of iron. He is modest about his accomplishments but his strong jaw speaks of determination and his fierce eyes burn with the desire to come to grips with and destroy the enemy.”

---

“Yoshitake! Shoji! Oizuma! Come here, please,” says the lieutenant. The three sailors jump up from the motor they are working on, trot over to Miharu, and salute. “This is Mr. Hiroo, a reporter,” Lieutenant Miharu says. “He is going to write an article about the ship and would like to ask you a few questions.”

“Yes, thank you Lieutenant,” he says. He looks at the men. “Um, at ease or whatever, fellows.” The sailors glance at Miharu, who nods fractionally. The men relax.

“Good, good,” says Hiroo. “Now, I know you men have been all over the Pacific during the war. Which of the exotic and distant ports of the new Japanese Empire have been your favorites, and why?” The three sailors look at each other.

“Well,” says Oizuma, “Rabaul was very nice. There were hot springs and some shops.”

“That’s where the cone snail almost killed me,” recalls Shoji.

“We spent the most time at Kwajalein,” says Yoshitake. “What a dull place!”

“That’s where I snagged the torpedo with the anchor,” says Shoji.

“But I did like Espiritu Santo,” says Yoshitake. “There was so much good food there!”

“That’s where I was washed overboard,” Shoji adds.

---

“The sailors excitedly recount tales of their past battles. Every port they have called at has its own stories filled with adventure and excitement. No danger seems to faze these fighting men.”

---

“Ah, Chief, there you are,” says Lieutenant Miharu. He introduces the reporter, who blinks upon seeing the remarkably ugly but powerfully built Shun. To his credit he recovers almost immediately.

“Chief Shun,” says Hiroo, “What do you think is the most important ability a petty officer should possess?”

Shun looks at Lieutenant Miharu and grins. “The ability,” he says to Hiroo, “to let the officers think that they are the ones running things.”

---

“Shun, the chief petty officer of the deck force, is a man of immense strength. To many of those aboard he is the heart of the ship’s fighting spirit. Yet like many old salts he is also something of a philosopher as well.”

---

“It’s a remarkable ship,” says Hiroo. “So many men and weapons in such a small space! I would not want to be the enemy who has to face this ship in battle.”

“I wouldn’t either,” says Lieutenant Miharu. “Yet the enemy has ships like it, and many more of them. If you talk to anyone, sailors, soldiers, airmen, anyone who has survived an encounter with the enemy, almost all of them speak of one thing – the almost unbelievable amount of firepower the enemy has. It is like trying to stand against a cyclone of steel and fire.”

“I have heard that,” says Hiroo. “But of course I can’t write anything of the kind.”

“No, I imagine not,” says the lieutenant. “I hope you got everything you needed from your visit.”

“I did, thank you,” Hiroo says, patting his notebook. “Good luck to you and the rest of the crew, Lieutenant. Look for my profile in the Asahi Shimbun in a couple of days!”

---

“While the big battleships and aircraft carriers get the most attention it is destroyers that form the backbone of the fleet. And high in the ranks of the destroyers stands Hibiki. This fine ship exemplifies the superior principles of Japanese naval design and her crew exemplifies the fighting spirit of the Imperial Japanese Navy. With such ships and such men no one can doubt that the enemy’s aggression is doomed to end in inglorious defeat. Everyone aboard Hibiki knows that it is only a matter of time before they and the rest of the Combined Fleet sweep the enemy from the seas.”


(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 3708
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/13/2008 12:01:44 AM   
Marc gto

 

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From: Batavia,ohio,usa
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excellent writing :)

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Post #: 3709
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/13/2008 12:23:55 AM   
kaleun

 

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From: Colorado
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quote:

excellent writing :)


Hiroo or Cuttlefish?

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Appear at places to which he must hasten; move swiftly where he does not expect you.
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Post #: 3710
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/13/2008 4:48:23 AM   
thegreatwent


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From: Denver, CO
Status: offline
Whatever your muse CF she deserves greater patronage.

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/14/2008 1:29:30 AM   
Cuttlefish

 

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September 23, 1944

Location: Tokyo
Course: None
Attached to: Disbanded in port
Mission: None
System Damage: 0
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 475

Orders: Await further orders

---

Frank Barnwell wakes up disoriented. For one thing there is a ceiling above him, not jungle. Second, he is lying on a bed. He doesn’t think he ever really appreciated before what a marvelous invention beds are.

It takes a moment for him to remember where he is. Imphal, he thinks. I’m in the hospital at Imphal. He was a bit out of his head towards the end of the trek out of the jungle and remembers very little of how he got here.

“Oh good, you’re awake,” says a cheery voice. A female voice. He turns his head and sees a pretty young nurse standing there. How glorious! Women, he thinks, are the best invention of all.

“How do you feel?” she asks briskly, cutting off his train of thought.

“Not..” he starts, then coughs. It sounds as though there is a hedgehog in his throat. The nurse pours some water from a pitcher on his bed stand and hands him the glass. He nods gratefully and drinks.

“Not bad,” he says, clearing his throat. “Weak, though.”

“I am not surprised,” she says. “You were a very sick man, Mr. Barnwell. But you are going to be fine. The doctor will be coming around soon to have a look at you. If he says you’re strong enough we will have you out of here in no time.”

“I think I like it here,” says Barnwell, smiling at her. “But at least I’ll be flying over the jungle again, not crawling through it.”

“Flying?” she says. “Don’t be foolish. You need time to recover. When you leave here it will be to go back to England.” She walks away and Barnwell is so distracted he hardly notices her retreat. He wants to see the orders before he believes it for certain but it looks as though Frank Barnwell’s war is finally over.


(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 3712
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/14/2008 7:23:17 PM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
Joined: 1/24/2007
From: Oregon, USA
Status: offline
September 24, 1944

Location: Tokyo
Course: South
Attached to: TF 27
Mission: Surface Combat
System Damage: 0
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 475

Orders: Proceed to Iwo Jima

---

Two hundred miles north of Saipan, where the powerful Japanese garrison is essentially cut off, lies Pagan Island. Pagan is one of the largest of the Northern Mariana Islands. It is essentially two active stratovolcanoes connected by a narrow isthmus, sparsely inhabited and covered with lush vegetation. The Japanese have about 800 men there, mostly support personnel for the small airstrip.

It is certainly not a force capable of resisting the United States Marine division that begins to come ashore in the morning following a short but powerful bombardment. Nor, to tell the truth, do they really try. Most of the men flee, leaving the enemy to take leisurely possession of the airstrip and the small cluster of buildings nearby.

---

At Tokyo a scratch force of warships is assembled and ordered to head for Iwo Jima. The force is under the command of Rear Admiral Sohei Tashiro, whose flag is aboard heavy cruiser Suzuya. With Suzuya are destroyers Akigumo, Fujinami, Isokaze, Asakaze, and Hibiki. Other cruisers and destroyers will rendezvous with them at Iwo.

---

Pagan Island:







Attachment (1)

(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 3713
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/14/2008 7:53:41 PM   
ColFrost


Posts: 145
Joined: 10/29/2003
From: South St Paul, MN
Status: offline
Excellent work CF, although I have a sense of foreboding - I just lost a surface fleet trying to do the same thing. I wonder how much air power they have at Saipan already?

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...the bravest are surely those who have the clearest vision of what is before them, glory and danger alike, and yet notwithstanding go out and meet it.

-Thucydides

(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 3714
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/14/2008 8:18:23 PM   
Capt. Harlock


Posts: 5358
Joined: 9/15/2001
From: Los Angeles
Status: offline
quote:

“Flying?” she says. “Don’t be foolish. You need time to recover. When you leave here it will be to go back to England.” She walks away and Barnwell is so distracted he hardly notices her retreat. He wants to see the orders before he believes it for certain but it looks as though Frank Barnwell’s war is finally over.


They used to talk about a "million-dollar wound". (The one that meant you were going home but could fully recover from.) Looks like Barnwell caught a million-quid bug!

_____________________________

Civil war? What does that mean? Is there any foreign war? Isn't every war fought between men, between brothers?

--Victor Hugo

(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 3715
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/14/2008 8:22:24 PM   
Capt. Harlock


Posts: 5358
Joined: 9/15/2001
From: Los Angeles
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: ColFrost

Excellent work CF, although I have a sense of foreboding - I just lost a surface fleet trying to do the same thing. I wonder how much air power they have at Saipan already?


If I'm reading the AAR aright, Saipan is still under Japanese control, but too dangerous for IJN ships to approach. It's the airfields in Guam and Tinian that are the problem.

_____________________________

Civil war? What does that mean? Is there any foreign war? Isn't every war fought between men, between brothers?

--Victor Hugo

(in reply to ColFrost)
Post #: 3716
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/14/2008 9:22:58 PM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
Joined: 1/24/2007
From: Oregon, USA
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Capt. Harlock


quote:

ORIGINAL: ColFrost

Excellent work CF, although I have a sense of foreboding - I just lost a surface fleet trying to do the same thing. I wonder how much air power they have at Saipan already?


If I'm reading the AAR aright, Saipan is still under Japanese control, but too dangerous for IJN ships to approach. It's the airfields in Guam and Tinian that are the problem.


Yes, Japan still holds Saipan. This is the situation in the Pacific: the Allies control all of eastern New Guinea and all of northern New Guinea west to Hollandia; Woleai, the Admiralty Islands, Ulithi, Guam, Tinian, and now Pagan; Wake and Eniwetok. Japan holds Yap, Palau, Saipan, Iwo and Bonin, Marcus Island, New Britain, Truk, all of the Marshalls except Eniwetok, the Gilberts, the Solomons, and Baker.

_____________________________


(in reply to Capt. Harlock)
Post #: 3717
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/14/2008 10:50:48 PM   
Marc gto

 

Posts: 229
Joined: 9/25/2000
From: Batavia,ohio,usa
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hibiki to the rescue

(in reply to Cuttlefish)
Post #: 3718
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/15/2008 12:10:26 AM   
Terminus


Posts: 41459
Joined: 4/23/2005
From: Denmark
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Capt. Harlock

quote:

“Flying?” she says. “Don’t be foolish. You need time to recover. When you leave here it will be to go back to England.” She walks away and Barnwell is so distracted he hardly notices her retreat. He wants to see the orders before he believes it for certain but it looks as though Frank Barnwell’s war is finally over.


They used to talk about a "million-dollar wound". (The one that meant you were going home but could fully recover from.) Looks like Barnwell caught a million-quid bug!


Malaria, mayhap?

_____________________________

We are all dreams of the Giant Space Butterfly.

(in reply to Capt. Harlock)
Post #: 3719
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/15/2008 1:11:33 AM   
Onime No Kyo


Posts: 16842
Joined: 4/28/2004
Status: offline
Oh boy! I hope the Hibiki force joins up with some more of the larger ships. We need some bigger bomb magnets around to keep our beloved ship safe.

_____________________________

"Mighty is the Thread! Great are its works and insane are its inhabitants!" -Brother Mynok

(in reply to Terminus)
Post #: 3720
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