War Studies: British naval supremacy ended on the 10th December 1941

A 136 years of the Royal Navy’s global supremacy ended with the sinking of the battleship, Prince of Wales and battle cruiser, Repulse by the Japanese. Neither the Admiralty, or politicians, understood that British naval domination was shaky beforethis débâcle.  

The sinking of the British warships was aided by naval officers infected by hubris. None more so than commander Admiral Phillips.

What went wrong? Why did Tom Phillips ignore the air threat to his fleet? Why did he leave Singapore and go north at all, given the immense Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) strength in ships and aircraft? Why did he maintain wireless telegraphy silence after Force Z had left Singapore….. Force Z was puny….1

The cream of the Royal Navy was sunk in an hour by Japanese  torpedo bombers.

A government cover-up began immediately with Hansard reporting that nothing informative would be said,

Major Stourton asked the Prime Minister whether he is now in a position to make a further statement regarding the circumstances of the loss of His Majesty’s Ships “Prince of Wales” and “Repulse”; and whether, at the time of the sinking of these two ships, they were protected by an adequate escort of seaborne or land-based fighter aircraft?

§Mr. Attlee [deputy PM] I regret that I am not able to add to the statements which have already been made on this subject.

§Major Stourton  Is my right hon. Friend aware that there is considerable public anxiety on this issue? Will the Government trust the people for once, and tell the whole truth? (my emphasis)2

Attlee was protecting Winston Churchill. Churchill’s wilful ignorance of Japanese military capabilities was fuelled by his Victorian racism. He knew the task force was incapable of halting the Japanese onslaught and yet insisted they proceed without air cover. Britain’s only viable aircraft carrier was in the USA after being damaged in the Caribbean. Japan’s destruction of the USA’s fleet at Pearl Harbour two days before the sinking of the British warships was criminally ignored. The Pearl Harbour surprise attack had demonstrated Japanese prowess and Britain’s ships went like lambs to the slaughter.

The sinking of these ships was cataclysmic. It ended the era of battleships as the principal naval weapon for every navy. Air craft carriers were now pre-eminent.

Notes

1 Prince of Wales and Repulse: Churchill’s “Veiled Threat” Reconsidered – International Churchill Society 2 LOSS OF HIS. MAJESTY’S SHIPS “PRINCE OF WALES” AND “REPULSE.” (Hansard, 8 January 1942)

Posted in History, Politics, War | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

A milkman delivers

Posted in Humour, quips | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

John Sinclair on American Socialism

Socialism never took root in America because the poor see themselves not as an exploited proletariat but as temporarily embarrassed millionaires.

Quoted in James O’Brien How they broke Britain p221

Posted in Economics, Humour, Politics | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Women after my own heart

Posted in Humour | Tagged | Leave a comment

Henrik Ibsen’s (alleged) last words

Nurse: “Well you seem to being doing better today.”

Ibsen: “On the contrary.”

He then died.

Posted in Health, Humour, quips | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Muhammad Ali’s wisdom

“I don’t trust anyone who’s nice to me but rude to the waiter. Because they would treat me the  same way if I were in that position.”

Posted in Sport | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Not in Canada

Posted in Humour, Politics | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

A Spike Milligan quip

“What would you rather have: a boring truth, or an exciting lie?”

Posted in Humour, quips | Tagged | Leave a comment

War Studies: Crimea, 2014: Might is right

“Might makes right” has been described as the credo of totalitarian regimes.1 The doctrine was first developed by the Ancient Greeks, “justice is nothing else than the interest of the stronger”….”2

The Russian invasion of Crimea was an audacious example of ‘might is right’. Democratic politicians were paralysed into collusion as they didn’t understand the logic of annexation. They deluded themselves into believing war was history. The lessons of the ferocious 1990s Balkan wars were forgotten.3 Presumably they thought that was an aberration, which could be safely ignored.

Putin paid attention and his invasion of the Crimea was predicated on western flabbiness. It was a triumph for Realpolitik.4

On 27 February [2014], Russian armed forces without insignias seized the building of the Supreme Council of Crimea and the building of the Council of Ministers in Simferopol. Crimea belonged to Russia again.5

The annexation took two days. Britain’s William Hague said

‘This action is a potentially grave threat to the sovereignty, independence and territorial integrity of Ukraine. We condemn any act of aggression against Ukraine’. (my emphasis)

Hague’s ‘potentially grave’ remark is supine. It mirrors Hitler’s contempt for Chamberlain who he described as a ‘worm’ in 1938,

He [Hitler] told me [Chamberlain] privately….. that after this Sudeten German question is settled, that is the end of Germany’s territorial claims in Europe. 6

Hague’s ‘potentially grave’ remark was Britain’s response to the invasion of a European country. Hague didn’t advise against British participation in the Olympic Games in Sochi even as the invasion was taking place in Crimea. Presumably he didn’t want to inconvenience athletes who’d trained hard. Britain, Europe and the USA imposed sanctions, which are notoriously ineffective. Putin had called the West’s bluff.

Although this wasn’t 1930s appeasement, it was close. Putin concluded the West would think that the Russo-Ukraine conflict was a, “….quarrel in a far away country between people of whom we know nothing.7 A few months later Putin’s campaign to annex eastern Ukraine began leading with inexorable military and political logic to the 2022 invasion.8

Notes

1 Might makes right – Wikipedia

2 loc.cit.

3 Balkans war: a brief guide – BBC News

4 Realpolitik – Wikipedia

5 Russia’s 2014 invasion of Crimea – a short history | Sky HISTORY TV Channel

6 Neville Chamberlain – Wikiquote

7  loc .cit

8 Russian invasion of Ukraine – Wikipedia

Posted in History, Politics, War | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Working at the White House

“If I’m going to be trivial, inconsequential, and deceitful…I might as well be in government.”

Joseph Heller Closing Time (1994) p159

Posted in Humour, Politics | Tagged , | Leave a comment