WASHINGTON (AP) — For
decades, as chroniclers of the battle that turned the tide of World War
II in the Pacific second-guessed Vice Adm. Stanhope Cotton Ring, his
voice was silent. He had locked it away in his sea chest.
Now, the Navy commander
who lost 27 aircraft from a 60-plane squadron in the confusion of the
early hours of the Battle of Midway speaks from the grave about what
went wrong. It's all there in a 22-page, handwritten letter dated March
28, 1946, and only recently discovered in a sea chest by his family.
"There has been much
written about the Battle of Midway, and in many respects there has been
a startling lack of accuracy," begins Ring, who died in 1963. "This is
an attempt, almost four years after the action, to set down in black
and white my best recollections of what occurred."
It was early on June 4,
1942, when Ring led his air wing from the carrier USS Hornet in one of
the first forays against a four-carrier Japanese task force.
Of his 60 planes, 45
never saw the Japanese armada, and many ran out of fuel and crashed
into the sea. The 15 that engaged the enemy, a squadron of slow and
defenseless Devastator torpedo bombers flying without fighter
protection, were picked off one by one by Japanese Zeros without making
a single hit on the ships.
In addition to the 15
torpedo bombers, 10 fighters and two dive bombers were lost. The two
fighter pilots and 29 of the 30 pilots and radio operators of the
torpedo bombers died.
On returning to the
Hornet, Ring found only 18 Douglas Dauntless scout bombers had made it
back; 15 of the 17 dive bombers landed on Midway island and later were
able to return to action.
"I was shaken at the
realization of such losses," Ring wrote.
None of the major
historians of the battle talked with Ring about his role, but their
near-unanimous verdict was that his planes lost their way. The line of
reasoning held that his inability to attack in the battle's crucial
early hours caused greater American losses than necessary, including
the carrier USS Yorktown.
Ring, the Hornet's
senior aviator whose air wing accounted for one-third of the strike
force at Midway, admits to a mistaken assessment of a murky situation.
His letter makes clear,
however, that "he was never lost at all" said Navy Capt. Bruce Linder,
who edited and annotated the letter for the Annapolis, Md.,-based Naval
Institute. "Those that jumped to that oversimplification lost the true
significance of the complexity of the fledgling level of naval aviation
in the early 1940s" when navigation and communications methods were
poor.
The "Lost Letter of
Midway" was published in the U.S. Naval Institute's monthly
"Proceedings" magazine in August.
Ring's planes, along
with the air group from the USS Enterprise, were to fly under radio
silence to a location near Midway where the Japanese carriers were
expected, with their planes away attacking U.S. installations at
Midway. The undefended carriers would have been easy targets — if only
they had been there.
When he didn't see the
carriers, Ring said he "decided that I should proceed on the assumption
that the enemy was closing Midway and directed the course of the
(planes) accordingly" toward the island. "My change of Air Group course
to the south was based entirely on my estimate of the situation (which
proved faulty) and not on definite information of the enemy movements."
The Japanese had
learned of the approaching American naval force and had turned to the
northeast to find it, a 90-degree angle from Ring's course.
Approaching Midway,
Ring saw smoke but no enemy and decided "immediate return to the
carrier was necessary ... since fuel supply was running low."
Ring picked up an
unfamiliar homing signal — the code had been changed, and Hornet had
not received word — and signaled his planes to ignore the beacon and
return by dead reckoning. His scout bombers followed him, but the dive
bombers and fighters did not. He tried to turn them back, "but I could
not catch them."
"When I finally gave up
the chase, VS-8 had disappeared from sight and VB-8 was apparently
headed for Midway," he said of the plane groups.
His analysis of what
went wrong — mainly communication problems and an inexperienced crew —
agree with the evaluation of Adm. Chester W. Nimitz, the Pacific
commander in chief, who wrote in his official report that the battle
illustrated a need for better training for land and sea forces and more
effective communication.
The torpedo bombers
turned northward and chanced upon the Japanese carriers at roughly the
same time as the Enterprise aviators.
Lt. Cmdr. John Waldron,
commanding the Devastators, "courageously and in the face of certain
destruction led his command in a torpedo attack against the enemy,"
Ring wrote. By tying up the Zeros in defending their carriers against
the torpedoes, Waldron's attack allowed dive bombers from Enterprise to
mortally wound three of the Japanese carriers.
The sole survivor of
the Hornet torpedo crews was Ens. George Gay, a pilot who clung to a
seat cushion as war swirled about him. He was picked up 30 hours later
and reported having thought to himself during his ordeal: "It's the end
of the world, and I have a grandstand seat."
Gay died four years
ago, and his ashes were put into the Pacific on Aug. 31, 1995, at the
spot where his comrades died 53 years earlier.
The Americans
eventually prevailed at Midway.
During the three-day
battle, an outnumbered U.S. force sank all four Japanese carriers and a
heavy cruiser, put another cruiser out of action and destroyed more
than 250 planes and some of the Japanese Navy's most experienced combat
pilots.
The battle 1,100 miles
west of Hawaii ended Japan's early advance through the Pacific toward
the American territory and put the Allies on course to Japan's
surrender on Sept. 2, 1945.