The Most Daring Mission of WWII - The Doolittle Raid on Tokyo

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  • Опубликовано: 27 окт 2024

Комментарии • 174

  • @seatedliberty
    @seatedliberty 3 года назад +101

    I had the extreme honor of meeting Dick Cole, co-pilot of the lead plane of the Doolittle raid when he was 101 years old. He still had one hell of a firm handshake.

    • @restitvtororbis5330
      @restitvtororbis5330 Год назад +7

      If i got my math right he would have been about 26 when he was on the raid. I can't even imagine how it would feel to go on a crazy one way trip (bordering on suicide mission) and make peace with the idea that this has a very high chance of being the end, only to discover that you had barely lived 1/4 of your life, and would go on to live to 103 afterwards. The man must have had an appreciation for his life i can't even comprehend

    • @TexasGreed
      @TexasGreed Год назад +1

      ​@@restitvtororbis5330 that's what I'm talking about man. When I think of the things I was doing and decisions I was making at 26 it almost feels like a joke. I couldn't imagine me and my friends at 26 getting together and raiding Japan in the slightest. Sometimes I wonder if the kids in the US now have it in em. I like to imagine if the time comes our current generations can muster this kind of strength. I guess the times create the people and the people create the times.

    • @sebastien3351
      @sebastien3351 3 месяца назад

      You are not a joke, you simply live in a time in which you are not severely challenged as these young men were.

  • @robertsmith2227
    @robertsmith2227 2 года назад +41

    This raid led to the battle of Midway, June 4th 1942, which really should be a national holiday in our country.

    • @harryparsons2750
      @harryparsons2750 Год назад +1

      So should December 7 plus it’s my birthday

    • @kmslegal7808
      @kmslegal7808 4 месяца назад +2

      we have Juneteenth instead

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 4 месяца назад

      @@kmslegal7808 Let that holiday share this occasion.

    • @Corvacar
      @Corvacar Месяц назад

      @@kmslegal7808. Not much of a replacement is it ? The significance of this Raid is immense.
      Fergieman

  • @countrysamurai
    @countrysamurai 2 года назад +15

    I have met over 30 of the Raiders and widows.
    A friend found out what hotel they were staying at, before their yearly reunion. We were able to meet many and get dozens of signatures on art work and in our books. I have also met many of the Raiders in different venues where I was the only one talking with them, for hours.
    It is incredible that so many people do not know of them or what heros they are.
    I was fortunate enough to actually see Gen. Doolittle back in ‘86. I was 24 and knew his place in history.
    The Legend himself.
    I have met Carroll Glines, who was the official historian of
    The Doolittle Raiders. He wrote one of the definitive accounts of the raid.
    A few corrections...as you can see by the video of the planes launching,
    This is them taking off on the actual raid. The sea is very rough and had spray coming over the deck of the Hornet. Doolittle lifted off and flew a quick circle, flew parallel with the Hornet to check his compass, then headed to Tokyo. As you stated, to launch all the aircraft, took about an hour. Because of the fuel issue and being forced to launch so early, all the crews, were told to head directly to their assigned targets, not to loiter or form up. They did not form up in groups. It was a long line of B25's to Japan. They were spread out over a 50 mile front, to give the appearance of having more planes.
    Tokyo was not the only target, as told by the wartime video. There were 5 total, Tokyo, Yokohama, Kobe, Nagoya, and Osaka.
    The planes were initially equipped with the Norden bombsight but since it was a top secret device and they bombed at low altitude, a cheap replacement was designed by one of the pilots, Ross Greening, i have met his widow, Dot.
    The widows of the Raiders were invited to the yearly reunions of the Raiders.
    It was daylight when they hit their targets but nighttime in a terrible storm when they crossed the China Sea. Doolittle had his crew bail out over land at night. Ted Lawson's plane and another ditched at night but his leg was injured and amputated later.
    Ted wrote...30 Seconds Over Tokyo. I have met his widow Ellen.
    This is the most important operation of the war. It forced the attack on Midway and that was the turning point in the Pacific.
    Afterwards, Japan was on the defensive with no more victories.
    Except for The Battle of Savo Island.

    • @Bydey
      @Bydey 8 месяцев назад +3

      This comment was top tier. Thanks for the detailed info.

  • @TJ3
    @TJ3  3 года назад +23

    Hope you guys enjoy! Historical notes - 1) The bombers were likely a little more spread out than pictured in my recreation of the raid, likely miles apart due to target locations. 2) I am limited in the skins I have to use, so some of the insignias in the later part of the video are not the ones that would have actually been on the B-25s in 1942. Thanks :) grab some TJ3 fanwear here! tj3-gaming-merch.creator-spring.com/

    • @chesterlouis8361
      @chesterlouis8361 4 месяца назад

      Yes, you are correct in your first note. They didn't group up and fly in together, they all flew in solo. ✌

  • @LeonardCooperman
    @LeonardCooperman 2 года назад +23

    These men were incredibly brave knowing it was probably a suicide mission. Just amazing.

  • @BHuang92
    @BHuang92 3 года назад +35

    One of the most significant raids of the Pacific front.

  • @chroniciguana402
    @chroniciguana402 2 года назад +84

    Oddly, the pilot and copilot of the aircraft that landed in the Soviet Union were both fluent in Russian.

    • @gaychristianmale422
      @gaychristianmale422 2 года назад +7

      probably Soviet spies

    • @williamcarey8529
      @williamcarey8529 2 года назад +14

      I do believe that the crew that landed in Russia were on some sort of diplomatic mission or were testing the Allied/Soviet Alliance was going to work out or not.

    • @CarlosPF94
      @CarlosPF94 Год назад +11

      @@williamcarey8529 that’s highly possible, especially during this time, secret missions within secret missions were common place.

    • @williamcarey8529
      @williamcarey8529 Год назад +1

      @@CarlosPF94 Thank you!!

    • @szymonchlebicki4606
      @szymonchlebicki4606 Год назад +3

      @@CarlosPF94 secret mission²

  • @rodbutler8069
    @rodbutler8069 3 года назад +27

    The Doolittle raid confirmed to the aggresive Japanese Empire that the US was coming for them at home. They awoke a sleeping giant.

  • @airguy5024
    @airguy5024 3 года назад +31

    Excellent video.
    I would recommend the 1944 movie Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo.
    Spencer Tracy, Van Johnson and a tremendous supporting cast.
    It is based on the book by Ted Lawson who was one of the pilots.
    It documents the training, the mission and the struggle these men endured to return home,

    • @ramblerdave1339
      @ramblerdave1339 3 месяца назад

      I read Lawson's book in the eighth grade, it's was my favorite story from the Pacific front, and the B-25, my favorite bomber. It was many years, before I learned about Midway!

    • @jackvoss5841
      @jackvoss5841 2 месяца назад

      I started flying lessons 16 years ago, when I was 70. I rented planes and instructors. A couple years later I bought my own plane, and promptly had the “Ruptured Duck” nose art painted on it. I was honoring the raiders and their accomplishments.
      My Ruptured Duck and I flew another 8 years. At 80, I decided to not fly any longer, and sold the Duck.
      Courtesy of Half Vast Flying

  • @wallybrown9509
    @wallybrown9509 3 года назад +13

    Most definatly one of the most amazing missions, and heroic acts of bravery in the history of war. Amazing men, and TRUE HEROS. Real heros, not fake wannabe heros most people think today.

    • @calebshuler1789
      @calebshuler1789 2 года назад

      God Bless

    • @sloansarabia
      @sloansarabia 2 месяца назад

      And Doolittle was piloting the first plane! Talk of leadership!

  • @StephenLuke
    @StephenLuke 6 месяцев назад +8

    RIP
    William J. Dieter
    (1912-1942)
    Donald E. Fitzmaurice
    (1919-1942)
    Leland D. Faktor
    (1921-1942)
    and
    The 50 Imperial Japanese civilians who were killed in the Doolittle Raid

  • @matrox
    @matrox 2 года назад +10

    I flew with Jimmy Doolittle in the raid......with my IL2 flight sim.😁

  • @AlexDahlseid2002
    @AlexDahlseid2002 3 года назад +12

    After the Doolittle raid Jimmy Doolittle would serve as the commander of 8th Air Force in the European Theater of WWII.

  • @maxazzopardi7446
    @maxazzopardi7446 2 года назад +17

    This was a subtle way of telling the Japanese military a preview of things to come.

    • @tdamtoft
      @tdamtoft Год назад +1

      Subtle? It was pretty direct and bloody well done!

  • @theoanderson1862
    @theoanderson1862 10 месяцев назад +4

    As always, a truly superb telling of an important historical event!
    Nitpicking begins: The photograph of "Lt Col Doolittle" was actually Major General Doolittle from later in the war.
    An interesting side note worthy of mention is that Doolittle was one of a very few soldiers in American history who was allowed to skip a rank and was promoted to Brigadier General a day after the raid, skipping the rank of Full Colonel altogether.

    • @Astrobrant2
      @Astrobrant2 4 месяца назад

      Yes, I noticed that he was a brigadier general when he was given the medal. I thought, "That was quick! So much for time-in-grade requirements."

  • @vinnieklimas8800
    @vinnieklimas8800 4 месяца назад +3

    Outstanding! Tears of honor and joy fall from my eyes but originate from my heart and soul!

  • @Brian-nw2bn
    @Brian-nw2bn 2 года назад +9

    This video was absolutely brilliant man. I love the recreations you do, they’re awesome at painting the picture ! Keep up the great work brother, your channels gonna keep blowin up, you deserve all the good things coming your way my guy glad to be here and look forward to all your work to come !

  • @LelannAubin
    @LelannAubin 4 месяца назад +2

    I enjoyed your telling of the story. My dad was on the USS NASHVILLE at that time.

  • @justinpurnell9791
    @justinpurnell9791 3 года назад +12

    Love the content man, definitely something I don’t see often on here, very unique. Keep up the good work!

  • @rodneycarey44
    @rodneycarey44 Год назад +2

    I would have been truly an honor to have been in the company of any of these men. A time in our nation when bravery and honor were admired, respected and valued.

  • @sweisbrod6109
    @sweisbrod6109 4 месяца назад +4

    Around 1980 we were visiting the Air Force Museum in Dayton Ohio. It was a hot day and wed been looking at some planes outside. We walked in to the museum through an open door at the back of a big hanger. It was set up for a dinner with many tables for 8 or 10 with white linens and sparkling table settings. There was a stage and podium flanked by two B-25 Mitchells.
    A young Airman pointed out that the area was closed to the public as there was a banquet there. I apologized for the intrusion and he assured us it was ok showed us to the door leading to the museum. As we, myself, my wife and our son and daughter, were walking out the corridor we saw a large group of elderly couples walking toward us. They all smiled and nodded, a few even stopped to talk and spoke to our kids who were 8 and 6. After they had passed i looked back and over tge doorway was a large sign that said,
    "Welcome Doolittle Raiders".

  • @01ZO6TT
    @01ZO6TT 2 года назад +5

    Well done, this is very detailed. I learned things about the raid that I didn’t know before. Keep it up. You now have a new subscriber.

    • @TJ3
      @TJ3  2 года назад

      Thank you!

  • @frankieblue1945
    @frankieblue1945 2 года назад +3

    That was pretty darn cool. Thanks man.

  • @Zany4God
    @Zany4God 2 года назад +4

    You did a great job. I look forward to another .

  • @alcoholfree6381
    @alcoholfree6381 Год назад

    A marvelous documentary on the amazing Doolittle Raid on Tokyo.
    My father was a bombardier in Europe. His first mission was on D-Day and his 24th mission was at the Battle of the Bulge on 12/24/1944. His plane was shot down that day; only 3 of the crew survived. I would love to see a documentary on what each position on the B-17 did. When I learned where the bombardier sat I was totally flabbergasted!!
    This documentary showed a lot of views I had never seen. Thanks

  • @brettj.m.roebuck17
    @brettj.m.roebuck17 3 года назад +8

    Wonderful review of the raid. Great job.

  • @robtob5150
    @robtob5150 Год назад +3

    I don't understand why this channel doesn't have at least a million subscribers.

    • @TJ3
      @TJ3  Год назад +1

      Thanks :)

  • @skimmer8774
    @skimmer8774 3 года назад +4

    Excellent reporting. Theses men set an example for thousands and thousands of fliers. Salute!

  • @josemoreno3334
    @josemoreno3334 Год назад +3

    The new B-21 stealth bomber of the USAF is called the Raider named in honor after the Doolittle Tokyo Raiders.👍. Great video 👍🎥. I'm retired USAF.🪖

  • @tonyholt90
    @tonyholt90 2 года назад +3

    Yeah definitely enjoyed this ! Very informative 👍

  • @jopitomnik1396
    @jopitomnik1396 3 года назад +5

    Very good video and your diction is excellent, I understand almost everything 😉 (english is not my mother tong). Thanks for all from France.

  • @asophia21
    @asophia21 Год назад

    Excellent video! Just heard about the Doolittle Raid yesterday and wanted to learn about it. After several attempts to find a video that it explained it well, I found yours! Thank you!

    • @TJ3
      @TJ3  Год назад

      Thanks :) glad you enjoyed

  • @johnericmalla8233
    @johnericmalla8233 2 года назад +3

    Very well done ☺️

  • @KyleCowden
    @KyleCowden 3 года назад +9

    Love this new series. Having seen many, many coverages of this raid; this is so much more engaging. One thing I've thought about from time to time is, were I there, I'd want to be one of the last in the pack. I'd want the entire deck as opposed to, say, half that the front planes had.
    Added in Edit: Sit at the feet of any of our heroes that still live, especially those from WWII, we are losing hundreds every day. There are so few left and even the Viet Nam veterans are reaching that age where they're starting to pass at an increasing rate. Listen, document if you can because once they are gone, there stories die with them.

  • @jmrodas9
    @jmrodas9 2 года назад +2

    This was a really daring raid, using aircraft that had not been designed for what they did, but they managed to do their mission, and to thrust back the Japanese's military greatest boast, that Toyo would never be bombed.

  • @oneshotme
    @oneshotme 3 года назад +2

    Enjoyed your video and I gave it a Thumbs Up

  • @coachpetemeadows6476
    @coachpetemeadows6476 6 месяцев назад +2

    You did a great job.

  • @TangoIndiaMike144
    @TangoIndiaMike144 3 года назад +4

    Awesome job man, you're a great a storyteller!

  • @charlespoindexter5105
    @charlespoindexter5105 3 месяца назад

    I have the book " Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo", written and signed by Capt. Ted Lawson, pilot of the Ruputured Duck, the 7th plane off the USS Hornet. A treasure I have kept since my days in elementary school.

  • @miketucker5532
    @miketucker5532 2 месяца назад

    Payback.
    Stone-cold righteous.
    Long live Doolittle's Raiders.

  • @Nativeat1YT
    @Nativeat1YT 3 года назад +1

    Beautiful.

  • @thomaspridmore106
    @thomaspridmore106 2 года назад +1

    Just giving it back what you sow you will reap brave lads

  • @surge384
    @surge384 2 года назад

    Superb doc. Thank you

  • @topnotch365
    @topnotch365 2 месяца назад

    Great video of a badly needed daring raid. However, because of the fuel shortage, they couldn't waist fuel waiting to fly in formation. They had to just take off and make a bee-line for their individual target. Of all of the concerns that they had to worry about, scarcity of fuel and lack of defensive protection was right up there at the top of the list (besides making it back alive).

  • @TheBishop12
    @TheBishop12 Год назад +2

    16:50 to expand
    “The Untold Story of the Vengeful Japanese Attack After the Doolittle Raid”
    When the U.S. responded to Pearl Harbor with a surprise bombing of Tokyo, the Imperial Army took out its fury on the Chinese people.
    That generosity shown by the Chinese would trigger a horrific retaliation by the Japanese that claimed an estimated quarter-million lives and would prompt comparisons to the 1937-38 Rape of Nanking. American military authorities, cognizant that a raid on Tokyo would result in a vicious counterattack upon free China, saw the mission through regardless, even keeping the operation a secret from their Pacific theater allies. This chapter of the Doolittle Raid has largely gone unreported-until now.
    “They shot any man, woman, child, cow, hog, or just about anything that moved, They raped any woman from the ages of 10 - 65, and before burning the town they thoroughly looted it. Out of twenty-eight market towns in that region,” the committee’s report noted, “only three escaped devastation.”
    That August, Japan’s secret bacteriological warfare group, Unit 731, launched an operation to coincide with the withdrawal of Japanese troops from the region.
    In what was known as land bacterial sabotage, troops would contaminate wells, rivers, and fields, hoping to sicken local villagers as well as the Chinese forces, which would no doubt move back in and reoccupy the border region as soon as the Japanese departed. Over the course of several meetings, Unit 731’s commanding officers debated the best bacteria to use, settling on plague, anthrax, cholera, typhoid, and paratyphoid, all of which would be spread via spray, fleas, and direct contamination of water sources. For the operation, almost 300 pounds of paratyphoid and anthrax germs were ordered.
    Technicians filled peptone bottles with typhoid and paratyphoid bacteria, packaged them in boxes labeled “Water Supply,” and flew them to Nanking. Once in Nanking, workers transferred the bacteria to metal flasks-like those used for drinking water- and flew them into the target areas. Troops then tossed the flasks into wells, marshes, and homes. The Japanese also prepared 3,000 rolls, contaminated with typhoid and paratyphoid, and handed them to hungry Chinese prisoners of war, who were then released to go home and spread disease. Soldiers left another 400 biscuits infected with typhoid near fences, under trees, and around bivouac areas to make it appear as though retreating forces had left them behind, knowing hungry locals would devour them.

  • @TheOneAndOnlyPapaElias
    @TheOneAndOnlyPapaElias 3 года назад +1

    YEAAAH IVE BEEN SO EXCITED!!!!!!!!!
    I really want that *Ill see you in the skies* shirt!!!!

    • @TJ3
      @TJ3  3 года назад +2

      Wooooo!

  • @ericericson3535
    @ericericson3535 Год назад

    The Tambor class submarines, Trout and Thresher had different outcomes in the War. The Trout was sunk in April 1944, and Thresher survived the war and was decommissioned in 1947, she received 15 battle stars and a Navy Unit Commendation.

  • @1ramyus
    @1ramyus Год назад

    An earlier launch wasn't Mitscher's and Doolittle's decision but a personal decision of Adm. Halsey on the USS Enterprise. Halsey was a commander for the entire operation and the joint Task Force 16. Edit: An interesting fact is that there was no doubt that the B-25 could take off from the carrier because it was exercised off the coast of Virginia; when 2 B-25 tested launch from the deck of Hornet with both - full bomb load and half bomb load, with bags of sand serving as a weight equivalent.

  • @calebshuler1789
    @calebshuler1789 2 года назад +2

    Most heroic thing maybe in history

  • @claudemaassen2963
    @claudemaassen2963 Год назад

    Wonderful post. Thank you.

  • @jodypitt3629
    @jodypitt3629 2 года назад +1

    Yes he had devastated their Sukiyaki

  • @jackmunday7602
    @jackmunday7602 3 года назад +5

    Another fantastic video. The first time I heard about the Doolittle raid. I was convinced it was Hollywood fiction. I mean launching sixteen B-25 Mitchell medium bombers off an aircraft carrier. Something it was never designed to do. Don't be ridiculous.
    But it turns out it wasn't Hollywood fiction. It was all true. Not only did these brave men do the impossible. Launching a fully loaded ten ton bomber off an aircraft carrier, pushing the aircraft well beyond its design capabilities, but they also succeeded in their mission. Bombing Japan, hitting the enemy where they felt safest, and Sending both the Japanese military and Government into a panic.
    And for me, this moment in history was when Japanese lost the war. It wasn't Midway, or Guadalcanal, or the Marianas or the two Atomic Bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. It was the Doolittle raid. Because from that moment on, the Japanese realised just who they were fighting. An enemy that would seemingly bend the laws of physics themselves in order to win.
    Thanks for the Videos TJ3 History. You and your videos are awsome. 👍 🇺🇸 🇬🇧

    • @TJ3
      @TJ3  3 года назад +3

      Thanks!

  • @ValleyProud916
    @ValleyProud916 27 дней назад

    The B-25 was the most badass plane in WW2

  • @phillipboone2005
    @phillipboone2005 4 месяца назад

    For the USA yes I agree but for the allies hands down there was a raid by British commandos that was simply unbelievable. The British mission to destroy the dry dock at St. Nazaire , see BBC documentary, the lives willing sacrificed, the Victoria Cross's earned. Just an incredible story.

  • @claykemper7193
    @claykemper7193 2 года назад +5

    So why hasn't the B25 that landed safely in Russia ever been recovered?

    • @robertsmith2227
      @robertsmith2227 2 года назад

      They only had 5 years to come up with one of their own

    • @sledgehammerk35
      @sledgehammerk35 Год назад

      Several people tried to find it within the last 20 years. According to the most current research, the aircraft was most likely scrapped in the 1950s.

  • @williamdilley4576
    @williamdilley4576 Год назад

    One of the crew was from Gentry, MO.

  • @silmarienprince3137
    @silmarienprince3137 2 года назад

    That was so cool. Thanknu

  • @henriyoung3895
    @henriyoung3895 4 месяца назад

    I am from OC, California. We had the Marine Airstation in Tustin, California called. LTA. Lighter then Air. It was for Blimps. How about a video on the Blimps on both Coasts during WW2.
    Thanks,
    SGT DOUG, RECON, 101ST, RVN 68-69 LZ SALLY

  • @claudemaassen2963
    @claudemaassen2963 Год назад

    Very brave men indeed.

  • @RW-ij1ci
    @RW-ij1ci 8 месяцев назад +1

    Imagine from going as insane as Japan use to be, to being one of the coolest places on earth.... and Nintendo.

  • @OSCSWAW
    @OSCSWAW 4 месяца назад

    This is similar to when Rocky Balboa put Apollo Creed on the deck in the second round in their first fight as just to say" I can hurt you".

  • @matrox
    @matrox 2 года назад +1

    Jimmy DooLittle, no he DooBig.✊😆

  • @brokenbridge6316
    @brokenbridge6316 2 года назад

    Great video

  • @jacru14
    @jacru14 2 года назад

    Great research, concise content. Info not in any movie on this subject.
    William (bull) Halsey pronounced HALL ZEE.

  • @pramitdas7512
    @pramitdas7512 2 года назад

    This is great content

    • @TJ3
      @TJ3  2 года назад

      Thank you!

  • @harryparsons2750
    @harryparsons2750 Год назад +1

    No fighter escort? Probably didn’t have the range

  • @willem-janvroom6630
    @willem-janvroom6630 2 года назад +1

    It is not good, it is superb. :-)

  • @williamwang5575
    @williamwang5575 Год назад

    There should be tanker planes for mid air refueling

  • @harryparsons2750
    @harryparsons2750 Год назад

    Dolittle did a lot

  • @rubensanmaurodelbosqur1950
    @rubensanmaurodelbosqur1950 3 года назад

    Excelente video 👏.

  • @alanc0x
    @alanc0x 2 года назад

    Hey man! Congrats on the videos! Can you share the name of the song? ,🙏

    • @TJ3
      @TJ3  2 года назад +1

      I'm not sure which song this was as I made it a while back, but much of my music is by Bonnie Grace.

  • @gideon8304
    @gideon8304 3 года назад +1

    The best

  • @robinsattahip2376
    @robinsattahip2376 2 года назад +2

    Be accurate, they hit other cities besides Tokyo, though only with one or two planes.

  • @calebshuler1789
    @calebshuler1789 2 года назад +1

    The ole Hornet

  • @ViperGripen
    @ViperGripen 2 года назад +1

    Can you do Alexander pokryshkin next?

  • @harryparsons2750
    @harryparsons2750 Год назад +1

    The original Enterprise

  • @brucepoole8552
    @brucepoole8552 2 года назад +2

    The japanese were guilty of war crimes for the execution of the American fliers.

  • @JohnShields-xx1yk
    @JohnShields-xx1yk Месяц назад

    It's incalculable how much they boosted American pride and determination 🇺🇸

  • @Shoehandler1142
    @Shoehandler1142 Год назад

    Americas message after the raid: “I’m coming for you and will reap a vengeance the world has never seen and never will see again”

  • @terencewinters2154
    @terencewinters2154 4 месяца назад

    A daring raid that made some air force people think they were the equal of naval aviation. Yet they never had the capacity to make a carrier landing or design a plane that could . A rare cooperative effort but a flawed waste of pilots . Heroic aviation but 20% casualty rate .

  • @weissrw1
    @weissrw1 2 года назад +1

    How many hours of research did that take??? Very impressive!!!

  • @patricksnyder7724
    @patricksnyder7724 2 года назад +3

    Too bad America doesn’t have the same backbone anymore

  • @Astrobrant2
    @Astrobrant2 4 месяца назад

    I have to ask: We lost 16 planes and some men. What did the Japanese lose in this attack?

  • @calebhankins767
    @calebhankins767 3 месяца назад

    jakob deshazer,, one of the doollittle raiders, later became a Christian and missionary to Japan. What is crazy is that the Japenese man who led the attack on pearl harbor, also became a Christian, and these 2 men who were enemies became great friends. Just another example of how much better the world would be if they all had Jesus!

  • @fr57ujf
    @fr57ujf 4 месяца назад

    "Something unprecedented that had never been done before." As opposed to something unprecedented that had been done before?

  • @CodeElement190
    @CodeElement190 3 года назад +1

    How did you get the bombers on the flight deck?

    • @TJ3
      @TJ3  3 года назад +1

      Its a custom user mission online for War Thunder

    • @gilbertjamessalud3145
      @gilbertjamessalud3145 3 года назад +2

      @@TJ3 can you do another historical video like, an enemy bf 109 spared a b-17 flying fortress please?!?!?

    • @gilbertjamessalud3145
      @gilbertjamessalud3145 3 года назад

      @@TJ3 if you see my comment let me know ok?

    • @CodeElement190
      @CodeElement190 3 года назад

      @@TJ3 would it be possible for you to provide the link so we can try it as well?

    • @TJ3
      @TJ3  3 года назад

      Here you go, just follow the instructions to download and install. live.warthunder.com/post/278973/en/

  • @travisdavis9577
    @travisdavis9577 Год назад

    I can’t for the life of me understand why the emporers palace was not hit

    • @sledgehammerk35
      @sledgehammerk35 Год назад

      Doolittle forbid it from being hit out of fear that it would unite the Japanese people instead of demoralizing them, which meant the raid would have completely backfired. He made the correct call.

  • @luissupan9117
    @luissupan9117 3 года назад +2

    Wikipedia says that 100,000 civilians died, almost one million were left homeless. Successful raid? We're talking about civilians.

    • @TheBishop12
      @TheBishop12 Год назад

      Your phrase of the day: Collateral Damage

    • @sledgehammerk35
      @sledgehammerk35 Год назад

      Yeah it was a successful raid. They’d been massacring Chinese civilians long before that raid ever took place for the simple reason that they could. Whether the raid happened or not, the Japanese would’ve found another excuse to do exactly what they did.

  • @Tazfullboxedu
    @Tazfullboxedu 2 года назад

    To youtube this game is war thunder

  • @michaelgreenfield6146
    @michaelgreenfield6146 Год назад

    General Doolittle my brother in Freemasonry /G\

  • @harryparsons2750
    @harryparsons2750 Год назад

    I don’t think they planned on landing in China I think they ran out of fuel and had no choice

    • @sledgehammerk35
      @sledgehammerk35 Год назад

      No they definitely planned on landing in China and turning over the aircraft to the Chinese as part of the lend lease act. Unfortunately, the Chinese were given the wrong date for their arrival because someone screwed up and didn’t account for the international date line. So the raiders showed up a day earlier than the Chinese were expecting, which meant no homing beacons.

    • @johnheigis83
      @johnheigis83 5 месяцев назад

      Yes, The plan was, for landing-site lighting s, to click on, during prearranged times - for them, with intentions, of landing safely, and then, using the Bombers again, helping Nationalist China, against Japan.
      But, we weren't able to warn the China landing-sites, of the - way too - early mission launch.
      So, the Bombers were too early, with no landing -site beacons to guide them.
      Some researchers suspect, the one surviving plane, that landed in E Russia, may have been on a specific mission, of some kind; otherwise, none were supposed to fly there, unless must.
      At least, such be my understanding.
      Semper Fidelis...

  • @george217
    @george217 2 года назад

    Bull Halsey made the decision to launch early...

  • @MrCornaldo
    @MrCornaldo 2 года назад

    Hero’s

  • @paulleckner8235
    @paulleckner8235 4 месяца назад

    God bless America!

  • @rogermurray9058
    @rogermurray9058 2 года назад

    U.S.S.HORNET CV-8 Not ownly Aircraft Carrier Doolittle Raid U.S.S.Enterprise CV-6 was Serport Ship Raid On 80th Anniversary Doolittle Raid Navy Honor Raid Naming Navy Aircraft Carrier U.S.S.James Doolittle

  • @evanwindom3265
    @evanwindom3265 2 года назад

    This was an amazing accomplishment, but I think it's a huge stretch to call it the most daring raid of WWII.

  • @shichen2136
    @shichen2136 Год назад

    You don't know where is the east china sea

  • @nicheva417
    @nicheva417 Год назад

    Chinese got severly brutalised for facilitating this.

  • @calebshuler1789
    @calebshuler1789 2 года назад

    It was a suicide mission. True suicide mission. They did it anyway.

  • @Sebastiangarces987
    @Sebastiangarces987 3 года назад

    One