★日本海海戦 Tsushima Straights, 27-28 May, 1905 最も一方的勝利だった海戦の1つとして知られる。約12隻の戦艦と17隻の駆逐艦を持つロシア艦隊は 日本艦隊によって朝鮮半島南部で壊滅させられた。伝説となった東郷提督の命令の下、日本艦隊は 2日間で28隻の内最低21隻を撃沈し7隻を捕獲した。それはかつてロシア皇帝の強大な艦隊だったものだ。 日本側は主要艦艇の喪失は無かった。
In what could only be declared as one of the most lop-sided victories in naval warfare, a Russian fleet of nearly a dozen battleships and seventeen smaller vessels was decimated by a Japanese fleet off the southern coast of Korea. Under the command of the legendary Admiral Togo, over the course of two days the Japanese managed to sink no fewer than 21 of the 28 ships of the Czar’s once mighty fleet and capture seven more?all without the loss of a single capital ship. http://www.toptenz.net/top-10-naval-battles-game-changers.php0124名無しさん@1周年2018/10/13(土) 12:27:04.24ID:CYYo7kfO0 坂の上の雲は7・8巻だけでいい 0125名無しさん@1周年2018/10/13(土) 12:37:32.50ID:JwP3NFkd0 『広瀬死す』の回も良かった゜゜゜゜゜-y(^。^)。o0○プハー ---- 広瀬 「あき!」 秋山 「広瀬さん!」 広瀬 「秋山、久しいのう!」 秋山 「戦艦朝日で水雷長をやっておられるとか」 広瀬 「今日は艦長のお供できたんじゃ」 秋山 「ほう」 広瀬 「連合艦隊作戦参謀か。出世したのう、大出世じゃ!」 秋山 「いや」 広瀬 「わしでしかできない仕事を探す。それがお前の仕事じゃ!」 秋山 「広瀬さん・・・」 0126名無しさん@1周年2018/10/13(土) 12:38:40.28ID:yWV0PCNM0>>8 茶碗じゃなかった?一つの茶碗で弟が飯、兄が酒を交互に繰り返すってやつ。 0127名無しさん@1周年2018/10/13(土) 12:44:38.33ID:hZIadqWj0 朝鮮半島の歴史には誇れる事が1つも無いニダ('A`)… 0128名無しさん@1周年2018/10/13(土) 12:47:31.09ID:AzGXWxJ10 「坂の上の雲」読んだのは中学の時だった 最初は碌に会話がなく事実ばかり羅列してるすっげーつまらない本だと思ったけど途中から夢中になった ああいう風に戦争そのものを主題にした小説は今でも少ないんじゃないかな ドラマにはちょっと不満 その後出た乃木愚将論に対する疑義に答えなかったからね 乃木は名将と言えないまでも愚将ではなかったんじゃないかな 0129名無しさん@1周年2018/10/13(土) 12:48:06.83ID:AuIFi1Eo0>>127 自衛官はチョン並の存在や
When war broke out in Europe in September of 1939, Germany’s surface navy was no match for the immense Royal Navy so Hitler decided to utilize the same tactic Germany had used that came perilously close to winning the First World War: blockading Britain with its fleet of U-boats. Knowing that denying the British the imports it needed to keep its economy afloat would bring it to its knees, the strategy at first appeared to be working as German U-boats sank British merchant ships faster than they could be built. Once America entered the fray, however, and could bring her immense industrial strength to bear, things began to go sour for the Germans. Despite sinking huge numbers of American ships, by 1943 American industrial capability, combined with improved anti-submarine weapons and tactics, began to take their toll on the German navy until by 1944, U-boat losses were so bad that Germany was no longer able to take the fight to the Allies, thereby assuring ultimate victory in Europe. Before Hitler’s U-boats were finally tamed, however, they had sunk over 3,000 ships and 14 million tons of shipping?accounting for fully 70% of all Allied sea losses of the war. The cost for the German’s had been catastrophic, however, with the loss of nearly 800 submarines and 28,000 men?fully 75% of all the submarine sailors in the entire navy! Had it worked, however, Germany might have won the entire war by starving England into submission, much as American submarines successfully did to Japan by sending her merchant fleet to the bottom, which cut off the import of oil and raw materials Japanese heavy industry so desperately needed to keep fighting.
This was the engagement that won the war in the Pacific for the United States by so decisively defeating the Japanese Navy that it was forced to go on the defensive and end its plans for further territorial conquest. (Had it gone the other way, it could well have set the American war effort back a year and possibly even forced the Roosevelt administration to sue for peace.) The interesting thing about this battle is that even though it involved scores of ships on both sides, neither fleet ever spotted the other. In fact, all the fighting was done from the air, with the American and Japanese carrier pilots taking turns trying to send each other to the bottom. In the end, it was Japan who came off the worst: not only did it fail to conquer the strategic island of Midway, but in a fifteen-minute span of time, it lost three of its four big aircraft carriers along with most of its best pilots, ending its dreams of finally defeating the American fleet once and for all. This was also one of the few battles of World War Two in which the Americans were outnumbered, with Admiral Nimitz commanding a fleet built around just three carriers to Japan’s four. The sinking of four of Japan’s irreplaceable carriers was also a sort of payback for Pearl Harbor as all four carriers Japan lost had participated in the attack on December 7th, making it doubly satisfying for a nation still reeling from the disaster of losing the Philippines two months earlier. 0145名無しさん@1周年2018/10/13(土) 16:20:04.74ID:i9qfy1Y80>>32 現代の池沼としてお前の顔も並べておかないとなw 0146名無しさん@1周年2018/10/13(土) 16:24:54.44ID:SvumjclC0>>24 相手がどう出てくるかずーっと考えてたら夢で見て、現実もその通りだったんで奇跡神のお告げと思って信仰の方にいっちゃった 実業家とか神棚飾ったりとか実は多いのは同じことをしても成功したり失敗したりだからかな 0147名無しさん@1周年2018/10/13(土) 16:27:18.91ID:i9qfy1Y80>>142 ミッドウェーはターニングポイントでしょ