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Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service(IJNAS)
大日本帝國海軍航空隊
(Dai-Nippon Teikoku Kaigun Koku Tai)
Naval Ensign of Japan
Active 1912-1945
Country Merchant flag of Japan (1870) Empire of Japan
Allegiance Emperor of Japan
Branch Naval Ensign of Japan Imperial Japanese Navy
Type Naval Air service
Engagements World War I
Sino-Japanese War
World War II
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Chuichi Nagumo, Minoru Genda, Saburo Sakai, Mitsuo Fuchida
Insignia
Roundel Japan Air Self-Defense Force roundel
A formation of Japanese bombers attacking warships in the Java Sea

A formation of Japanese bombers taking anti-aircraft fire, seen from the Australian cruiser, HMAS Hobart.

The Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service (大日本帝國海軍航空隊 Dai-Nippon Teikoku Kaigun Kōkū-tai?) was the air arm of the Imperial Japanese Navy during World War II. The organization was responsible for the operation of naval aircraft and the conduct of aerial warfare in the Pacific War.

It was controlled by the Navy Staff of the Imperial Japanese Navy and the Navy Ministry. The Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service was equal in function to the Royal Navy's Fleet Air Arm (FAA), the U.S. Navy's Naval Aviation branch, the Italian Navy's Aviazione Ausiliara per la Marina, or the Soviet Navy's Morskaya Aviatsiya.

The Imperial Japanese Navy Aviation Bureau (Kaigun Kōkū Hombu) of the Ministry of the Navy of Japan was responsible for the development and training.

The Japanese military acquired their first aircraft in 1910 and followed the development of air combat during World War I with great interest. They initially procured European aircraft but quickly built their own and launched themselves onto an ambitious aircraft carrier building program. They launched the world's first purpose-built aircraft carrier, Hōshō, in 1922. Afterwards they embarked on a conversion program of several excess battlecruisers and battleships into aircraft carriers. The IJN Air Service had the mission of national air defence, deep strike, naval warfare, and so forth. It retained this mission to the end.

The Japanese pilot training program was very selective and rigorous, producing a high-quality and long-serving pilot corps, who ruled the air in the Pacific during early World War II. However, the long duration of the training program, combined with a shortage of gasoline for training, did not allow the Navy to rapidly provide qualified replacements in sufficient numbers. Moreover, the Japanese, unlike the U.S. or Britain, proved incapable of altering the program to speed up training of the recruits they got. The resultant decrease in quantity and quality, among other factors, resulted in increasing casualties toward the end of the war.

Japanese navy aviators, like their Army counterparts, preferred manueuverable aircraft, leading to lightly built but extraordinarily agile types, most famously the A6M Zero, which achieved its feats by sacrificing armor and self-sealing fuel tanks.

History[]

Origins[]

Wakamiya

Japanese seaplane carrier Wakamiya.

In 1912, the Royal Navy had informally established its own flying branch, the Royal Naval Air Service. The Japanese admirals, whose own Navy had been modeled on the Royal Navy and whom they admired, themselves proposed their own Naval Air Service. The Japanese Navy had also observed technical developments in other countries and saw that the airplane had potential. The following year, in 1913 a Navy transport ship, the Wakamiya was converted into a seaplane tender, a number of aircraft were also purchased.

Siege of Tsingtao[]

On 23 August 1914, as a result of its treaty with Great Britain, Japan declared war on Germany. The Japanese, together with a token British force, then laid siege to the German held territory of Kiaochow and its administrative capital Tsingtao on the Shandong peninsula. During the siege, starting from September, Maurice Farman seaplanes onboard (two active and two reserve) the Wakamiya conducted reconnaissance and aerial bombardments on German positions and ships. On 30 September the Wakamiya was later damaged by a mine, but the seaplanes (by transferring to land) continued to used against the German defenders until their surrender on 7 November 1914. The Wakamiya conducted the world's first naval-launched aerial raids in history[N 1] and was in effect the first aircraft carrier of the Imperial Japanese Navy.[N 2] By the end of the siege the aircraft had conducted 50 sorties and dropped 200 bombs, although damages to German defenses were light.[2]

Interwar Years[]

The Japanese navy had closely monitored the progress of aviation of the three Allied naval powers during World War I and concluded that Britain had made the greatest advances in naval aviation[3]

Mitsubishi B1M

Mitsubishi B1M torpedo bomber.

The Sempill Mission was a British aeronaval technical mission led by Captain Sempill and sent to Japan in September 1921, with the objective of helping the Imperial Japanese Navy develop its aeronaval forces. The mission consisted in a group of 29 British instructors, headed by Captain William Sempill, and stayed in Japan for 18 months.[4] The British government hoped it would lead to lucrative an arms deal. The Japanese, were trained on several British aircraft, such as the Gloster Sparrowhawk, in various techniques such as torpedo bombing, flight control and carrier landing and take-offs. Skills that would later be employed in the shallow waters of Pearl Harbour in December 1941.[5] The mission also brought the plans of the most recent British aircraft carriers, such as the HMS Argus and the HMS Hermes, which influenced the final stages of the development of the carrier Hōshō. The Hōshō became the first designed aircraft carrier from the keel up to be built. The military in Japan were also aided in their quest to build up their naval forces by Sempill who had become a Japanese spy. Over the next 20 years, the British Peer provided the Japanese with secret information on the latest British aviation technology. His espionage work helped the Japanese rapidly develop its military aircraft and its technologies before the Second World War.[6]

Under the Washington Naval Treaty two incomplete battlecruisers were allowed to be rebuilt as carriers, for the Japanese; the Akagi and the Amagi. However the Amagi was damaged during an earthquake in 1923 and the Kaga became a replacement. With these two carriers much of Imperial Japanese Navy's doctrines and operating procedures were established.

IJNAS vs US first encounter (1932)[]

  • During the Shanghai Incident on February 22, 1932 Lt Robert Short (US Army Reserve) while piloting a Boeing 218 with Chinese markings damaged one IJN Type 13 carrier attack aircraft, killing the pilot, Lt. Kotani and wounding the observer, before he was killed in action.[citation needed] Reportedly three days previously Short had shot down IJN Lt. Kidokoro.[citation needed]

Sino-Japanese War[]

From the onset of hostilities in 1937 until forces were diverted to combat the Americans in 1941, the Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service played a key role in military operations on the Chinese mainland. Despite the fierce rivalry between military branches, in the fall of 1937 General Matsui Iwane, the Army general in command of the theater, admitted the superiority of the Naval Air Services. His combat troops relied on the Navy for air support.[7]

Aircraft attacked Chinese positions in Shanghai and surrounding areas, naval bombers such as the G3M and G4M were used to bomb Chinese cities. Japanese fighter planes, notably the Mitsubishi Zero, gained tactical air superiority; control of the skies over China belonged to the Japanese. Unlike other naval airforces, the IJNAS was responsible strategic bombing and operated long ranged bombers.

The Japanese strategic bombing were mostly done against Chinese big cities, such as Shanghai, Wuhan and Chonging, with around 5,000 raids from February 1938 to August 1943.

The bombing of Nanjing and Guangzhou, which began on 22 and 23 September 1937, called forth widespread protests culminating in a resolution by the Far Eastern Advisory Committee of the League of Nations. Lord Cranborne, the British Under-Secretary of State For Foreign Affairs, expressed his indignation in his own declaration.

Words cannot express the feelings of profound horror with which the news of these raids had been received by the whole civilized world. They are often directed against places far from the actual area of hostilities. The military objective, where it exists, seems to take a completely second place. The main object seems to be to inspire terror by the indiscriminate slaughter of civilians...»[8]

World War II[]

Japaneseaircraft

Identification chart for Japanese military planes during WWII

File:Japanesecrewmen.jpg

IJNAS planes taking off for Pearl Harbor

Jap planes preparing-Pearl Harbor

1st Air Fleet Aichi dive bombers preparing to bomb American naval base in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii

Carrier shokaku

Carrier Shōkaku preparing to launch the attack on Pearl Harbor.

At the beginning of the Pacific war the Navy Air Service consisted of five naval air fleets[9] In April, 1941 the First Air Fleet was created, concentrating the Navy's carriers into a single powerful striking unit[10] The Japanese had a total of ten aircraft carriers: six fleet carriers, three smaller carriers, and one training carrier. The 11th Air Fleet contained most of the Navy's land based strike aircraft.

On December 7, 1941, the Imperial Japanese Navy attacked Pearl Harbor crippling the U.S Pacific Fleet and destroying over 188 aircraft for a loss of 29 aircraft. On December 10, land based bombers of the 11th Airfleet were also able to sink HMS Prince of Wales and HMS Repulse.

There were also air raids on the Philippines and attacks on Darwin in northern Australia.

From 16 December 1941 to 20 March 1945 IJN aviation casualites killed were 14,242 aircrew and 1,579 officers.

Aircraft strength 1941[]

The IJNAS had over 3,089 aircraft in 1941 and 370 trainers.[citation needed]

  • 1,830 first line aircraft including:
    • 660 fighters, 350 Mitsubishi Zeros[11]
    • 330 Carrier based strike aircraft
    • 240 land based twin engined bombers
    • 520 seaplanes (includes fighters and reconnaissance) and flying boats.

World War II Aircraft[]

Fighters:

Bombers:

Torpedo & Dive Bombers:

Float planes & Flying Boats

Reconnaissance Planes:

Trainers:

  • Mitsubishi A5M-4k (2 seat version of Mitsubishi A5M)

Transports:

Organization[]

Carrier aviation flotillas[]

SantaCruzShokaku

Mitsubishi A6M2 "Zero" Model 21 on the flight deck of carrier Shokaku, 26 October 1942, Battle of the Santa Cruz Islands.

The elite of the pilots were the carrier-based air groups (kokutai, later called koku sentai) whose size (from a handful to 80 or 90 aircraft) was dependent on both the mission and type of aircraft carrier that they were on. Fleet carriers had three types of aircraft: fighters, level/torpedo planes, and dive bombers. Smaller carriers tended to have only two types, fighters and dive bombers. The carrier-based kokutai numbered over 1,500 pilots and just as many aircraft at the beginning of the Pacific War.

Eleventh Air Fleet and land-based air fleets[]

The IJN also maintained a shore-based system of naval air fleets called Koku Kantai and area air fleets called homen kantai containing mostly twin-engine bombers and seaplanes. The senior command was the Eleventh Naval Air Fleet, commanded by Vice Admiral Nishizō Tsukahara. Land based aircraft provided the bulk of Japan's naval aviation up to the eve of World War II.[12]

Strength[]

Each naval air fleet contained one or more naval air flotillas (commanded by Rear Admirals) each with two or more naval air groups. Each naval air group consisted of a base unit and 12 to 36 aircraft, plus four to 12 aircraft in reserve. Each naval air group consisted of several hikotai (squadron/s) of nine, 12 or 16 aircraft; this was the main IJN Air Service combat unit and was equivalent to a chutai in the Imperial Japanese Army Air Service. Each hikotai was commanded by a Lieutenant (j.g.), Warrant Officer, or experienced Chief Petty Officer, while most pilots were non-commissioned officers. There were usually four sections in each hikotai, and each section (shotai) with three or four aircraft; by mid-1944 it was common for a shotai to have four aircraft. There were over 90 naval air groups at the start of the Pacific War, each assigned either a name or a number. The named naval air groups were usually linked to a particular navy air command or a navy base. They were usually numbered when they left Japan.

Imperial Japanese Military
Empire of Japan
Administration
Imperial General Headquarters
Components
War flag of the Imperial Japanese Army Imperial Japanese Army
(Dai Nippon Teikoku Rikugun)
        Imperial Japanese Army Air Service
        Railways and Shipping Section
    Uniforms
Naval Ensign of Japan Imperial Japanese Navy
(Dai Nippon Teikoku Kaigun)
        Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service
        Imperial Japanese Navy Land Forces
    Major battles
    List of ships
    List of aircraft
    Main admirals
Rank insignia
Army rank insignia
Naval rank insignia
History of the Japanese Military
Military History of Japan during World War II

Naval Air Group identification[]

And before 31 October 1942[]

  • Place name; Standing air group (常設航空隊, Jōsetsu-Kōkūtai).
  • Numbered name; Special setting air group (特設航空隊, Tokusetsu-Kōkūtai).

And after 1 November 1942[]

  • Numbered name; Category 'A' air group (甲航空隊, Kō Kōkūtai) as combatant unit.
    • Example
      • 12th Kōkūtai is Training (bomber) group.
      • 121st Kōkūtai is reconnaissance aircraft group.
      • 762nd Kōkūtai is land-based torpedo bomber group.
      • 1081st Kōkūtai is military airlift group.
    • Regulation table
Value Hundred's digit (classification) Ten's digit (competent authorities) One's digit
0 Training group Yokosuka Naval District Odd number is standing air group.
Even number is special setting air group.
1 Reconnaissance aircraft group
2 Fighter group (carrier fighter)
3 Fighter group (interceptor fighter) Kure Naval District
4 Float reconnaissance aircraft group
5 Carrier dive bomber group, carrier torpedo bomber group Sasebo Naval District
6 Carrier air group, submarine-launched floatplane group
7 Land-based bomber group, land-based attack bomber group
8 Flying boat group Maizuru Naval District
9 Maritime patrol aircraft (Maritime Escort) group
10 Military airlift group
  • Place name; Category 'A' air group as training unit, evaluation unit.
    • Example
      • Atsugi Kōkūtai
      • Kasumigaura Kōkūtai
      • Takuma Kōkūtai
      • Yokosuka Kōkutai
  • Region name; Category 'B' air group (乙航空隊, Otsu Kōkūtai) as air base guard unit.
    • Example
      • Kantō Kōkutai
      • Mariana Kōkutai
      • Hitō Kōkutai

Squadron identification[]

And after 1 March 1944[]

  • Regulation table
Classification Squadron number Aircraft type (role)
Fighter Squadron
(戦闘飛行隊 Sentō Hikōtai)
1–400 Type 'A' Fighter or carrier fighter (甲戦 Kōsen)
401–800 Type 'B' Fighter (乙戦 Otsusen, interceptor fighter)
801–1000 Type 'C' Fighter (丙戦 Heisen, night fighter)
Attack Squadron
(攻撃飛行隊 Kōgeki Hikōtai)
1–200 Carrier dive-bomber
201–400 Carrier attack-bomber
401–600 Land-based bomber
601–800 Land-based attack-bomber
Reconnaissance Squadron
(偵察飛行隊 Teisatsu Hikōtai)
1–200 Reconnaissance aircraft
201–300 Flying boat
301–600 Reconnaissance seaplane
601–800 (missing number)
801–1000 Maritime patrol aircraft
Transport Squadron
(挺進飛行隊 Teishin Hikōtai)
1–100 Transport

Naval Aircraft identification System[]

The IJN had, at the beginning of the Pacific War, three aircraft designation systems:[13] The Experimental Shi numbers, the Type numbering system and an aircraft designation system broadly similar to that used by the U.S. Navy from 1922 until 1962.

Each new design was first given an experimental Shi number, based upon the current Japanese imperial year of reign. The Mitsubishi Zero so started its career as Navy Experimental 12-Shi Carrier Fighter.[14]

Upon entering production the aircraft was given a Type number. The 'Zero' was so fully known as Navy Type 0 Carrier Fighter, as the Zero was accepted in 1940, or 2600 in the Japanese calendar.[15]

The aircraft was also given a "short designation" consisting of a group of Roman letters and numbers.

  • The first letter (sometimes two) indicated the basic type or purpose of the aircraft.
  • Second came a series number indicating the number of major sub-types produced for that type of aircraft. (Unlike USN practice, the digit "1" was not ignored in this system and was included.)
  • Third was the second letter which was the manufacturer's code, and included some non-Japanese companies.

(G4M designated attack bomber (G), the fourth in the Navy's sequence, designed or produced by Mitsubishi, while G5N would be the next attack bomber in sequence, built by Nakajima.)

  • Fourth was a number indicating the version of the aircraft.

The first production version of the 'Zero' thus became A6M1.

Japanese Navy Air Service short designation system, data from[16][17]
Letter Type Manufacturer
A Carrier Fighter Aichi (Aichi Tokei Denki and Aichi Kokuki)/North American Aviation (US)
B Carrier Attack Bomber (Torpedo or Level Bomber) Boeing Aircraft (US)
C Carrier Reconnaissance Consolidated Aircraft (US)
D Carrier Bomber (Dive Bomber) Douglas Aircraft (US)
E Reconnaissance Seaplane -
F Observation Seaplane -
G Attack Bomber (land based) Hitachi Kokuki/Grumman Aircraft Engineering (US)
H Flying Boat (Reconnaissance) Hiro (Dai-Juichi Kaigun Koskusho)/Hawker Aircraft (UK)
He - Ernst Heinkel Flugzeugwerke (Germany)
J Land-based Fighter Nihon Kogata Hikoki/Junkers Flugzeug und Moterenwerke (Germany)
K Trainer Kawanishi Kokuki
L Transport -
M Special Floatplane Mitsubishi Jukogyo
MX Special Purpose Aircraft -
N Float Fighter Nakajima Hikoki
P Bomber (land based) Nihon Hikoki
Q Patrol Plane (Anti-Submarine Warfare) -
R Land-based Reconnaissance -
S Night Fighter Sasebo (Dai-Nijuichi Kaigun Kokusho)
Si - Showa Hikoki
V - Vought-Sikorsky (US)
W - Watanabe Tekkosho/Kyushu Hikoki
Y - Yokosuka (Dai-Ichi Kaigun Koku Gijitsusho)
Z - Mizuno Guraida Seisakusho

Further minor changes were indicated by adding letters after the subtype number as in the Type/Model scheme above. The first two letters and the series number remained the same for the service life of each design.

In a few cases, when the designed role of an aircraft changed, the new use was indicated by adding a dash and a second type letter to the end of the existing short designation (e.g., the H6K4 was the sixth flying boat (H6) designed by Kawanishi (K), fourth version of that design (4). When the plane was equipped primarily as a troop or supply transport, its designation was H6K4-L.)

See also[]

References[]

Notes
  1. Wakamiya is "credited with conducting the first successful carrier air raid in history"[1]
  2. "Nevertheless, the Wakamiya has the distinction of being the first aircraft carrier of the Imperial Navy".[1]
Citations
  1. 1.0 1.1 Source:GlobalSecurity.org
  2. Peattie 2007, p. 9.
  3. Peattie 2007, p. 17.
  4. Peattie 2007, p. 19.
  5. "The Highland peer who prepared Japan for war". The Daily Telegraph. 6 January 2002. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/japan/1380539/The-Highland-peer-who-prepared-Japan-for-war.html. 
  6. Day, Peter (3 January 2002). "British aviation pioneer was a spy for Japan". Daily Telegraph. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1380224/British-aviation-pioneer-was-a-spy-for-Japan.html. Retrieved 2012-05-21. 
  7. Peattie 2007, p. 103.
  8. Gilbert 1989, p. 135.
  9. Air Units of the Imperial Japanese Navy, Globalsecurity.com
  10. Tagaya 2003, p. 5.
  11. Sweet creative, 2009. p. 199.
  12. Peattie 2007, p. 29.
  13. Francillon 1979, p. 50.
  14. Francillon 1979, p. 546.
  15. Francillon 1979, p. 52.
  16. Francillon 1979, pp. 51-52, 549-557.
  17. Thorpe 1977, p. 15.
Bibliography
  • Francillon, Ph.D., René J. Japanese Aircraft of the Pacific War. London: Putnam & Company Ltd., 1979. ISBN 0-370-30251-6.
  • Gilbert, Martin (ed.). Illustrated London News: Marching to War, 1933-1939. New York: Doubleday, 1989.
  • Peattie, Mark R. Sunburst: The Rise of Japanese Naval Air Power, 1909-1941. Annapolis, MD: US Naval Institute Press, 2007. ISBN 978-1-59114-664-3.
  • Stille, Mark. Imperial Japanese Navy Aircraft Carriers, 1921-45. Botley, Oxfordshire, UK: Osprey Publishing, 2005. ISBN 1-84176-853-7.
  • Tagaya, Osamu. Imperial Japanese Navy Aviator, 1937-45. Botley, Oxfordshire, UK: Osprey Publishing, 2003. ISBN 1-84176-385-3.
  • Tagaya, Osamu. Mitsubishi Type 1 "Rikko" 'Betty' Units of World War 2. Botley, Oxfordshire, UK: Osprey Publishing, 2001. ISBN 978-1-84176-082-7.
  • Thorpe, Donald W. Japanese Naval Air Force Camouflage and Markings World War II. Fallbrook, CA: Aero Publishers, Inc., 1977. ISBN 0-8168-6583-3 (hardcover, paperback ISBN 0-8168-6587-6).
  • Sweet creative (ed.). Zerosen no himitsu. PHP kenkyusho, 2009. ISBN 978-4-569-67184-0.
  • Assignment of naval air group numbers (海軍航空隊番号附与標準, Kaigun Kōkūtai-bangō fuyo Hyōjun), 1 November 1942, Naval Minister's Secretariat, Ministry of the Navy
  • Senshi Sōsho, Asagumo Simbun (Japan)
    • Vol. 39, Combined Fleet #4, "First part of the Third step Operations", 1970
    • Vol. 45, Combined Fleet #6, "Latter part of the Third step Operations", 1971
    • Vol. 71, Combined Fleet #5, "Middle part of the Third step Operations", 1974
    • Vol. 77, Combined Fleet #3, "Until February 1943", 1974
    • Vol. 80, Combined Fleet #2, "Until June 1942", 1975
    • Vol. 91, Combined Fleet #1, "Until outbreak of war", 1975
    • Vol. 93, Combined Fleet #7, "Last part of the War", 1976
    • Vol. 95, History and summary of the Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service, 1976

External links[]

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