Japanese SuperSub

nandu

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Japanese SuperSub
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Spring, 1946. Ten months after the end of World War II, an explosion rocks the Pacific off the coast of Hawaii. America has just destroyed one of Japan's most advanced weapons systems – the I-401 aircraft carrier submarine. The supersub combined the stealth and tactical advantages of sea and sky and was invented to execute air strikes on land from the sea. But why did America sink one of its most prized military captures? Bound by an agreement to share any intelligence with the Soviets but feeling the pressure of the looming Cold War, it was a calculated decision to keep the technology out of Soviet hands. Six decades later, a team of researchers from the University of Hawaii located the submarine's remains. The discovery of the sunken sub sparks a new examination of its forgotten place in military history.

[video]http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/episodes/japanese-supersub-preview-this-episode/546/[/video]

THIRTEEN's Secrets of the Dead: Japanese SuperSub recounts Japan's superior submarine technology and reveals how close the Japanese came to using the subs to blow up the Panama Canal, terrorize the U.S. and possibly enact a deadly biological attack. The film premieres nationally Wednesday, May 5, 2010 at 8 p.m. (ET) on PBS (check local listings). Actor Liev Schreiber (Taking Woodstock and X-Men Origins: Wolverine) narrates.

"This little-known sub had potential to be a true game-changer," says Jared Lipworth, executive producer of Secrets of the Dead. "If the Japanese had managed to build a fleet of them and get them into action early in the war, the outcome in the Pacific might have been very different. Fortunately for America, our secret weapon was the game changer, and because of it, the Japanese never got a chance to use theirs."

The need for the aircraft carrier subs arose after the attack on Pearl Harbor and America's entry into the war. Realizing that the Japanese Navy could not compete head-to-head with the machine and manpower of the U.S., Harvard-educated Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto decided that the Japanese needed a way to strike quickly, terrorize American citizens and sap America's willpower for an all-out war in the Pacific. After experimenting with some small attacks on the U.S. West coast, Yamamoto came up with the idea of a fleet of aircraft-carrying subs that could launch attacks on the American mainland.

Designing and building the subs, however, was no easy feat. The aircraft hangar made them too top-heavy for a standard submarine layout, so the Japanese engineers came up with an innovative twin-hull design that could support the hangar and airplane launch ramp. The sub's specialty bombers, called Seirans, also had to be custom designed. They had wings that could rotate and fold up, a tailfin that could fold down, and a method of heating the engine oil underwater so that the planes didn't have to warm up on the surface, where they were most vulnerable to attack. The submarine was also heavily armed with four anti-aircraft guns and eight torpedo tubes, and had a special rubber and asphalt coating that helped prevent it from being spotted by enemy radar.

The subs were ahead of their time, but by the time they were ready to set sail, their mission was outdated. The Japanese entertained the idea of using them to launch biological attacks on U.S. cities, sending them to blow up the Panama Canal, and ultimately, using them to attack American aircraft carriers of the Island of Uthili. They might have succeeded, but America's super-weapon arrived just in time, and the Atom bomb put an end to the war.

Japanese SuperSub brings viewers first-hand veteran accounts from sailors and pilots who manned the Japanese subs, and from the American sailors who captured them. The engineering logistics and battle plans, explored by military historians, highlight just how innovative the submarines really were. The documentary examines two nations engaged in a war, and in a secret, experimental arms race. In the U.S., it was the Manhattan Project, with top scientists racing to create the atomic bomb. In Japan, it was the I-400 project, to build a submarine that could wrestle the advantage from a far superior American force. Once shrouded in secrecy and still with classified components, the powerful supersubs are finally being acknowledged as the precursor to modern attack submarines, and perhaps the greatest weapons that never did battle.

THIRTEEN's Secrets of the Dead: Japanese SuperSub was produced by Windfall Films and Spy Pond Productions for THIRTEEN in association with National Geographic Channel and WNET.ORG. Eric Stange is producer/director, Anna Saraceno and Jackie Mow are co-producers, and David Dugan is executive producer for Windfall Films. At THIRTEEN, Jared Lipworth is executive producer. William R. Grant is executive-in-charge.

http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/episodes/japanese-supersub-preview-this-episode/546/
 

nandu

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'Japanese SuperSub' explores how submarine could have altered course of WWI



Japanese negotiating surrender with U.S. officers in 'Secrets of the Dead.'

"Secrets of the Dead: Japanese SuperSub," Wednesday night at 8 on PBS

In the early 1940s, when World War II was still up for grabs, the Japanese Navy made a bet that didn't quite pay off. This new "Secrets of the Dead" production offers some chilling details of what might have happened if it did.

The bet was on a "supersub," a submarine that could deliver bombers to within striking distance of cities on America's West Coast.

Timing, luck and the fortunes of war delayed production and launch until it was too late for the subs to make a difference, and the few that were manufactured were never deployed.

Had they been produced when Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto ordered them in 1942, before the U.S. Navy established control of the Pacific, the experts in "Japanese SuperSub" warn that they could have altered the course of the war.

Putting aside the psychological impact of an attack on Los Angeles or San Francisco, submarine-borne bombers could have shut down the Panama Canal or crippled what remained of the U.S. war fleet after Pearl Harbor.

At one time, some Japanese officers proposed using the subs to rain germ and biological warfare on U.S. cities - a tactic the Japanese had been testing on Chinese prisoners, killing an estimated 200,000 in the process.

But along the way, two things happened. First Yamamoto was killed, which back-burnered his pet project. Then the U.S. dropped the atomic bomb, which brought a sudden end to the war even as the supersubs were being positioned for attack.

The commander of the supersubs, by the way, when ordered by Japanese headquarters to surrender, chose to shoot himself instead.

All this makes "Japanese SuperSub" a big what-if, and in that sense it's more abstract than the World War II "Secrets of the Dead" episodes that will air the following two Wednesdays - Winston Churchill attacking his French allies to make a point about his toughness and an intriguing reevaluation of the Battle of Stalingrad.

"SuperSubs" doesn't have the visceral action of those episodes, so it focuses instead on strategy and technology.

For Yamamoto, this documentary suggests, the supersub was the equivalent of the U.S. betting on the atomic bomb and Germany focusing on long-distance V-2 rockets to terrorize London.

Yamamoto probably placed too much faith in his boat. But when the U.S. captured the two working supersubs after the war, U.S. officials noted all the technology, then sunk both boats so the Soviet Union wouldn't know they existed.

Call that move a final what-if.

http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/tv/2010/05/05/2010-05-05_what_if__japans_supersub.html
 

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