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Guadalcanal Vs Midway Decisive Battle Analysis

Last reviewed: February 24, 2024 ~3 min read
Abstract

This essay analyzes whether the Guadalcanal campaign or the Battle of Midway was more decisive in the Pacific Theater of World War II. While Midway is often considered the turning point, the author argues that Guadalcanal was more decisive due to its strategic value as an air base, massive Japanese casualties exceeding 19,000 killed, and its role as a springboard for Allied island-hopping campaigns. The prolonged nature of the Guadalcanal campaign also demonstrated Allied resolve and broke Japanese morale more effectively than the shorter Midway engagement.

By any measure, World War II was the costliest war in human history, but the Allied victory in the Pacific Theater is frequently overlooked by the momentous defeat of Hitler and the liberation of Europe. Indeed, the U.S. in particular paid an enormously high price in blood and treasure for this victorious outcome in the Pacific Theater. Although a legitimate argument can be made that the Battle of Midway was the turning point in the Pacific Theater in World War II, bloody battles fought to maintain control of Guadalcanal and the Solomon Islands were more decisive because it provided an air base that allowed the Allies to control the sea and air lanes between the U.S. and Australia as well as a springboard for its island-hopping battle plans.

The protracted Guadalcanal campaign also stands apart from the Battle of Midway by virtue of the sheer number of Japanese casualties that were incurred. While the Battle of Midway accounted for the loss of just over 3,000 Japanese troops at sea (The Battle of Midway 2024), the foot-by-foot fight over the jungles of Guadalcanal and the Solomons Islands claimed perhaps 10 times that many Japanese troops. In fact, the total number of Japanese deaths suffered during this campaign may never be known, and the actual total may be far higher. For example, Marine Corps historians emphasize that, “Over the seven months of the Guadalcanal campaign, U.S. forces took startlingly high casualties, with 7,100 dead and almost 8,000 wounded. The Japanese forces defending the island suffered more than 19,000 personnel killed, with an unknown number wounded” (History of the U.S. Marine Corps, Pacific 2024: 7).

In other words, the U.S. clearly demonstrated it resolve in breaking not only the backbone of Japanese military presence in the Pacific, it also intended to break its bushido spirit altogether and this eventuality was essential in contributing to the successful outcome of the campaign. Notwithstanding the Japanese soldiers’ seemingly unshakeable loyalty to the emperor and commitment to die rather than surrender, it is reasonable to suggest that witnessing thousands of deaths of their comrades in arms exacted a heavy toll on the Japanese troops during the Guadalcanal campaign to the extent that it diminished their ability to withstand the American onslaught. In this regard, Howard and Paret emphasize the adverse “impact of the ebbing of moral and physical strength, of the heart-rending spectacle of the dead and wounded” (104) on soldiers’ morale.

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References
1 sources cited in this paper
    • Battle of Midway. (2024). The National World War II Museum.
    • History of the U.S. Marine Corps, Pacific. (2024). U.S. Marine Corps Military Library.
    • Howard, Michael and Paret, Peter, eds. "On the Nature of War" in On War. Princeton University Press, 1984.
    • Tzu, Sun. The Art of War. Project Gutenberg, 2021.
Cite This Paper
PaperDue. (2024). Guadalcanal Vs Midway Decisive Battle Analysis. PaperDue. https://www.paperdue.com/essay/guadalcanal-vs-midway-decisive-battle-analysis-essay-2182241

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