Mil History Talk

Episode 76: Silent Blockade, The US Submarine War Against Japan

52 min · I går
episode Episode 76: Silent Blockade, The US Submarine War Against Japan cover

Description

Episode 76 of Mil History Talk explores the United States submarine campaign against Japan—one of the most effective and strategically decisive offensives of the Pacific War. Hope and Brian examine how American submarines hunted merchant shipping, attacked warships, gathered intelligence, rescued downed aviators, and steadily severed the maritime lifelines connecting Japan to its overseas empire. The episode also looks at the cramped, exhausting, and dangerous realities of life aboard boats such as USS Drum (SS-228), where long patrols, mechanical strain, torpedo attacks, and depth-charge counterattacks demanded extraordinary discipline and endurance. Expect operational history, technical detail, logistics, human cost, and the occasional moment of gallows humor from two hosts who have once again produced something suspiciously close to a naval deployment. Join the discussion and view episode artwork on the Mil History Talk Facebook page, and follow Mil History Talk on Substack for additional commentary, historical notes, images, and future episode updates.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Mil History Talk community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

76 episodes

episode Episode 76: Silent Blockade, The US Submarine War Against Japan artwork

Episode 76: Silent Blockade, The US Submarine War Against Japan

Episode 76 of Mil History Talk explores the United States submarine campaign against Japan—one of the most effective and strategically decisive offensives of the Pacific War. Hope and Brian examine how American submarines hunted merchant shipping, attacked warships, gathered intelligence, rescued downed aviators, and steadily severed the maritime lifelines connecting Japan to its overseas empire. The episode also looks at the cramped, exhausting, and dangerous realities of life aboard boats such as USS Drum (SS-228), where long patrols, mechanical strain, torpedo attacks, and depth-charge counterattacks demanded extraordinary discipline and endurance. Expect operational history, technical detail, logistics, human cost, and the occasional moment of gallows humor from two hosts who have once again produced something suspiciously close to a naval deployment. Join the discussion and view episode artwork on the Mil History Talk Facebook page, and follow Mil History Talk on Substack for additional commentary, historical notes, images, and future episode updates.

Yesterday52 min
episode Episode 75: Movie Review: Pressure artwork

Episode 75: Movie Review: Pressure

In Episode 75 of Mil History Talk, Hope steps into her role as the podcast's official Hollywood liaison and movie reviewer to take a close look at Pressure, the new World War II drama about the critical weather forecasts that helped determine the timing of D-Day. While most war films focus on soldiers, ships, and battles, Pressure explores the tense days leading up to Operation Overlord through the eyes of the meteorologists and commanders responsible for one of history's most consequential decisions. Hope examines the film's historical accuracy, performances, production quality, and portrayal of key figures including Dwight Eisenhower, James Stagg, Bernard Montgomery, and Kay Summersby. She discusses where the movie succeeds, where Hollywood takes liberties, and why the suspense remains effective even when everyone knows how the story ends. Plus, Hope shares her thoughts on the upcoming Jimmy Stewart WWII film Jimmy and explains why she's already counting the days until its release.

23. juni 202616 min
episode Episode 74: Alfred Thayer Mahan and Sea Power artwork

Episode 74: Alfred Thayer Mahan and Sea Power

Was Alfred Thayer Mahan really just the “battleship guy,” or have we been misunderstanding one of history’s most influential strategists for more than a century? In this episode of Mil History Talk, Hope and Brian dive into the life, ideas, and enduring legacy of Alfred Thayer Mahan, the naval officer whose writings helped shape American strategy, influenced Theodore Roosevelt, and continue to inform great-power competition today. Along the way, they explore why sea power is about far more than fleets and naval battles. Mahan’s real subject was the relationship between commerce, trade, communications, infrastructure, and national power. From the rise of the U.S. Navy and the Great White Fleet to modern concerns over China, the Taiwan Strait, global supply chains, and maritime chokepoints, Hope and Brian show why Mahan remains surprisingly relevant in the twenty-first century. Expect plenty of humor, pop-culture references, Clausewitz jokes, and strategic insights as they explain why container shipping may be more important to world power than most people realize.

19. juni 202617 min
episode Episode 73: Tanks on the Beach artwork

Episode 73: Tanks on the Beach

In Episode 73 of Mil History Talk, Hope and Brian continue their 82nd Anniversary D-Day series by exploring one of the most overlooked groups of the Normandy invasion: the U.S. Army's separate tank battalions. While popular memory focuses on the infantry, paratroopers, and Rangers, American planners never intended the assault forces to fight alone. The 70th, 741st, and 743rd Tank Battalions were tasked with leading the way onto Utah and Omaha Beaches, providing the armored firepower needed to suppress German defenses and help soldiers move inland. Join us as we examine the remarkable story of swimming Sherman tanks, the catastrophe that struck the 741st Tank Battalion offshore at Omaha, the leadership decision that saved the 743rd Tank Battalion, and the critical role played by engineer-operated tank dozers clearing obstacles under fire. This is a story of adaptation, combined arms, mission command, and the forgotten tankers who helped make D-Day possible. History remembers the beaches. This episode remembers the men who brought the tanks ashore.

6. juni 202636 min
episode Episode 72: IX Troop Carrier Command in Normandy artwork

Episode 72: IX Troop Carrier Command in Normandy

As the 82nd Anniversary of D-Day approaches, Military History Talk begins a special two-part series on some of the most overlooked contributors to Operation Overlord. In Episode 72, Hope and Brian take listeners into the cockpit of the IX Troop Carrier Command—the organization responsible for delivering the American airborne assault into Normandy during the opening hours of June 6, 1944. Often overshadowed by the drama of Omaha Beach and the heroics of the airborne divisions themselves, the men of IX Troop Carrier Command flew more than 2,000 transport aircraft and hundreds of gliders through darkness, cloud cover, anti-aircraft fire, and intense navigational challenges to place the 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions behind German lines. The result was the largest airborne operation in history. Join us as we explore how IX Troop Carrier Command was organized and trained, why the airborne drops became so scattered, how the glider landings proved remarkably accurate, and the staggering challenges faced by crews flying unarmed C-47s into combat. We also examine the command’s continuing role in Normandy through aerial resupply, reinforcement, and medical evacuation missions. From chaos and confusion to innovation and courage, this is the story of the airmen who made the airborne assault possible.

3. juni 202622 min