This study explores, in fascinating detail, the story of how the
skill of codebreakers and fighter pilots terminated the career of
Admiral Yamamoto--and the subsequent controversy over who fired the
fatal shots.
He masterminded the most devastating surprise attack against the United
States in its history. He was a marked man in the war that followed. A
key intelligence breakthrough enabled the military to pinpoint his
location. An elite team was assembled and charged not with his capture
and subsequent trial but with his execution. Osama bin Laden? No--this
was Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, the Commander-in-Chief of the Japanese
Combined Fleet during World War II.
This new title analyses the origins, implementation, and outcomes of
Operation Vengeance, the long-range fighter interception of Admiral
Yamamoto's transport aircraft that sent him to his death on April 18,
1943. Author Si Sheppard examines every angle of the operation in
detail, including the role of intelligence work in pinpointing the time
and location of Yamamoto's flight, the chain of command at the highest
level of the US political and military establishment who ordered the
attack, and the technical limitations that had to be overcome in
planning and conducting the raid. It also provides a close study of the
aerial combat involved in completing the mission, offering a holistic
exploration of the operation which avenged Pearl Harbor.