tlb wrote:That is actually paraphrase of a quote from a US Admiral about the probable action by Nimitz; I found it once and cannot find it again. There are all sorts of "what if" questions that can be asked about the action and response. Another interesting one it what would happen if they had also attacked the oil storage depot. I found this quote: "the Japanese ignored the unglamorous target that truly would have crippled the U.S. Navy for perhaps a year or more: the oil tanks next to Pearl Harbor. Without the ability to refuel at Pearl, the U.S. Navy would have had to retreat to San Diego, San Francisco Bay, and Puget Sound."
And even as it was lack of oil transport caused the US to keep its remaining, and then salvaged and repaired, slow battleships based no further west than the aforementioned San Diego, San Francisco Bay, and Puget Sound for months -- the first ones only returning to Pearl Harbor in August '42 and only sending any them into the combat zone, to patrol near the Fiji islands, in November '42.
There was a shortage of tankers to move oil from the west coast to Hawaii -- in no small part because of the numbers being sunk off the eastern seaboard by German uboats. And there was also the inability to get fuel for them even further forward to the combat zone. The US only had 8 fast (18 knot) fleet oilers able to keep up with the battleship or carrier task forces at even their economical cruising speeds; and wasn't especially well provided with
any oilers -- but only oilers had the training and equipment to refuel ships at sea; commercial tankers were only able to move oil from port to port. And until the US was able to seize secure forward ports they had no place west of Pearl for tankers to deliver oil to; and so no place for thirsty battleships to refuel.
No point in straining Pearl's oil supplies with battleships you couldn't send forward into combat anyway.
(Heck there's some argument that at Coral Sea the loss of the fast oiler
Neosho might have had a larger impact on US Navy operations over the next year or so than the loss of the carrier Lexington)