Dilandu wrote:runsforcelery wrote:
It's an American idiom. "I don't have a dog in the fight" means that I'm, neutral in whatever's under discussion. In this case, it means that since I'm neither Russian nor Japanese, I'm not invested in demonstrating that "my" side (whichever it might be) was right/better/smarter/etc. Now, if the USN had been a belligerent, things would be different, of course!:lol:
Dilandu wrote:Ah, i understand. Thanks for explanation.
Well, i'm patriotic, but rationally patriotic.
runsforcelery wrote:The loss of two of their own battleships to mines screwed up their calculations,
Dilandu wrote:There was also a situation, when the Vladivostok's Cruisers Squadron sunk a steamer with the whole supply of japan heavy siege howitzers... So, actually the IJN screwed twice at least.
True, but finding replacement siege guns was a little easier than getting battleships back up off the bottom!
runsforcelery wrote:the Russians would have to fight their way through the IJN (which would have torpedo boats while the Russians didn't)
Dilandu wrote:Actually. the russian navy at Tsusima have a nine torpedo boats. Not too many, i must admit, but there were a reasonable doubts about the possibility of torpedo boats attack in open sea.
That's true; I'd forgotten them. But would they properly have been considered torpedo boats or torpedo boat destroyers? I don't have a source handy to check at the moment.
runsforcelery wrote: in ships with badly fouled bottoms and machinery that was likely to need servicing badly . . . and that didn't even count the fact that they knew the Russians would have to sail with heavy deckloads of coal. They had a very, very good notion of what that was going to mean in material terms.
Dilandu wrote:Hm. in that i must agree - that could be predicted actually.
runsforcelery wrote:I'll give you that Russian gunnery was very good --- indeed, much better than most non-Russian sources allow --- but it wasn't that much better than other navies.
Dilandu wrote:Well, in Yellow Sea, the "Mikasa" was hit 20 times during the early phase of battle, and no russian ship during that phase - were the russian fleet was controlled - have sustained so much damage.
runsforcelery wrote: My sources (admittedly, none of which are Russian) would seriously dispute the fact that Russian gunnery was better than the RN and the French.
Dilandu wrote:Well, during the WW1 - i admit, it was later - the russian engagements with "Goeben" demonstrated that. As i recall, in november 1916, the "Imperatritsa Ekaterina" ("Imperatritsa Maria"-class) engaged "Goeben" at the 20000 meters into the sun, and the third salvo hit less the 50 meters out of the target, damaged the enemy with fragments. And later there was another similar incident with "Breslau" ,that was engaged on the more than 22000 meters
IIRC, Slava's gunnery was very good in the Battle of Riga and the Moon Sound action, as well.
runsforcelery wrote:I'm not at all sure that that would have been true in 1905 when no one (including the Russians)expected true long-range gunnery engagements.
Dilandu wrote:Actually, Makarov expected that - it was one of the reasons, why the First Pacific Squadron was so good in gunnery. It wasn't the wholke russian navy, i must admit, only the ships that was under Makarov control.
Um. That fits with most of what I've read of him. On the other hand, I've sometimes wondered if his reputation hasn't grown in the telling, as we'd say over here, because of his stature as the one Russian admiral who showed up really well in the entire war. We Americans have a tendency to venerate officers who don't necessarily deserve it (fully, at least) on the merits because they had good press or were a bright spot in an otherwise gloomy war situation. William Bainbridge would be one example. "Hard Luck Bill" managed to lose the schooner Retaliation in the quasi war with France (by sailing right up to two French frigates he thought were British without checking assumptions first). Then he lost USS Philadelphia by running her onto a shoal in Tripoli Harbor (and surrendering her after a five hour "bombardment" in which, IIRC, he hadn't lost a man). He wasn't exactly stellar in several other commands, either, and he actively connived at getting Stephen Decatur killed in a duel with a fellow USN officer because of professional jealousy and a grudge he carried over a scathing report from a board Decatur had chaired years before. (I should mention, I suppose, that one reason he hated Decatur was that after he surrendered Philadelphia --- and the tide floated her back off the shoal --- Decatur led the boarding action which destroyer her right under the guns of the enemy. In the duel in question, however, he masqueraded as Decatur's friend, acted as his second, and then worked actively to make sure either Decatur or his opponent got killed, which would have finished --- and did effectively finish --- the career of whoever survived, as well.) Despite that, the USN's named several ships for him, including the first nuclear-powered cruiser in US service. Another example, of a slightly different sort, would be Bill Halsey, who achieved iconic status as a "fighting admiral" during the darker periods of the war in the Pacific but made several questionable decisions (including the Battle of the Santa Cruz Islands and his movements during the Battle of Leyte Gulf) which tend to be overlooked by those who worship at his shrine.
I've always wondered if there might not be a little of that in Makarov's case, since I've actually read relatively little about him in English-language sources.
runsforcelery wrote: My sources suggest that both Russia and Japan were unhappy with their respective gunnery results during the Russo-Japanese War and both took steps to address the shortcoming post-1905.
Dilandu wrote:Yes, that's right. The russian navy was satisfied with the penetration power of their shells... but was completely dissatisfied with their fuses, that simply doesn't work in most times.
They weren't the only ones having that particular problem at the time! Good AP fuzes were something of a dark art for everyone.
runsforcelery wrote:As I've explained above, the Japanese knew that the fight between their entire navy and the Port Arthur squadron would be long over (Ione way or the other) before the Baltic Fleet ever put in an appearance.
Dilandu wrote:Yes, but the point is, that the IJN started the war wothout any industrial or naval superiority even in local therms. With all respect, the IJN superiority wasn't so overwhelming to guarantee for the Japan victory over Pacific Navy without expecting heavy losses on the japanese side. And if the japanese lost enpugh ships dealing with First Pacific Squadron - what they are supposed to do when the larger Baltic Fleet appeared? With all respect, i didn't think that the Togo would be able to repeat his Tsusima sucsess with only two or three battleships and three or four armoured cruisers in action.
My point, that the japanese started the war without any reservations (as they usually do ). They threw all they got in battle in expectation of complete sucsess (and as you pointed prevoiusly - actually screw it). But they were still able to commence the victory against much larger naval and industrial power.
I understand your point, but I also think you're misestimating the actual balance between Japan and Russia at the time. Japan was looking at the enormous advantages of location it possessed, and its strategy --- starting with the surprise attack on Port Arthur --- was designed to grain and keep the upper hand both strategically and psychologically over the Russians. They also had a pretty good idea of the lethargy of the Russian leadership in Port Arthur and planned to capitalize on it. and while it's true that the Russians suffered some bad luck during the war, but so did the IJN, yet the IJN resoundingly defeated the Russian Navy in the end. There's another English language idiom --- the proof is in the pudding --- which means that the only way to judge the real effectiveness of an effort is by the way it works out in the end. By that metric, the Japanese were entirely correct in their estimate of their capabilities vis-à-vis those of Russia and her navy.
runsforcelery wrote:Now, as to the military potential of the two sides post-Tsushima and post-Mukden, neither one of them was in good shape to continue the war. Russia was on the verge of Revolution; Japan was on the verge of collapse. Russia had no Navy left; the Japanese Army was at full stretch and the Russians were shipping in supplies. Both sides later resented Teddy Roosevelt's role in brokering the peace treaty at Portsmouth, but --- at the time --- both sides were glad to accept it before something even worse happened to them!
Dilandu wrote:Well, actually there was a russian fleet that still could be used... the Black Sea Fleet (that was one of the reason why the Japan were ready to gave many of their claims to end the war). They have the "Knyaz Potemkin-Tavricheskyy", the "Rostislav", the "Dvenadtsat Apostolov" and "Tri Svyatitela" in comission, and even without them the power in older ships to keep the Ottoman navy in bay. But generally, it's true, that both sides were unable to fight any longer.
The problem was, that the russian internal problems wasn't something that Japan could claim as their actions. At least, not more than triggering it.
I'm aware of the Black Sea Fleet, but how was Russia going to get it out of the Black Sea and send it off to Asian waters? And even if they[d managed it, what about the additional ships Japan could have added to her fleet while it was getting itself together to make the voyage? In fact, several of the surrendered Russian prizes which were eventually taken into Japanese service could probably could have been refitted and put into Japanese service by the time a third Russian wave could have gotten to the Pacific.
You're right that they couldn't have counted on the wave of unrest which swept through Russia, and I think it's entirely fair to say that they seriously underestimated the degree of economic strain their war effort would impose on their own government and economy. And it's definitely true that they hideously underestimated how long the capture of Port Arthur would take and how much it would cost them in casualties, as well as time. On the other hand, war is always a high-risk enterprise, and it's more common than not for one or both sides to have seriously misestimated the risks involved. The imperial Russian government certainly underestimated Japan disastrously! And if the Japanese had no way to know the unrest was coming, the Russian government should have . . . and did, in many ways. Does the phrase "What this country needs is a short, victorious war to stem the tide of revolution" sound familiar? I think some hack SF writer stole it for the title of a novel one time . . . .
I will agree with you about the pre-WW II Japanese proclivity for charging into exceptionally high-risk gambles, however. In 1904, they happen to have gauged the odds correctly, judged by the outcome. In 1941, they tried to repeat the same roll of the dice on a far larger scale and crapped out disastrously. Indeed, their success in 1904-05 was key to their disaster in 1941-45. They knew there was no way they could ultimately out build Russia or the US, although in 1904-05 they could at least hope to buy additional vessels overseas from their good friends the UK to help redress the balance somewhat. In 1941,the US was in the process of actively building a naval strength they knew they couldn't defeat, especially since it wasn't going to be divided between the Pacific, Baltic, and Black Sea when the US needed it. The 1941 decision was made on the calculation that the new US programs established an ever-narrowing window which would, within one or two years at the outside, make it impossible --- as opposed to highly unlikely (by any rational measure ) --- that the IJN could defeat the USN. So they made what amounted to a do-or-die decision, guided (at least in part) by their experience against Russia and a serious misreading of the character of the US electorate, and embraced a strategy in which war weariness was supposed to preclude the Americans from paying the price demanded for victory. Among other things, they read American pacifism and the hoops through which FDR had to jump just to get Lend-Lease through an isolationist Congress as an indication that the US would have no stomach for the task, and their experience in 1904-05 played a major role in making that particular blunder in evaluating their enemy. The US in 1941 was most emphatically not Russia in 1904 in terms of domestic cohesion, however, and FDR and the US military never had to fight the Japanese while worrying that the country might go up in revolution behind them! Not only that, but virtually every sector of the US public "had a dog in the fight" in this instance, whereas the Russian war effort against Japan never really had that sort of fervent support from the bulk of the population, if only because the bulk of the population was excluded from significant participation in Russian political life and policymaking.