Jonathan_S wrote:Jonathan_S wrote:The remaining strategists and tacticians wouldn't be so incompetent as the lose the war for the US, not given the ridiculously lopsided industrial output and manpower.
Some numbers to give this context.
Between Dec 7, 1941 and Aug 15, 1945 the countries commissioned:
Battleships: Japan 2 | US 8
Fleet carriers: Japan 7 | US 17
Light carriers: Japan 1 | US 9
Escort carriers: Japan 10 | US 75
Heavy Cruisers: Japan 0 | US 9
Light Cruisers: Japan 8 | US 33
Destroyers: Japan 69 | US 272
Submarines: Japan 110 | US 145
And total aircraft produced: Japan ~85,000 | US ~273,000
Just utterly outproduced.
When the production differential is that lopsided (and there isn't some offsetting tech silver bullet) you don't need a strategic or tactical genus; even average middle of the road leaders can easily achieve victory.
Actually it is FAR worse:
USA completed an additional to your list:
1000 LST, Japan 0
400 DE's, Japan 0
2500 Liberty ships, Japan equivalent 125(January 1945, not middle of 1945)
500 Victory ships, Japan 0
60 additional Light Carriers for UK/France and Brazil???
USA ~100? Fast Oilers (what is diff between fast/slow? hyperwar site has them mixed so...)--> Japan 0 as they converted the ones they did or were building into carriers.
Not going to even count smaller under 1000ton boats.
So, an additional # ships over 1000 tons add to your list
USA ~4500 vrs Japan ~125...
This was closer to the SLN verses Manticore minus the population in reality. Any admiral with such gargantuan horrendous advantages would have won.