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  2. Operation Hailstone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Hailstone

    Japan started to rebuild Truk as a bomber air base and increased its anti-aircraft defenses. Spruance sent in carrier planes again on 29 April and destroyed the defenses and bombers parked at airports. British forces attacked again in June 1945. No significant naval buildup occurred at Truk after Operation Hailstone. [citation needed]

  3. Chuuk Lagoon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chuuk_Lagoon

    Naval Base Truk in the Truk Lagoon was the Empire of Japan's main base in the South Pacific theatre of World War II. There was a myth that Truk was heavily fortified, and it was given nicknames like "the Gibraltar of the Pacific," or Japan's equivalent of the Americans' Pearl Harbor. [16] In fact, [T]he reality was somewhat different.

  4. Imperial Japanese Navy bases and facilities - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperial_Japanese_Navy...

    Maizuru Naval Base Maizuru Naval District - now a Japan Self-Defense Forces facility and museum; Hiroshima Naval Base; Oroku Aerodrome/Oroku Naval Air Base - now the Naha Airport/Naha Air Base (JSADF, but the MSDF also has a presence) Kōchi Airfield - now Kōchi Ryōma Airport; Truk Islands naval base; Tokushima naval base with seaplane base ...

  5. Structure of the Imperial Japanese forces in the South Seas ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structure_of_the_Imperial...

    Japanese base at Truk, the pivot of the Japanese position in the South Seas Mandate. Truk was a huge naval complex, the "Pearl Harbor of the Japanese". It had been under construction since 1937. Japanese aviation facilities was Dublon , Moen ,and Eten Atolls.

  6. Battle of Rabaul (1942) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Rabaul_(1942)

    For the Japanese, Rabaul was important because of its proximity to the Caroline Islands, which was the site of a major Imperial Japanese Navy base on Truk. The capture of New Britain offered them a deep water harbour and airfields to provide protection to Truk and also to interdict Allied lines of communication between the United States and ...

  7. Imperial Japanese Navy in World War II - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperial_Japanese_Navy_in...

    In February 1944, the US Navy's fast carrier task force attacked the major Japanese naval base of Truk during Operation Hailstone. Although the Combined Fleet had moved its major vessels out in time to avoid being caught at anchor in the atoll, two days of air attacks resulted in significant losses to Japanese aircraft and merchant shipping.

  8. Bombing of Rabaul (November 1943) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bombing_of_Rabaul...

    The bombing of Rabaul in November 1943 was an air attack conducted by the Allies of World War II upon a cruiser force at the major Japanese base of Rabaul.In response to the Allied invasion of Bougainville, the Japanese had brought a strong cruiser force down to Rabaul from Truk, their major naval base in the Caroline Islands about 800 miles north of Rabaul in preparation for a night ...

  9. Operation Inmate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Inmate

    Operation Inmate was an attack by the British Pacific Fleet against Japanese positions on Truk Atoll in the central Pacific Ocean during the Second World War.The attacks against the isolated islands on 14 and 15 June 1945 were conducted to provide combat experience for the aircraft carrier HMS Implacable and several of the fleet's cruisers and destroyers ahead of their involvement in more ...