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  • Five Minutes That Changed the War: The Battle of Midway
    2026/03/29

    In this episode, Dale and Christophe cover the Battle of Midway — one of the most consequential naval engagements in American history and the decisive turning point of the Pacific War. From the catastrophic losses of the first six months following Pearl Harbor, to the codebreakers working in a windowless basement in Hawaii, to the torpedo bomber crews who flew into certain death and made victory possible, the full story gets the treatment it deserves.

    What we cover:

    The strategic context going into the battle — Japan's "Victory Disease" and the devastating string of Allied losses across the Pacific from December 1941 through the spring of 1942. Admiral Yamamoto's Operation MI: the plan to lure the American carrier fleet into a decisive engagement and destroy it before the US industrial machine could turn the tide. The unsung heroes of Station HYPO — Commander Joseph Rochefort and the codebreaking team that cracked enough of Japan's JN-25b cipher to reveal where and when the attack was coming, and the famous "AF is short on water" deception that confirmed Midway as the target. The American order of battle — two operational carriers, a Yorktown repaired in 72 hours by 1,400 workers around the clock, and a collection of aircraft ranging from capable to dangerously obsolete. The opening moves on June 3rd and 4th, including the PBY Catalina patrol that made first contact and the wave after wave of Midway-based aircraft cut to pieces without scoring a single hit. The sacrifice of Torpedo Squadrons 8, 6, and 3 — 41 of 42 aircraft lost, zero torpedo hits, and why their deaths were anything but wasted. Wade McClusky following a destroyer's wake across empty ocean, Maxwell Leslie leading a dive bombing attack with no bomb, and the five minutes that broke the back of the Pearl Harbor strike force. Hiryu's counterstrike, the crippling and eventual loss of Yorktown, and Admiral Yamaguchi going down with his ship. The final accounting: four Japanese fleet carriers, 248 aircraft, and roughly 3,000 men — against one American carrier, 150 aircraft, and 307 men.

    Why it matters:

    Midway ended Japan's offensive momentum permanently, gutted an irreplaceable generation of veteran naval aviators, and made the Guadalcanal campaign possible just two months later. The battle stands as one of the clearest examples in military history of signals intelligence directly deciding the outcome of a major engagement — and as a testament to men who did their duty knowing it might not be enough.

    Honor Roll:

    This episode closes by honoring the men of Torpedo Squadrons 8, 6, and 3 — whose sacrifice made everything that followed possible.

    The US Navy History Podcast drops new episodes regularly. Find us on Spotify, follow us on X at @USNHistoryPod, reach out at usnavyhistorypodcast@gmail.com, and join the conversation on our Discord — https://discord.gg/hzFAtfhvm

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    1 時間 53 分
  • The First Battle of Balikpapan: Four Destroyers Raid a Burning Anchorage, January 1942
    2026/03/22

    The episode recounts the January 23–24, 1942 night raid at Balikpapan in the Dutch East Indies, seven weeks after Pearl Harbor, when Commander Paul Talbot led four aging Clemson-class destroyers (USS John D. Ford, Pope, Parrott, and Paul Jones) through the Makassar Strait toward burning Dutch-demolished oil facilities to attack a Japanese invasion convoy anchored off the coast. With no air cover, limited equipment, and unreliable Mark 15 torpedoes, the destroyers used the refinery fires for navigation and target silhouette, fired the first American surface-launched torpedoes of WWII against Japan, shifted to gunfire amid smoke and confusion, and withdrew before dawn with all four ships intact. Postwar records confirm four Japanese transports and patrol boat P-37 sunk, additional damage inflicted, but the invasion succeeded; the hosts emphasize morale, tactical lessons, and torpedo-failure documentation. The episode closes honoring Hospital Corpsman 3rd Class Manuel Reyes Denton, killed in Vietnam in 1963 during a rescue mission.

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    1 時間 46 分
  • U.S. Navy Involvement in Operation Epic Fury
    2026/03/08

    In this episode, Dale and Christophe break down the U.S. Navy's role in Operation Epic Fury — the massive American military campaign launched against Iran on February 28, 2026. From the decades of tension that set the stage, to the opening Tomahawk salvo, the systematic destruction of the Iranian Navy, and the debut of revolutionary new drone technology, this episode covers the full naval picture of one of the most significant military operations in a generation.

    Note: Everything discussed in this episode reflects what has been publicly reported as of early March 2026. Details may be updated or corrected as more information becomes available. Some cost figures are modeled estimates from think tanks, not confirmed Pentagon data. Operational details — including submarine deployments, munitions counts, and targeting specifics — reflect only what officials have chosen to disclose publicly.

    The episode opens with the 45-year history of U.S.-Iran tensions that made Operation Epic Fury inevitable — from the 1979 hostage crisis, to the IRGC's systematic harassment of commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, to the 2019 tanker attacks, to Operation Midnight Hammer in June 2025, when the U.S. struck Iran's nuclear facilities using B-2 stealth bombers and submarine-launched Tomahawks.

    From there, Dale and Christophe walk through the full naval order of battle assembled for Epic Fury — the USS Abraham Lincoln and USS Gerald R. Ford carrier strike groups, fourteen Arleigh Burke-class destroyers, three littoral combat ships, and an undisclosed number of submarines operating across the Arabian Sea, the Persian Gulf, and the eastern Mediterranean — and explain why the geographic positioning of each asset was as strategic as the assets themselves.

    The episode then dives into the opening Tomahawk campaign, the systematic destruction of the Iranian Navy — including the first sinking of an enemy vessel by U.S. torpedo since World War II — and Iran's massive retaliatory barrage of 500+ ballistic missiles and 2,000+ drones in the first four days of the war. Dale and Christoph examine how the Navy's Aegis missile defense systems held the line, and why the sustainability of interceptor stockpiles is one of the most pressing strategic questions hanging over the operation.

    The second half of the episode covers the combat debut of LUCAS — the $35,000 drone reverse-engineered from Iran's own Shahed-136 — and the critical but largely invisible role of the EA-18G Growler in clearing the electronic path over Iranian airspace. The episode closes with a hard look at the economics of the operation, the shift to Phase 2 targeting Iran's missile production industrial base, and what Operation Epic Fury reveals about the future of American sea power — including the vulnerabilities it has exposed along the way.

    Email us at usnavyhistorypodcast@gmail.com, find us on X at @USNHistoryPod, and join the conversation on our Discord server — https://discord.gg/bJ9Q5vXE. If you enjoyed this episode, tell a friend. It really helps.

    Fair winds and following seas.


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    1 時間 47 分
  • Battle of Badung Strait: ABDA’s Night Counterattack at Bali
    2026/03/01

    Dale and Christophe discuss the February 1942 Battle of Badung ("Bong/Barong") Strait in the Netherlands East Indies, framing it within Japan’s rapid early-Pacific-War offensives after Pearl Harbor and the sinking of HMS Prince of Wales and HMS Repulse, and Japan’s drive to seize oil and strategic airfields. They explain ABDA Command under Dutch Rear Admiral Karel Doorman as a multinational, unevenly coordinated force facing Japanese air superiority, refined night-fighting doctrine, and Type 93 “Long Lance” torpedoes. Japan lands troops from the 48th Infantry Division on Bali on February 19 and moves to secure Denpasar airfield, prompting Allied surface counterattacks in confined waters. U.S. Clemson-class destroyers fire torpedoes without confirmed hits and withdraw; Dutch cruisers De Ruyter and Java with destroyers fight Japanese escorts, suffer damage, evade torpedoes, and also withdraw, leaving Bali secured and foreshadowing the Battle of the Java Sea. The episode closes honoring Medal of Honor recipient PFC Charles N. DeGlopper (killed June 9, 1944, near La Fière, France).

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    1 時間 39 分
  • Burning the USS Philadelphia: Stephen Decatur’s Raid on Tripoli Harbor (1804) and the First Barbary War
    2026/02/22

    Dale and Christophe discuss the First Barbary War and the 1803 loss of the 44-gun frigate USS Philadelphia, commanded by Captain William Bainbridge, after it struck an uncharted reef while pursuing a Tripolitan corsair into Tripoli Harbor and was captured with more than 300 sailors taken prisoner. With the captured ship refloated and positioned under Tripoli’s harbor defenses, 25-year-old Lt. Stephen Decatur volunteers to prevent it from being used against the U.S. Navy. Using the captured ketch renamed USS Intrepid and disguised as a Maltese merchant vessel, Decatur leads 67 volunteers into Tripoli Harbor on February 16, 1804, relying on deception, silence, and hand-to-hand weapons only. After being allowed alongside and then detected, the Americans board, secure the deck in about 20 minutes with no American combat fatalities, and set the Philadelphia ablaze when escape under sail proves impossible. The Intrepid rows out as Tripoli’s defenses fire; the burning frigate later explodes, eliminating Tripoli’s prize and restoring U.S. naval honor. The episode explains how the raid reshaped perceptions of the young U.S. Navy, influenced naval doctrine on denying assets to the enemy, and became part of Marine Corps tradition (“to the shores of Tripoli”), while noting the war continued until 1805 and prisoners remained captive until later negotiations that included a ransom payment. The hosts also answer questions about the deception, likely multilingual communication at sea, and typical ketch crew sizes, and reflect on scuttling as preferable to enemy capture. In the closing tribute segment, they honor Fireman Third Class John Lammers of Osberg, Wisconsin, who enlisted in June 1918, trained at Great Lakes Naval Training Station, and died of Spanish influenza at the Great Lakes Navy Hospital on September 25, 1918; an American Legion post in his hometown is named in his honor. The episode ends with listener contact information (email, X/Twitter, and Discord) and a request for ratings and reviews.

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    54 分
  • When the Battle of the Atlantic Came to Aruba: Operation Neuland and the 1942 U-boat Attack
    2026/02/15

    Dale and Christophe discuss the February 1942 German U-boat attack on Aruba and why the island’s Lago Oil and Transport Company refinery was a critical Allied fuel source, processing Venezuelan crude into high-octane aviation gasoline. They explain Operation Neuland, Germany’s coordinated Caribbean submarine offensive aimed at sinking tankers and crippling oil production, and detail U-156 (commanded by Werner Hartenstein) torpedoing multiple anchored tankers near San Nicolas Harbor, including the USS Pedernales, while attempting to shell the refinery. The shelling effort failed when the crew fired the deck gun with the muzzle cover still on, injuring crew and leaving the refinery largely intact; refinery workers activated emergency systems and production resumed quickly. The episode covers the psychological impact on Aruba, limited early defenses, casualties among sailors, and the broader campaign involving U-502, U-67, and U-129, which disrupted shipping across the Southern Caribbean. They describe the U-boat deck guns (8.8 cm and 10.5 cm) and the purpose of the muzzle plug, discuss convoy expansion, air patrols, blackouts/light discipline, and strengthened Caribbean bases and defenses that reduced U-boat effectiveness by 1943. The hosts emphasize logistics and energy infrastructure as strategic targets, industrial resilience, hemispheric defense cooperation, and how Caribbean oil supported later Allied operations, including aviation over Normandy. The episode ends with a “Hero Card” honoring Specialist Robert E. Hall Jr. of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, US Army Reserve 467th Engineer Battalion, killed by a suicide car bomb at a gate in Iraq on June 28, 2005, and provides contact info for the podcast via email, X/Twitter, and Discord.

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    54 分
  • The Pivotal Battle of the Atlantic
    2026/02/08

    In this episode of the US Navy History Podcast, Dale and Christophe examine the critical Battle of the Atlantic. They discuss its impact on World War II's outcome, highlighting how control over the Atlantic Ocean was essential for the Allies. The episode covers the significant strategies employed by both the Allies and the Germans, including the use of U-boats and the development of anti-submarine technologies. The conversation delves into individual sacrifices, the evolution of naval warfare tactics, and the multinational cooperation that ultimately led to Allied victory. The narrative underscores how the battle was not won through a single event but through continuous adaptation and relentless effort, eventually securing a lifeline for the Allied powers and setting the stage for D-Day and the liberation of Europe.

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    46 分
  • The Second Barbary War: America's Decisive Naval Victory
    2026/02/01

    In this episode of the US Navy History Podcast, Dale and Christophe discuss the Second Barbary War, highlighting America's bold confrontation with the Barbary States in 1815. The United States, under Commodore Stephen Decanter, refused to continue paying tributes and instead launched a decisive naval campaign against Algiers, Tunis, and Tripoli. This act of defiance ended centuries of European appeasement of state-sponsored piracy in the Mediterranean. The episode delves into the significant battles, the subsequent treaties enforced at gunpoint, and the long-term impacts on American naval doctrine and international relations. It also underscores the human element, celebrating the liberation of hundreds of captives and the broader implications for freedom and maritime safety. Additionally, the podcast honors Second Lieutenant Herman “Chuck” Dresden for his bravery during the Battle of Iwo Jima in World War II.

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    46 分