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Asashio played a role in
many of the early crucial battles of the Pacific War, including the
invasion of Java, the attack on Midway, and the struggle for
Guadalcanal, until she met her end in the Bismarck Sea in March, 1943.
In early 1942, she used her night-fighting skills and "Long Lance"
torpedoes to good effect, but a year later, American material and
technological advantages did her in.
Like
other classes of Japanese destroyers, Asashio
was "all business." Her typical flared bow cut the sea, sheltering a
long low deck. By Western standards, she was over-powered, top-heavy,
and flimsy. But that was Japanese destroyer philosophy; the naval
architects packed her hull with six 5-inch guns, eight torpedo tubes
(plus handy re-loads), and a three-boiler, 38,000 HP power plant
capable of driving the ship at 34 knots. Quite a package for a
1500-ton, 361-foot long destroyer. With a crew relentlessly
trained in night-fighting, she was expected to inflict real damage on
the US Navy's capital ships.

When the Japanese invaded the Dutch East Indies in February, they
faced a hodge-podge of Allied forces from the so-called ABDA (American,
British, Dutch, Australian) command. After several early successes, on
February 18 the Japanese landed on Bali, the last island before Java.
Their transports unloaded quickly, protected by Admiral Kubo's force,
consisting of light cruiser Nagara,
and seven destroyers, including Asashio.
The mixed ABDA naval force, under Admiral Doorman, came out to meet
them, and the Bali Invasion Force scattered that evening, destroyers Asashio and Oshio shepherding the transport Sasago Maru. The ABDA cruisers and
destroyers caught them just about 2300; both sides exchanged some
ineffective gunfire, and the Japanese headed off to the east. Dutch
destroyer Piet Hein came on
bravely, but fatally, making smoke and further confusing the already
uncertain conditions of the nighttime battle. She fired both guns and
torpedoes at Asahio without
effect. Asashio retaliated
with a spread of Long Lance torpedoes, whose 825 lb. warheads hit Piet Hein, blew a huge hole in her,
and sank her immediately.
Asashio and Oshio continued dueling in the
dark, first with two American destroyers, and then (to the extent that
the actual events can be re-created from the contemporary accounts) for
some time, fired on each other! Not long after midnight, the second
wave of the ABDA task force steamed into Badung Strait, uncertain of
what they were looking for and of each other's signals. While the
Allies got off the first spread of torpedoes, none hit home, and
effective counter-fire from the 5-inch guns of the two IJN destroyers
dissuaded the two American destroyers from pressing their attack. As
the two fleets essentially steamed by each other in the darkness, Dutch
light cruiser Tromp, bringing
up the Allied rear, and Asashio
poked and probed futilely for more than two hours. Finally, Asashio's gunners found the range,
pouring eleven shells into Tromp's superstructure, knocking her out of
the battle and to Australia for repairs.
Much has been written about the battle of Badung Strait, and the
ineffectual Allied leadership, but essentially, it was just two
Japanese destroyers that made the difference.

Two years later, in March of 1943, the Japanese had been thrown back
on the defensive. Anxious to stem the Allied advance in New Guinea,
they organized a relief convoy of 6,900 soldiers in eight transports,
escorted by eight destroyers and numerous airplanes. The U.S. Fifth
Army Air Force had developed new 'skip-bombing' tactics for their
B-25s, and on March 3, as the sixteen Japanese ships approached, the
American bombers tore into them, strafing the crowded decks with .50
caliber machine gun fire and, literally, skipping 500-lb. bombs
(released at very low altitude) into the sides of the ships. The first
day, they sank two transports. Admiral Kimura had little choice but to
push on, to try to reach New Guinea. And on the next day, March 4, the
skip-bombers struck again, this time sinking all the remaining
transports and four of the escorting destroyers, including Asashio. It was monumental disaster
for the Japanese; never again would they attempt to send transports
into areas covered by Allied air power.
Sources: Public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships
and pictures from my father's 1943 Naval Recognition Manual
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