151 - How Sea Control doomed the 17th Army to Starvation on Guadalcanal: The failure of the Tokyo Express
19 June 2026

151 - How Sea Control doomed the 17th Army to Starvation on Guadalcanal: The failure of the Tokyo Express

The Principles of War - Lessons from Military History on Strategy, Tactics, Doctrine and Leadership.

About

The Naval Battle of Guadalcanal cost the US Navy two rear admirals and six warships — yet it stopped 11 Japanese transports carrying 10,000 troops and the supplies needed to take Henderson Field. We discuss the critical 12–15 November 1942 engagements where Rear Admiral Daniel Callaghan's cruisers intercepted a battleship bombardment force, and Willis Lee's radar-directed gunnery from USS Washington sank the Kirishima in the war's only battleship-versus-battleship duel in the Pacific.

Key learnings:
• Why Henderson Field functioned as the decisive terrain controlling both sides' ability to resupply by day or by night
• How only 2,000 Japanese troops landed from the convoy — most without weapons or ammunition
• What the Fifth Battle of the Matanikau plan revealed about American intelligence failures on Japanese defensive positions

Dave Holland is an ex-Marine and was posted to Guadalcanal with the Australian Federal Police.  He regularly leads battlefield study tours through the area. He is a world-leading expert on the battles of Guadalcanal and author of Guadalcanal's Longest Fight - The Pivotal Battles of the Matanikau Front.

Full show notes and transcript: https://theprinciplesofwar.com/ 

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