David Thatcher, an Army Air Force gunner decorated for helping save the lives of four seriously wounded fellow crewmen in the
Doolittle Raid on Japan of April 18, 1942, America’s first strike against
the Japanese homeland in World War II, died Wednesday in Missoula,
Mont. He was 94 and the next-to-last survivor among the mission’s 80
airmen.
While it was not a large action, it was the most imaginative and perhaps the most consequential early action in the war. Among the consequences was that Japan removed a large carrier task force from the Indian Ocean to their home waters and goaded them into the disastrous (for them) attack on Midway.
Here is a link to the NYTimes article about Thatcher.
If you have not seen the movie, Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo, I strongly recommend it.
Thursday, June 23, 2016
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