CHALLENGE TO JAPAN
Allied Assault On Wake (Received October 8, 1 p.m.) WASHINGTON, October 8. The Allied assault against .Wake Island challenges Japanese control of the central and West Pacific, declares the correspondent of the Associated Press of America. Claiming to give the opinions of American military authorities, he adds that the huge mandated island area on which Tokio’s defence is based must now be considered vulnerable unless the Japanese Fleet comes out to fight. However, United States military and naval experts believe that the Japanese Fleet will stay at home. They predict that the Allies will take the keypoints of the Marshalls, Gilberts . and Carolines against strictly local resistance, and will succeed after many months in cutting the enemy’s economic jugular vein across the China Sea. . . “The explanation seems to lie in the fact that the Japanese Navy, decisively beaten from the Bering Sea to the Indian Ocean, is unwilling to risk its warships except in order to prevent a direct threat against the Japanese homeland,” sums up the correspondent. “The projected ‘'Allied advance in the central Pacific is expected to coincide with General MacArthur’s drive northward, from New Guinea and! the Solomons, in which the immediate objective is believed to be Ritbaul, with the Philippines as the longrange goal. 'Some experts expect a simultaneous thrust toward the Kuriles by a combined Pacific fleet and air force ■which would be likely to produce the most violent Japanese reaction since Guadalcanal.”
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Dominion, Volume 37, Issue 12, 9 October 1943, Page 5
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241CHALLENGE TO JAPAN Dominion, Volume 37, Issue 12, 9 October 1943, Page 5
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