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  1. May 11, 2018 · The Kaiten was not only a weapon of destruction but a symbol of the strength of the Japanese pilots' spirit. US Navy/ Wikimedia Commons Ships in port at Ulithi in late 1944. The Kaiten hide under the water. It was the early hours of the morning on November 20, 1944. The sun was rising off the bow of the USS Mississinewa, and rays of orange ...

  2. Jan 31, 2016 · On October 25 th, 1944, 5 Zero airplanes were escorted to the target by the top Japanese pilot Hiroyoshi Nishizawa. USS St. Lo, an escort carrier, was the first important warship that was sunk by a Kamikaze attack. The Kamikaze strike resulted in massive fires that led to an explosion in the ship’s bomb magazine.

  3. Lastly, if you were a kamikaze pilot, and you attempted to defect and somehow got away from your squadron, and headed over to, say, an American carrier or airbase, you would likely have been shot down on sight. Especially after the first few attacks, American sailors were paranoid of enemy kamikaze attacks. 9. Reply.

  4. Jun 14, 2014 · A Japanese bid to have letters of farewell and other papers written by kamikaze pilots included in a registry of historic documents has been rejected by the UN heritage body, after fierce ...

  5. The fliers ranged in age from 17 to 19 and all were so-called Young Boy Pilots, youth who joined the air force training corps at the age of 14, before the kamikaze units were even established.

  6. Nov 9, 2016 · First of all, kamikaze pilots never did wear helmets. This is a misnomer. They wore soft leather flying caps, the kind we see Charles Lindbergh and Amelia Earhart wear in old films. These flying caps covered their head and ears. They kept the pilots from getting too cold or even going deaf while flying with their cockpit canopy open.

  7. Sep 9, 2002 · Albert Axell recalls the era of the Japanese Kamikaze pilots. To die voluntarily in the prime of life is unnatural. The very thought of death is unbearable for any person who is sound of mind. Given that Japan’s Kamikaze pilots were sound of mind, why then did these young pilots, perhaps as many as 7,000, willingly choose to kill themselves ...