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Battle of Leyte Gulf

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Battle of Leyte Gulf, The USS Princeton engulfed in flames after being bombed by the Japanese Navy on the Sibuyan É
[Credit: U.S. Navy/National Archives/Naval Historical Center (Digital Photo Numer: 80-G-287970)](October 23–26, 1944), decisive air and sea battle of World War II that crippled the Japanese Combined Fleet, permitted U.S. invasion of the Philippines, and reinforced the Allies’ control of the Pacific.

U.S. landing ships, tank (LSTs), on the beach at Leyte Island in the Philippines, October 1944.
[Credit: Encyclop?dia Britannica, Inc.]U.S. troops landing on Leyte island in the Philippines during World War II.
[Credit: Encyclop?dia Britannica, Inc.]The battle was precipitated by a U.S. amphibious assault on the central Philippine island of Leyte on October 20. The Japanese responded with Sho-Go (Victory Operation), a plan to decoy the U.S. Third Fleet north, away from the San Bernardino Strait, while converging three forces on Leyte Gulf to attack the landing; the First Attack Force was to move from the north across the Sibuyen Sea through the San Bernardino Strait, with the Second Attack Force and C Force moving from the south across the Mindanao Sea through the Surigao Strait.

Gen. Douglas MacArthur (centre) and others arriving ashore during the initial U.S. landings at É
[Credit: NARA]As the Japanese forces moved into position southwest of Leyte, submarines of the U.S. Seventh Fleet discovered the First Attack Force and sank two heavy cruisers west of Palawan on October 23. A series of almost continuous surface and air clashes followed, especially in the Sibuyen Sea, while the U.S. Third Fleet chased the Japanese decoy. Finally, on October 25, the three major engagements of the battle were fought, almost simultaneously. At the Surigao Strait, battleships and cruisers from the Seventh Fleet destroyed C Force and forced the Second Attack Force to withdraw. Meanwhile, the First Attack Force passed through the unguarded San Bernardino Strait and inflicted heavy damage on the Seventh Fleet escort carriers off Samar but withdrew unexpectedly just as they seemed ready to attack the landing operations. In the north, off Cape Engaño, part of the Third Fleet sank Japanese carriers while another part moved south, attacking and pursuing the First Attack Force.

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