The Final Hours of the Pacific Conflict
In this tragic clash, a formation of Grumman F6F-5 Hellcats from United States Navy Fighter Squadron 88 (VF-88), operating from the aircraft carrier USS Yorktown (CV-10), was ambushed by a mixed force of Mitsubishi J2M3 Raiden and A6M5 Zero interceptors belonging to the Imperial Japanese Navy’s elite 302nd Kōkūtai. The resulting engagement, which cost the lives of four American aviators who had taken off during wartime only to be shot down during peacetime, serves as a poignant microcosm of the broader Pacific War. It highlighted the technological apex of wartime aeronautical engineering, the devastating attrition of pilot experience, and the lethal consequences of rigid adherence to martial codes.
By mid-1945, the Allied war machine had effectively isolated the Japanese home islands. The Imperial Japanese Navy had been systematically dismantled in the titanic fleet engagements of the Philippine Sea and Leyte Gulf, rendering it incapable of power projection. Concurrently, the United States Strategic Bombing Survey (USSBS) had prioritized the systematic destruction of Japan's industrial capacity and urban centers, leading to the devastating low-altitude B-29 Superfortress incendiary campaigns directed by Major General Curtis LeMay of the XXI Bomber Command.
Operating in conjunction with the strategic bomber offensive, Admiral William F. Halsey’s United States Third Fleet maintained a relentless operational tempo off the coast of Honshu. Halsey’s Fast Carrier Task Force (Task Force 38) was a maritime armada of unprecedented destructive capability. A single task group within this force, such as Task Group 38.4, fielded more offensive punch than the entire pre-war carrier fleet, boasting over a hundred Grumman Hellcats, Vought Corsairs, and Curtiss Helldivers.
Despite the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki on August 6th and 9th, and the Soviet Union's abrogation of the Neutrality Pact followed by their invasion of Manchuria on August 8th, the Japanese military high command remained deeply fractured regarding capitulation. In response to this diplomatic stalling, Admiral Nimitz directed Halsey to maintain unremitting pressure on the Japanese military infrastructure. Halsey’s directive was to launch continuous fighter sweeps and bomber strikes against airfields, transportation networks, and coastal shipping to preclude any possibility of a coordinated kamikaze (suicide) defense against the anticipated Operation Downfall invasion forces. It was under this doctrine of continuous attrition that the aviators of the USS Yorktown prepared for their missions on the morning of August 15th.
In stark contrast to the overwhelming material superiority of the United States Navy, the Japanese home defense forces were operating in a state of terminal decline, yet they remained exceptionally dangerous. The primary defensive bulwark for the Kanto Plain and the Tokyo metropolitan area was the 302nd Kōkūtai (Naval Air Group), operating out of Atsugi Airfield.
Established in March 1944 specifically to counter the high-altitude threat posed by B-29 Superfortresses, the 302nd Kōkūtai was an elite formation steeped in the culture of the Bushido code. The pilots considered themselves the dedicated Samurai of the modern era, sworn to protect the Emperor and the capital. Surrender was universally viewed as an unthinkable disgrace. Following the Emperor's eventual broadcast, many officers at Atsugi would briefly rebel, taking up arms against their own government in a futile attempt to continue the war, though the garrison ultimately surrendered without bloodshed.
The 302nd was commanded by Lieutenant Yukio Morioka, who, at 23 years of age, was the youngest air group leader in the Imperial Japanese Navy. Originally trained as a dive-bomber pilot, Morioka transitioned to fighters and led a unit characterized by a severe dichotomy in pilot skill. While the unit retained a core of highly experienced, pre-war veterans, the severe attrition of the Pacific War meant that the bulk of its pilot roster consisted of raw recruits. By early 1945, the Japanese aviation training pipeline had collapsed; new pilots were often thrust into combat with a mere 130 hours of total flying time, facing American aviators who typically boasted upwards of 525 hours before their first combat deployment. This disparity in training would heavily influence the tactical dynamics of the final engagement.
The human element of the August 15 dogfight reveals a cross-section of the men swept up in the war's final crescendo. The engagement pitted weary American aviators dreaming of the postwar world against Japanese defenders who felt they had nothing left to lose.
Fighter Squadron 88 (VF-88) "Gamecocks"
Air Group 88, attached to the USS Yorktown, had arrived in the Pacific Theater late in the war but had quickly been bloodied. Over the six weeks preceding mid-August, the group had suffered devastating losses while operating in the heavily defended airspace over the Japanese home islands. The squadron had lost ten pilots, including their revered squadron leader, Lieutenant Commander Charles Crommelin, who perished in a freak mid-air collision with his wingman over Hokkaido.
Command of VF-88 subsequently fell to Lieutenant Malcolm W. Cagle, a former executive officer whose leadership was viewed with deep skepticism by the exhausted squadron. The veteran pilots, bonded by the shared trauma of combat attrition, were highly critical of Cagle's risk management in the final, uncertain days of the war.
The division that launched on the morning of August 15 was led by Lieutenant Howard M. "Howdy" Harrison, a seasoned flight leader from Sutton, West Virginia. Harrison's primary motivation in the war's final days was survival; he desperately wished to return home to reunite with his wife and meet the infant daughter born after his deployment to the Pacific.
Harrison’s wingmen presented a diverse tapestry of American backgrounds. Ensign Wright C. "Billy" Hobbs, a 22-year-old native of Indiana, was a passionate aviator who believed he was born to fly fighter aircraft. Conversely, Ensign Eugene "Mandy" Mandeberg viewed his service through a different lens. A former reporter for The Michigan Daily in Detroit, Mandeberg saw his deployment not as a grand adventure, but as a grim wartime duty. Squadron mates noted that Mandeberg lacked the aggressive demeanor typical of fighter pilots, preferring to study the "flora and fauna" rather than focus strictly on tight formation flying. Ensign Joseph G. Sahloff, hailing from Selkirk, New York, was driven by a desire to prove his aeronautical competence among the Navy's best. Lieutenant (j.g.) Clarence A. "Ted" Hansen and Lieutenant (j.g.) Maury Proctor, both possessing vital combat experience, rounded out the strike package.
The Veterans of the 302nd Kōkūtai
The Japanese pilots launching from Atsugi represented the antithesis of the American outlook. Leading elements of the 302nd Kōkūtai was Ensign Sadaaki "Temei" Akamatsu, a legendary and highly controversial figure within the Imperial Japanese Navy. Akamatsu had been flying since 1932, logging an astounding 8,000 flight hours. A veteran of the Second Sino-Japanese War, he was a known trickster, a frequent insubordinate, and notoriously flew combat missions while heavily intoxicated. Despite his lack of discipline, his combat record was undeniable; he was one of the few Japanese aviators who preferred the heavy, demanding Mitsubishi J2M Raiden over the nimble Zero, utilizing strict "boom-and-zoom" tactics to rack up kills.
Akamatsu was joined by other seasoned aces, including Yozo Tsuboi, the highest-scoring Raiden ace of the war, and Junro Teramura, a seasoned squadron leader. These veterans provided the tactical backbone for the 302nd, directing the aggressive, high-speed diving attacks that would characterize their interception of VF-88, while the less experienced conscripts provided the sheer numerical volume necessary to overwhelm the American formations.
The F6F-5 Hellcat was the quintessential American carrier fighter of the late Pacific War. Designed specifically utilizing combat data from early engagements with the Japanese Zero, the Hellcat was engineered to prioritize speed, altitude performance, and pilot survivability over horizontal maneuverability.
At the heart of the F6F-5 was the massive Pratt & Whitney R-2800-10W Double Wasp, an 18-cylinder radial engine producing 2,000 horsepower. This powerplant propelled the aircraft to a maximum speed of 380 mph at medium altitudes. The Hellcat was heavily armored, featuring self-sealing fuel tanks and protective plating around the cockpit and oil coolers, allowing it to sustain immense kinetic punishment and remain airborne. Armed with six .50-caliber Browning M2 machine guns, it projected a devastating cone of fire.
However, the F6F-5 was undeniably burdened by the requirements of naval aviation. The heavy landing gear and complex wing-folding mechanisms added significant parasitic weight, making it slightly slower at high altitudes compared to late-war, land-based fighters. Furthermore, on the morning of August 15, the Hellcats of VF-88 were heavily encumbered by underwing ordnance and external drop tanks intended for airfield suppression, severely degrading their acceleration, climb rate, and maneuverability prior to the engagement.
The J2M Raiden represented a radical paradigm shift in Japanese fighter design. Conceived by Jiro Horikoshi, the brilliant engineer behind the A6M Zero, the Raiden was a localized point-defense interceptor built expressly to destroy heavily armored, high-altitude American bombers. Horikoshi completely abandoned the traditional Japanese emphasis on dogfighting agility in favor of raw speed and rapid climb performance.
The J2M was visually distinctive, featuring a sleek but stubby fuselage necessary to house the oversized Mitsubishi Kasei engine. To minimize drag, the engine was buried deep behind a long cowling, utilizing a specialized intake fan and a long extension shaft connected to the propeller. The J2M3 variant achieved formidable aerodynamic benchmarks. Post-war evaluations conducted by the United States Technical Air Intelligence Command (TAIC) utilizing captured airframes, 92-octane fuel, and methanol injection recorded the J2M3 reaching a blistering maximum speed of 417 mph at 16,600 feet.
The Raiden was heavily armed, typically carrying four 20mm cannons, providing the burst mass necessary to shred American aircraft. Its primary operational weaknesses were poor pilot visibility from the deeply recessed cockpit and sluggish handling characteristics at low speeds. However, when utilized correctly in high-speed, vertical diving attacks - as favored by veterans like Akamatsu - the Raiden was a lethal, energy-fighting platform.
The Mitsubishi A6M5 Model 52 Zero ("Zeke")
By the summer of 1945, the legendary A6M Zero was fundamentally obsolete, outclassed in speed, dive rate, and armor by nearly every American fighter in the theater. The A6M5 (Model 52) was a desperate attempt to modernize the airframe and prolong its tactical viability.
Engineers shortened the wingspan and rounded the wingtips to increase the aircraft's maximum dive speed, a fatal flaw in earlier models. They also modified the Sakae engine's exhaust system, utilizing thrust-augmenting individual exhaust stacks to squeeze out additional speed. The Model 52 incorporated rudimentary armor plating behind the pilot and self-sealing fuel tanks, though it remained structurally fragile compared to the Hellcat. Retaining its armament of two 20mm cannons and two 7.7mm machine guns, the Zero's primary asset remained its superlative horizontal turn time. If a Zero pilot could successfully force an American aircraft into a low-speed, turning engagement, the A6M5 could still easily outmaneuver the heavier Hellcat.
The Final Mission: August 15, 1945
At 0415 hours, Vice Admiral John "Slew" McCain’s Fast Carrier Task Force commenced flight operations, launching a massive 103-plane fighter sweep intended to neutralize the airfields surrounding Tokyo. Lieutenant Harrison's division of eight F6F-5 Hellcats launched from the USS Yorktown, tasked with suppressing Tokurozama and Atsugi airfields to clear the airspace for subsequent heavy bomber strikes.
The mission deteriorated almost immediately after departing the carrier deck. The American formations encountered severe weather fronts characterized by towering cumulonimbus clouds. Unable to navigate safely over or around the dense cloud banks, unit cohesion broke down. Harrison, adapting to the deteriorating tactical situation, detached two of his Hellcats to maintain a high-altitude orbit above the weather. Their orders were to act as a vital communications relay, while Harrison led the remaining six aircraft - piloted by Proctor, Hansen, Sahloff, Hobbs, and Mandeberg - down to a low tactical altitude beneath the overcast to proceed toward the target.
The Ceasefire and the Ambush
At approximately 0645 hours, as Harrison’s six Hellcats approached Tokurozama Airfield, the high-altitude relay team forwarded an urgent, historic transmission: Emperor Hirohito had accepted the terms of the Potsdam Declaration; all Allied offensive operations were to be suspended immediately.
Admiral Nimitz’s recall order was broadcast across all fleet frequencies. American pilots aloft were instructed to jettison their offensive ordnance into the ocean and immediately reverse course back to Task Force 38. For the aviators of VF-88, the psychological shift was profound. The burden of combat evaporated in an instant. Lieutenant (j.g.) Ted Hansen vividly recalled his immediate thought upon hearing the transmission: "Oh God, let's get our fannies out of here".
However, the transition from wartime to peacetime was violently interrupted. Out at sea, radar operators aboard the US destroyers Heermann, Black, Bullard, and Chauncey - acting as advanced pickets - detected a large cluster of incoming bogeys. Unfortunately, this warning did not reach Harrison’s low-flying division in time. Plunging out of the heavy cloud cover directly above the withdrawing Americans were twelve Japanese fighters - specifically four J2M3 Raidens and eight A6M5 Zeros - from the 302nd Kōkūtai. This Japanese formation had either failed to receive the Emperor's surrender broadcast or, driven by the fanaticism prevalent at Atsugi, actively chosen to ignore it.
The Dogfight Over the Kanto Plain
The tactical ambush was disastrous for the Americans. The Hellcats were flying low to the ground, heavily encumbered by their drop tanks, and operating at a low kinetic energy state. Conversely, the Japanese interceptors possessed a massive advantage in potential energy, utilizing the gravity of their steep dive to achieve speeds well in excess of the Hellcats' capabilities.
Realizing the impossibility of outrunning the diving attackers, Harrison ordered his division to turn directly into the onslaught, initiating a series of brutal, high-closure-rate head-on passes. The airspace instantly dissolved into a chaotic, swirling furball.
Hansen found himself immediately targeted by multiple enemy airframes. In a desperate maneuver, he engaged in a head-to-head merge, devastating a Japanese fighter with his six .50-caliber machine guns and narrowly avoiding a fatal mid-air ramming attempt by a second aircraft, which he also subsequently destroyed. Nearby, Maury Proctor observed a J2M Raiden firmly attached to the tail of Ensign Sahloff’s Hellcat. Proctor violently wrenched his aircraft into a tight starboard turn, pulling a high-deflection lead on the Raiden. Firing from 700 yards, Proctor’s concentrated burst struck the Raiden, causing it to explode in mid-air.
Despite these localized victories, the numerical supremacy and massive energy advantage of the 302nd Kōkūtai proved insurmountable. Sahloff’s F6F-5, severely damaged in the initial pass, plummeted to the earth. In the swirling confusion, visual contact was lost with Harrison, Hobbs, and Mandeberg. Overwhelmed by the sheer volume of attackers, all three were shot down.
The engagement lasted only minutes. Hansen and Proctor, piloting heavily damaged aircraft, managed to utilize the superior ruggedness of their Hellcats to extricate themselves from the combat zone, limping back to the Yorktown. The final tally of the war’s last dogfight stood at four American Hellcats lost, alongside two Japanese Zeros and two Raidens.
Aftermath and Legacy
The loss of Harrison, Hobbs, Mandeberg, and Sahloff - men who died in combat after the war had technically ended - cast a long, dark shadow over the celebrations aboard the Third Fleet. Admiral Halsey carried the psychological burden of their deaths for the remainder of his life. In his postwar memoirs, Halsey explicitly asked that the names of these four aviators never be forgotten, viewing their sacrifice as the ultimate tragedy of the conflict and referring to their deaths as an "unpayable personal debt".
The remains of the fallen aviators lay undisturbed for decades. It was not until March 1946 that U. S. personnel recovered unidentified remains from the Myoho-ji Temple in Yokohama, which were subsequently buried as an "unknown" at the Manila American Cemetery in the Philippines. In 2019, modern forensic initiatives led to the exhumation of these remains. Utilizing advanced Single Nucleotide Polymorphism DNA capture methods, the Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency conclusively identified the remains in March 2025 as those of Ensign Eugene Mandeberg. Eighty years after his final flight, Mandeberg was laid to rest with full military honors at Beth El Memorial Park in Livonia, Michigan, providing a solemn closure to the final casualty event of the Second World War.
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