The 
Japanese Zero and how we learned to  fight it.  
In April 1942 thirty-six Zeros attacking a  British naval base at Colombo, Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), were met by about sixty Royal Air Force aircraft of mixed types, many of them  obsolete. Twenty-seven of the RAF planes went down: fifteen Hawker  Hurricanes (of Battle of Britain fame), eight Fairey Swordfish, and  four Fairey Fulmars. The Japanese lost one Zero. 
 
Five months after America’s entry into the  war, the Zero was still a mystery to U.S. Navy pilots. On May 7,1942, in the Battle of the Coral Sea, fighter pilots from our aircraft carriers Lexington and Yorktown fought the Zero and didn’t know what to call it. Some misidentified it as the German  Messerschmitt 109. 
A few weeks later, on June 3 and 4, warplanes flew from the Japanese carriers Ryujo and Junyo to attack the American military base at  Dutch Harbor in Alaska’s Aleutian archipelago. Japan’s attack on  Alaska was intended to draw remnants of the U.S. fleet north from Pearl Harbor, away from Midway Island, where the Japanese were setting a trap. (The scheme ultimately backfired when our Navy  pilots sank four of Japan’s first-line aircraft carriers at Midway, giving the United States a major turning-point victory.)  
 
In the raid of June 4, twenty bombers blasted oil storage tanks, a warehouse, a hospital, a hangar, and a  beached freighter, while eleven Zeros strafed at will. Chief Petty Officer Makoto Endo led a three-plane Zero section from the Ryujo, whose other pilots were Flight Petty Officers Tsuguo Shikada and  Tadayoshi Koga. Koga, a small nineteen-year old, was the son of a  rural carpenter. His Zero, serial number 4593, was light gray, with  the imperial rising-sun insignia on its wings and fuselage. It had left the Mitsubishi Nagoya aircraft factory on February 19, only  three and a half months earlier, so it was the latest design.  
 
Shortly before the bombs fell on Dutch  Harbor that day, soldiers at an adjacent Army outpost had seen three Zeros shoot down a lumbering Catalina amphibian. As the plane began to sink, most of the seven-member crew climbed into a rubber raft and began paddling toward shore. The soldiers watched in horror as the Zeros strafed the crew until all were killed. The Zeros are believed to have been those of Endo, Shikada, and Koga. 
 
After massacring the Catalina crew, Endo led his section to Dutch Harbor, where it joined the other eight  Zeros in strafing. It was then (according to Shikada, interviewed in  1984) that Koga’s Zero was hit by ground fire. An Army intelligence  team later reported, “Bullet holes entered the plane from both upper  and lower sides.” One of the bullets severed the return oil line  between the oil cooler and the engine. As the engine continued to  run, it pumped oil from the broken line. A Navy photo taken during  the raid shows a Zero trailing what appears to be smoke. It is  probably oil, and there is little doubt that this is Zero 4593.  
 
After the raid, as the enemy planes flew  back toward their carriers, eight American Curtiss Warhawk P-40's  shot down four VaI (Aichi D3A) dive bombers thirty miles west of  Dutch Harbor. In the swirling, minutes-long dogfight, Lt. John J.  Cape shot down a plane identified as a Zero. Another Zero was almost  instantly on his tail. He climbed and rolled, trying to evade, but  those were the wrong maneuvers to escape a Zero. The enemy fighter  easily stayed with him, firing its two deadly 20-mm cannon and two  7.7-mm machine guns. Cape and his plane plunged into the sea.  Another Zero shot up the P-40 of Lt. Winfield McIntyre, who survived  a crash landing with a dead engine. 
 
Endo and Shikada accompanied Koga as he  flew his oil-spewing airplane to Akutan Island, twenty-five miles  away, which had been designated for emergency landings. A Japanese  submarine stood nearby to pick up downed pilots. The three Zeros  circled low over the green, treeless island. At a level, grassy  valley floor half a mile inland, Koga lowered his wheels and flaps  and eased toward a three-point landing. As his main wheels touched,  they dug in, and the Zero flipped onto its back, tossing water,  grass, and gobs of mud. The valley floor was a bog, and the  knee-high grass concealed water.    Endo and Shikada circled. There was no  sign of life. If Koga was dead, their duty was to destroy the downed  fighter. Incendiary bullets from their machine guns would have done  the job. But Koga was a friend, and they couldn’t bring themselves  to shoot. Perhaps he would recover, destroy the plane himself, and  walk to the waiting submarine. Endo and Shikada abandoned the downed  fighter and returned to the Ryujo, two hundred miles to the south.  (The Ryujo was sunk two months later in the eastern Solomons by  planes from the aircraft carrier Saratoga. Endo was killed in action  at Rabaul on October 12, 1943, while Shikada survived the war and  eventually became a banker.) 
 
The wrecked Zero lay in the bog for more  than a month, unseen by U.S. patrol planes and offshore ships.  Akutan is often foggy, and constant Aleutian winds create unpleasant  turbulence over the rugged island. Most pilots preferred to remain  over water, so planes rarely flew over Akutan. However, on July 10 a  U.S. Navy Catalina (PBY) amphibian returning from overnight patrol  crossed the island. A gunner named Wall called, “Hey, there’s an  airplane on the ground down there. It has meatballs on the wings.”  That meant the rising-sun insignia. The patrol plane’s commander,  Lt. William Thies, descended for a closer look. What he saw excited  him. 
 
Back at Dutch Harbor, Thies persuaded his  squadron commander to let him take a party to the downed plane. No  one then knew that it was a Zero. 
 
Ens. Robert Larson was Thies’s copilot  when the plane was discovered. He remembers reaching the Zero. “We  approached cautiously, walking in about a foot of water covered with  grass. Koga’s body, thoroughly strapped in, was upside down in the  plane, his head barely submerged in the water. “We were surprised at  the details of the airplane,” Larson continues. “It was well built,  with simple, unique features. Inspection plates could be opened by  pushing on a black dot with a finger. A latch would open, and one  could pull the plate out. Wingtips folded by unlatching them and  pushing them up by hand. The pilot had a parachute and a life raft.”  Koga’s body was buried nearby. 
 
In 1947 it was shifted to a cemetery on  nearby Adak Island, and later, it is believed, his remains were  returned to Japan . Thies had determined that the wrecked plane was  a nearly new Zero, which suddenly gave it special meaning, for it  was repairable. However, unlike U.S. warplanes, which had detachable  wings, the Zero’s wings were integral with the fuselage. This  complicated salvage and shipping. Navy crews fought the plane out of  the bog. The tripod that was used to lift the engine, and later the  fuselage, sank three to four feet into the mud. The Zero was too  heavy to turn over with the equipment on hand, so it was left upside  down while a tractor dragged it on a skid to the beach and a barge.  At Dutch Harbor it was turned over with a crane, cleaned, and  crated, wings and all. When the awkward crate containing Zero 4593  arrived at North Island Naval Air Station, San Diego, a  twelve-foot-high stockade was erected around it inside a hangar.  Marines guarded the priceless plane while Navy crews worked around  the clock to make it airworthy. (There is no evidence the Japanese  ever knew we had salvaged Koga’s plane.) 
 
In mid-September Lt. Cmdr. Eddie R.  Sanders studied it for a week as repairs were completed. Forty-six  years later he clearly remembered his flights in Koga’s Zero. “My  log shows that I made twenty-four flights in Zero 4593 from 20  September to 15 October 1942,” Sanders told me. “These flights  covered performance tests such as we do on planes undergoing Navy  tests. 
 
The very first flight exposed weaknesses  of the Zero that our pilots could exploit with proper tactics. “The  Zero had superior maneuverability only at the lower speeds used in  dog fighting, with short turning radius and excellent aileron  control at very low speeds. However, immediately apparent was the  fact that the ailerons froze up at speeds above two hundred knots,  so that rolling maneuvers at those speeds were slow and required  much force on the control stick. It rolled to the left much easier  than to the right. Also, its engine cut out under negative  acceleration [as when nosing into a dive] due to its float-type  carburetor. “We now had an answer for our pilots who were unable to  escape a pursuing Zero. We told them to go into a vertical power  dive, using negative acceleration, if possible, to open the range  quickly and gain advantageous speed while the Zero’s engine was  stopped. At about two hundred knots, we instructed them to roll hard  right before the Zero pilot could get his sights lined up. “This  recommended tactic was radioed to the fleet after my first flight of  Koga’s plane, and soon the welcome answer came back: “It works!’”  Sanders said, satisfaction sounding in his voice even after nearly  half a century. 
 
Thus by late September 1942 Allied pilots  in the Pacific theater knew how to escape a pursuing Zero.  
 
“Was Zero 4593 a good representative of  the Model 21 Zero?” I asked Sanders. In other words, was the  repaired airplane 100 percent? 
 
“About 98 percent,” he replied.  
 
The zero was added to the U.S. Navy  inventory and assigned its Mitsubishi serial number. The Japanese  colors and insignia were replaced with those of the U.S. Navy and  later the U.S. Army, which also test-flew it. The Navy pitted it  against the best American fighters of the time—the P-38 Lockheed  Lightning, the P-39 Bell Airacobra, the P-51 North American Mustang,  the F4F-4 Grumman Wildcat, and the F4U Chance Vought Corsair—and for  each type developed the most effective tactics and altitudes for  engaging the Zero. 
 
In February 1945 Cmdr. Richard G.  Crommelin was taxiing Zero 4593 at San Diego Naval Air Station,  where it was being used to train pilots bound for the Pacific war  zone. An SB-2C Curtiss Helldiver overran it and chopped it up from  tail to cockpit. Crommelin survived, but the Zero didn’t. Only a few  pieces of Zero 4593 remain today. The manifold pressure gauge, the  air-speed indicator, and the folding panel of the port wingtip were  donated to the Navy Museum at the Washington, D.C., Navy Yard by  Rear Adm. William N. Leonard, who salvaged them at San Diego in  1945. In addition, two of its manufacturer’s plates are in the  Alaska Aviation Heritage Museum in Anchorage, donated by Arthur  Bauman, the photographer. 
 
Leonard recently told me, “The captured  Zero was a treasure. To my knowledge no other captured machine has  ever unlocked so many secrets at a time when the need was so great.”  A somewhat comparable event took place off North Africa in  1944—coincidentally on the same date, June 4, that Koga crashed his  Zero. 
A squadron commanded by Capt. Daniel V.  Gallery, aboard the escort carrier Guadalcanal, captured the German  submarine U-505, boarding and securing the disabled vessel before  the fleeing crew could scuttle it. Code books, charts, and operating  instructions rescued from U-505 proved quite valuable to the Allies.  Captain Gallery later wrote, “Reception committees which we were  able to arrange as a result … may have had something to do with the  sinking of nearly three hundred U-boats in the next eleven months.”  By the time of U-505’s capture, however, the German war effort was  already starting to crumble (D-day came only two days later), while  Japan still dominated the Pacific when Koga’s plane was recovered.  
 
A  classic example of the Koga plane’s value occurred on April 1, 1943,  when Ken Walsh, a Marine flying an F4U Chance-Vought Corsair over  the Russell Islands southeast of Bougainville, encountered a lone  Zero. “I turned toward him, planning a deflection shot, but before I  could get on him, he rolled, putting his plane right under my tail  and within range. I had been told the Zero was extremely  maneuverable, but if I hadn’t seen how swiftly his plane flipped  onto my tail, I wouldn’t have believed it,” Walsh recently recalled.  “I remembered briefings that resulted from test flights of Koga’s  Zero on how to escape from a following Zero. With that lone Zero on  my tail I did a split S, and with its nose down and full throttle my  Corsair picked up speed fast .I wanted at least 240 knots,  preferably 260. Then, as prescribed, I rolled hard right. As I did  this and continued my dive, tracers from the Zero zinged past my  plane’s belly. “From information that came from Koga’s Zero, I knew  the Zero rolled more slowly to the right than to the left. If I  hadn’t known which way to turn or roll, I’d have probably rolled to  my left. If I had done that, the Zero would likely have turned with  me, locked on, and had me. I used that maneuver a number of times to  get away from Zeros.” By war’s end Capt. (later Lt. Col.) Kenneth  Walsh had twenty-one aerial victories (seventeen Zeros, three Vals,  one Pete), making him the war’s fourth-ranking Marine Corps ace. He  was awarded the Medal of Honor for two extremely courageous air  battles he fought over the Solomon Islands in his Corsair during  August 1943. He retired from the Marine Corps in 1962 after more  than twenty-eight years of service. Walsh holds the Distinguished  Flying Cross with six Gold Stars, the Air Medal with fourteen Gold  Stars, and more than a dozen other medals and honors. 
 
How important was our acquisition of  Koga’s Zero? Masatake Okumiya, who survived more air-sea battles  than any other Japanese naval officer, was aboard the Ryujo when  Koga made his last flight. He later co-authored two classic books,  Zero and Midway. Okumiya has written that the Allies’ acquisition of  Koga’s Zero was “no less serious” than the Japanese defeat at Midway  and “did much to hasten our final defeat.” If that doesn’t convince  you, ask Ken Walsh. 
 
INSIDE THE ZERO 
 
The Zero was Japan’s main fighter plane  throughout World War II. By war’s end about 11,500 Zeros had been  produced in five main variants. In March 1939, when the prototype  Zero was rolled out, Japan was in some ways still so backward that  the plane had to be hauled by oxcart from the Mitsubishi factory  twenty-nine miles to the airfield where it flew. It represented a  great leap in technology. At the start of World War II, some  countries’ fighters were open cockpit, fabric-covered biplanes. A  low-wing all-metal monoplane carrier fighter, predecessor to the  Zero, had been adopted by the Japanese in the mid-1930's, while the  U.S. Navy’s standard fighter was still a biplane. But the world took  little notice of Japan’s advanced military aircraft, so the Zero  came as a great shock to Americans at Pearl Harbor and afterward. A  combination of nimbleness and simplicity gave it fighting qualities  that no Allied plane could match. Lightness, simplicity, ease of  maintenance, sensitivity to controls, and extreme maneuverability  were the main elements that the designer Jiro Horikoshi built into  the Zero. The Model 21 flown by Koga weighed 5,500 pounds, including  fuel, ammunition, and pilot, while U.S. fighters weighed 7,500  pounds and up. Early models had no protective armor or self-sealing  fuel tanks, although these were standard features on U.S. fighters.  Despite its large-diameter 940-hp radial engine, the Zero had one of  the slimmest silhouettes of any World War II fighter. The maximum  speed of Koga’s Zero was 326 mph at 16,000 feet, not especially fast  for a 1942 fighter. But high speed wasn’t the reason for the Zero’s  great combat record. Agility was. Its large ailerons gave it great  maneuverability at low speeds. It could even outmaneuver the British  Spitfire. Advanced U.S. fighters produced toward the war’s end still  couldn’t turn with the Zero, but they were faster and could out  climb and out dive it. Without self-sealing fuel tanks, the Zero was  easily flamed when hit in any of its three wing and fuselage tanks  or its droppable belly tank. And without protective armor, its pilot  was vulnerable. In 1941 the Zero’s range of 1,675 nautical miles  (1,930 statute miles) was one of the wonders of the aviation world.  No other fighter plane had ever routinely flown such a distance.  Saburo Sakai, Japan’s highest-scoring surviving World War II ace,  with sixty-four kills, believes that if the Zero had not been  developed, Japan “would not have decided to start the war.” Other  Japanese authorities echo this opinion, and the confidence it  reflects was not, in the beginning at least, misplaced. Today the  Zero is one of the rarest of all major fighter planes of World War  II. Only sixteen complete and assembled examples are known to exist.  Of these, only two are flyable: one owned by Planes of Fame, in  Chino, California, and the other by the Confederate Air Force, in  Midland, Texas. 
After an outstanding presentation by Adm. "Whitey" Feightner, USN (Ret.), our member Mahlon Piper was prompted to send the above story he received from a former fighter pilot.