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NEWS AND VIEWS THAT IMPACT LIMITED CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT

"There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with
power to endanger the public liberty." - - - - John Adams

Thursday, March 5, 2015

‘Huge’ WWII Japanese battleship Musashi has been found



Found at Last

  • It was an engineering marvel and one of the largest warships in naval history until it was destroyed by U.S. forces in WWII. For eight years, the sunken Japanese battleship Musashi was the subject of an exhaustive search by Microsoft co-founder and all-around renaissance man, Paul Allen.  He and his research crew discovered it Sunday. Underwater video of the wreckage shows a valve wheel with Japanese writing, a main gun turret, a catapult system for launching planes as well as the bow of the ship affixed with a teak chrysanthemum, the Imperial Seal of Japan.


(Washington Post)  -  The construction of a vessel that would come to represent the might of Japan’s navy was so secretive, according to historical accounts, that workers hid it underneath a camouflage of rope. There was good reason to try to keep construction secret. It would become a fearsome creature of war: Said to be at that time “the largest battleship in naval history,” it extended nearly 900 feet in length, weighed 73,000 tons and was equipped with a massive arsenal of guns.

“I couldn’t believe how enormous they were!” American Helldiver gunner Joe Anderlik recalled of the vessel during a massive naval battle that sank the beast. Musashi “was huge!” another gunner said, according to World War II Database. “I had never seen anything as big in my entire life. It was a magnificent sight.”

But despite such magnificence, the end of the Musashi would be as cloaked in opacity as its origins. Allied forces pummeled its mighty frame with 20 torpedoes and 17 bombs, and on that day in October 1944, it sank somewhere in the Sibuyan Sea near the Philippines. It took with it 1,023 lives. And it was never seen again.

Researchers believe this object was a catapult used to
launch float planes from the Musashi.
(PaulAllen.com/Agence France-Presse via Getty Images)

That was until this week, when the Musashi reemerged in the most unexpected of places: Microsoft billionaire Paul Allen’s Twitter page. “WW2 Battleship Musashi sank 1944 is FOUND 1,000 meters deep. … Huge anchor,” wrote Allen, who has been looking for the ship for more than eight years. “RIP crew of Musashi.”

The announcement brought a startling end to the story of the Musashi: sank by an American naval force, discovered by an American billionaire. “Since my youth, I have been fascinated with World War II history, inspired by my father’s service in the U.S. Army,” Allen said in a statement. “The Musashi is truly an engineering marvel and, as an engineer at heart, I have a deep appreciation for the technology and effort that went into its construction.”

Allen, 62, who founded Microsoft with Bill Gates and now owns, among other things, the Seattle Seahawks and the Portland Trail Blazers, uploaded a number of pictures of what he described as the ship’s rusty bow, with a Japanese seal clearly visible. According to the Japan Times, officials with the Imperial Japanese Navy and the Philippine navy were not aware of the reported discovery, which Allen said he found with his luxury yacht, the Octopus, which apparently has all sorts of gizmos for deep-ocean surveillance.

Read More . . . .



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The wreck of the largest battleship ever constructed has been located off the Philippines by Paul Allen, the joint-founder of Microsoft, more than 70 years after it was sunk during the Second World War.
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Avid underwater explorer Mr Allen posted images on his Twitter feed of the Musashi, the colossal Japanese warship sunk by US forces at the 1944 Battle of Leyte Gulf. 
(Telegraph.co.uk)

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