Naval supply ships alongside fleet units in Pacific waters

The Invisible Army - Part 8: Pacific Logistics: Two Systems, One Ocean

The Invisible Army ← Series Home Key Takeaways Two different concepts: The Army built forward bases and pulled supplies toward the front. The Navy created mobile logistics that moved with the fleet. Both worked�for different purposes. The fleet train revolution: The U.S. Navy developed underway replenishment�refueling and rearming ships at sea without returning to port. This multiplied combat power by keeping the fleet in action. Island hopping was logistics strategy: Bypassing strongholds and seizing key islands wasn't just tactical cleverness�it minimized the logistics burden of capturing and holding territory. Distance dominated everything: The vast Pacific distances forced innovations that shaped naval logistics for the next 80 years. The Tyranny of Pacific Distance The Pacific Theater presented logistics challenges unlike anything in Military and Logistics. The distances were almost incomprehensible: ...

Naval supply ships alongside fleet units in Pacific waters

The Kinetic Chain - Part 8: The Pacific Logistics Challenge

The Kinetic Chain 1 Part 1: Alexander's Invisible Army 2 Part 2: Napoleon's Fatal Calculation 3 Part 3: The Railroad Revolution 4 Part 4: The Crimean Catastrophe 5 Part 5: Barbarossa and the Battle of the Gauges 6 Part 6: The Battle of the Bulge and the Tyranny of Fuel 7 Part 7: Wholesale Distribution and the American Way of 8 Part 8: The Pacific Logistics Challenge 9 Part 9: Victory Through Logistics 10 Part 10: Vietnam and the Tyranny of Terrain 11 Part 11: Giap's Bicycle Brigades 12 Part 12: The Ho Chi Minh Trail 13 Part 13: American Largesse in Vietnam 14 Part 14: The M16 Debacle and Logistics Failure 15 Part 15: The Falklands Logistics Miracle 16 Part 16: Desert Storm and the Logistics Miracle 17 Part 17: The Future of Contested Logistics ← Series Home Key Takeaways Two different concepts: The Army built forward bases and pulled supplies toward the front. The Navy created mobile logistics that moved with the fleet. Both worked—for different purposes. The fleet train revolution: The U.S. Navy developed underway replenishment—refueling and rearming ships at sea without returning to port. This multiplied combat power by keeping the fleet in action. Island hopping was logistics strategy: Bypassing strongholds and seizing key islands wasn't just tactical cleverness—it minimized the logistics burden of capturing and holding territory. Distance dominated everything: The vast Pacific distances forced innovations that shaped naval logistics for the next 80 years. The Tyranny of Pacific Distance The Pacific Theater presented logistics challenges unlike anything in Military and Logistics. The distances were almost incomprehensible: ...

Massive convoy of ships and troops preparing for redeployment

The Invisible Army - Part 9: The Logistics of Victory After Victory

The Invisible Army ← Series Home Key Takeaways Victory creates logistics demands: The end of the European war didn't end logistics requirements—it created new ones as forces redeployed for the Pacific. Scale of redeployment was unprecedented: Moving millions of men and millions of tons of equipment halfway around the world in months had never been attempted. Operation Downfall's logistics: The planned invasion of Japan would have required the largest logistics operation in history—eclipsing even Normandy and Okinawa. Demobilization is logistics too: When Japan surrendered, the challenge reversed: how do you bring 12 million people home and return to a peacetime economy? The One-Front War On May 8, 1945, Germany surrendered. The European war was over. The Pacific war continued. ...

Massive convoy of ships and troops preparing for redeployment

The Kinetic Chain - Part 9: Victory Through Logistics

The Kinetic Chain 1 Part 1: Alexander's Invisible Army 2 Part 2: Napoleon's Fatal Calculation 3 Part 3: The Railroad Revolution 4 Part 4: The Crimean Catastrophe 5 Part 5: Barbarossa and the Battle of the Gauges 6 Part 6: The Battle of the Bulge and the Tyranny of Fuel 7 Part 7: Wholesale Distribution and the American Way of 8 Part 8: The Pacific Logistics Challenge 9 Part 9: Victory Through Logistics 10 Part 10: Vietnam and the Tyranny of Terrain 11 Part 11: Giap's Bicycle Brigades 12 Part 12: The Ho Chi Minh Trail 13 Part 13: American Largesse in Vietnam 14 Part 14: The M16 Debacle and Logistics Failure 15 Part 15: The Falklands Logistics Miracle 16 Part 16: Desert Storm and the Logistics Miracle 17 Part 17: The Future of Contested Logistics ← Series Home Key Takeaways Victory creates logistics demands: The end of the European war didn't end logistics requirements—it created new ones as forces redeployed for the Pacific. Scale of redeployment was unprecedented: Moving millions of men and millions of tons of equipment halfway around the world in months had never been attempted. Operation Downfall's logistics: The planned invasion of Japan would have required the largest logistics operation in history—eclipsing even Normandy and Okinawa. Demobilization is logistics too: When Japan surrendered, the challenge reversed: how do you bring 12 million people home and return to a peacetime economy? The One-Front War On May 8, 1945, Germany surrendered. The European war was over. The Pacific war continued. ...