CORAL SEA BATTLE
JAPANESE CLAIMS ‘BRILLIANT VICTORY” HAMPERED BY WEATHER (By Telegraph—Press Association—Copyright) (Recd. 10.55 p.m.) New York, May 13. According to a United Press of America dispatch, a Japanese naval spokesman at Shanghai asserted today that bad weather and nothing else prevented the Japanese fleet from achieving a knock-out victory in the I aerial and naval battle in the Coral Sea. The spokesman added that if it had not been for the weather the Japanese would have been cible to pursue and completely destroy the United Nations' forces, which, he declared, consisted of two aircraft-carriers, two battleships, three 10,000-ton cruisers, and six or seven destroyers. Tokio official radio tacitly admitted the importance of the Coral Sea battle by the disclosure that the Japanese warships were commanded by Admiral Yamamoto, Commander-in-i’ Chief of the Japanese combined fleet, I to whom Premier Tojo cabled a message of felicitations on the “brilliant achievements attained by the Japanese Navy against the combined British and American fleet.”
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Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 86, Issue 111, 14 May 1942, Page 5
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163CORAL SEA BATTLE Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 86, Issue 111, 14 May 1942, Page 5
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