The moment he roared, countless aerial bombs fell from the bomber's magazine, like meteorites, swooping down towards the Japanese warships amidst the roar.
All dive bombers lowered their altitude before bombing Japanese warships.
Compared with the rapidly passing fighter planes, these Japanese warships are as heavy as turtles on the mud.
Whether an aerial bomb can hit a Japanese warship only depends on the skill of the pilot who drops the bomb.
The aerial bombs dropped included armor-piercing bombs, incendiary bombs, napalm bombs, white phosphorus incendiary bombs, etc.
Seeing enemy bombers passing over their heads, dropping bombs like a rainstorm, many Japanese soldiers had already begun to scream and run away.
The Japanese soldiers who stayed behind continued to shoot at the fighter planes passing by in the sky.
They no longer need to consider whether the anti-aircraft shells they fired will hit their own fighter planes.
Because in the past period of time, all their fighter planes were killed by the air-to-air missile salvoes of the Fourth Army, and no one was left.
The few remaining fighter planes have been re-berthed on the aircraft carrier and will no longer attack.
¡°Boom!!¡±
¡°Boom!!!!¡±
The loud noise caused by the explosion began to sound like thunder running between heaven and earth, exploding in the Japanese fleet.
Countless bombs exploded one after another, and the dense noise changed the background sound of the entire world.
The sound of the waves on the sea can no longer be heard, the cry for help of the fallen soldier has been torn to pieces, and the roar of the fighter plane can no longer be heard amid the thunderous explosion.
Explosions, flames, the darkness still shrouding the surroundings, and the persistent dark clouds above have become the main components of this huge picture.
On the Japanese warship, aerial bombs exploded one after another, blasting huge holes in the Japanese deck and exposing the bottom cabin. The Japanese ship island was demolished, leaving behind collapsed iron plates and signal towers.
The bomb that fell into the water set off a huge wave at the moment of explosion.
The waves flew up to a height of tens of meters, and then fell down hard like a giant palm.
Some Japanese soldiers on the deck were knocked over by the falling waves, and were carried by the current on the deck into the abyss-like cold water.
Their anti-aircraft firepower network was intertwined in the sky, as if the shuttle of a loom was traveling back and forth.
Whenever the bombers and fighter jets of the Fourth Army encounter these firepower nets, it is inevitable that some fighter planes will be shot down.
If they are lucky and hit an insignificant place, their fighter planes can barely support their return. If they are unlucky and hit the fuel tank or cockpit, these fighters are destined to be unable to refuse the invitation of the ocean.
But the pilots of the Fourth Army have already regarded death as home.
They controlled the fighter planes like hunting eagles, flying high into the sky again and again, and then flew down at extremely high speeds, dived very close to the Japanese warships, and then dropped bombs.
¡°Boom boom!!!¡±
A loud noise was heard, and another Japanese destroyer exploded violently. The boiler and ammunition depot caught fire at the same time, and the entire warship began to tilt.
The Japanese sailors above had already begun to jump into the sea or look for lifeboats.
But it¡¯s not really safe when you¡¯re on the sea.
The fuel flowing out of the warship, as well as the strafing and bombing from the aircraft overhead, can all claim their names.
¡°Boom!!!¡±
There was another explosion. A Japanese cruiser was under continuous bombing. Its thick external armor could not withstand the intensive bombing.
Amidst the huge noise, the cruiser's ammunition depot was detonated, and the entire hull was cut in half in the huge explosion.
The Japanese battleships were thick-skinned and often resisted bombardments from more than a dozen aerial bombs, to no avail.
But their soldiers were unable to withstand the bombardment of incendiary bombs and napalm bombs.
Especially napalm bombs, these pervasive napalm, after burning, flowed down from various gaps in the Japanese cabin like ghosts.
??Any place it passes by will be ignited by flames.
Often the Japanese troops on the ship put out the newly burning flames, and the ensuing napalm bombs would also kill these Japanese troops putting out the fire.
The burning flames, the soldiers who kept dying, and the warships that kept exploding made a large number of Japanese soldiers begin to fall into despair.
They were like falling into hell, surrounded by either cold water or scorching flames, bombs exploding constantly, and bullets falling from the sky.
The first round of bombing ended quickly, but the attacks by the air forces of the Fourth Army did not stop.
Their attacks against the Japanese army continued.
The second round of bomber formations and fighter formations are already approaching here, and the distance is getting closer and closer.
The soldiers on the Japanese warships breathed a sigh of relief when they saw the first bomber formation gradually disappearing, and the original rumbling engine sound gradually disappeared.
This cruel battle is finally over.
The soldiers thought this in their hearts, but they did not realize that this battle had just begun.
Hojo Seiji walked out of the command module and looked at the bombed deck, which was full of holes, and at the destroyed carrier-based aircraft above the deck.
He walked forward and saw other warships, many of which were in flames and thick smoke, like people about to drown, as if they were about to be swallowed by the boundless sea water at any time.
With the help of the light generated by the flames, Hojo Seiji could see that among the thick smoke and flames, Japanese soldiers were working hard to extinguish the flames. Only in this way can the battleship be prevented from sinking.
But some battleships were not so lucky. Two destroyers had completely sunk. One of the battleships, with only half of its bow exposed, was still standing stubbornly on the water.
But complete sinking is only a matter of time.
Many soldiers on the sea have begun to struggle to get closer to the warships next to them, but the fuel floating on the seaside may burn at any time.
Just as Hojo Seiji was watching the Japanese soldiers swimming desperately towards other warships, a burst of flames suddenly flew out from behind the Japanese army and fell towards the sea below.
Hojo Seiji¡¯s eyes suddenly widened, and his pupils dilated instantly. (Remember the website address: www.hlnovel.com