Japanese submarine I-177

I-176, a submarine of the same class as I-177
Career (Empire of Japan)
Name: I-177
Commissioned: 28 December 1942
Fate: Sunk by USS Samuel S. Miles (DE-183) on 3 October 1944
General characteristics
Class and type:KD7 type Kaidai-class submarine
Complement:101

Japanese Submarine I-177 was a Japanese KD7 type Kaidai-class submarine that saw service during World War II in the Imperial Japanese Navy. I-177 was commissioned on 28 December 1942 and was sunk by USS Samuel S. Miles (DE-183) on 3 October 1944 killing all of her 101-strong crew.

War crimes

Following the end of the Pacific War, Australian war crimes investigators investigated if the I-177 and its Commander Nakagawa were responsible for the sinking of the Australian Hospital Ship Centaur. The Centaur was torpedoed off the Australian east coast on 14 May 1943.[1] The torpedo ignited a fuel tank setting the ship ablaze. It rolled to port and sank within three minutes. Of the 332 crew, patients, medical staff and passengers on board, 268 died - only 64 were rescued.

Commander Nakagawa had survived the war because he had been transferred from the I-177 before it was sunk. Several of the investigators suspected that Nakagawa and I-177 were most likely responsible, but they were unable to establish this beyond reasonable doubt. However, Nakagawa was charged with ordering the machine-gunning of survivors from torpedoed ships on three different dates in February, 1944. He was convicted and sentenced to four years imprisonment at Sugamo Prison as a Class B war criminal.[2] Nakagawa refused to ever speak on the subject of the sinking of Centaur, even to defend himself, until his death in 1991.

Citations

  1. Dennis & Grey 2009, p. 124
  2. Jenkins, Battle Surface, pp. 284–5

References