Part of that would involve a more complicated question involving the actual capabilities of a 1980's carrier vs the Kido Buttai's Pearl Harbor Strike Forces.Nealithi wrote: ↑Fri Jan 15, 2021 11:15 pmI think the answer is that unless they failed to protect Pearl Harbor they would be. Not just the technical crew. All of the crew. Because even the cooks will know the damage control duties for the ship and be valuable understanding her. The only reason to keep her in theater is if somehow the systems didn't work right. Like the Phoenix missiles could not get proper lock-on to the mostly wooden aircraft. So the Nimitz blunts the attack and harms the Japanese fleet. But does not prevent said attack. Therefore is needed for support of things like the Aleutian Islands campaign etc. Till the fleet is restored. And by then she would be a proper flagship. (Though someone would likely rename her since she was named for an admiral that was in active duty at the time)
Once the 1st Wave Japanese Strike was airborne, would the Nimitz, and the Nimitz alone, without her normal supporting task force, have the capability of stopping that first wave of airborne strikes heading into Pearl? The answer to that is a much more ambiguous Maybe. At that point the Nimitz would have been carrying roughly a Dozen Tomcats as her main, and almost sole mechanism for engaging aerial combatants. The Japanese Carriers launched 420 aircraft in 2 waves of ~ 200 planes each, plus some scout/search planes. Spaced 45 minutes apart. How much ammo do Tomcats carry? At the speeds they fly how many airplanes can they shoot down per high speed pass? At best what they could probably do would be to disrupt the first attack wave. The Tomcats could 100% find and intercept the Japanese planes thanks to the Hawkeyes. But at the speeds they fly they would not be able to well differentiate the Zero's from the Kates and Vals to know to just pick off the bombers. And yeah there are questions as to just how effective the Sidewinders would be against the slower moving, not entirely metal prop planes.
But the second wave is where things get interesting. The Nimitz could at that point stop it cold and end the entire war in a few minutes. And they could do it with their Anti Sub Patrol planes. Which also carried anti ship missiles. The Nimitz could end the Kido Buttai, all 6 Japanese Carriers with the second strike still sitting on her decks. Or they could simply bomb the ever living shit out of the entire Japanese fleet with the A-6's. The Primary mission profile for Kirk Douglas would have been to send the Tomcats to harass the inbound Pearl strike, while sending everything else to sink every Japanese ship. The attack planes would not need fighter cover. They could fly and attack from altitudes above what the Japanese Aircraft or Anti Aircraft Fire could reach. Heck the Kido Buttai had no radar. They would not even know anything was coming until the ships were on fire.
The problem was in 1941 the Japanese Navy launched more combat aircraft in that single strike than all but 3 modern land based air forces actually operate in total. The Carrier of 1980 was not real well equipped to deal with a low tech high volume swarm of aircraft. At least not unless they got in close enough for the Carriers own Anti Aircraft defenses to open up.