The Night the U.S. Navy Task Force Attacked the Planet Venus
In the closing months of World War II, the skies over the Pacific were a source of constant anxiety. The Japanese had unleashed a desperate new weapon: the Fu-Go balloon bomb. These high-altitude, hydrogen-filled spheres were designed to ride the jet stream across the ocean and rain fire on the American mainland.
The threat was real, and every sailor was on high alert. However, on one infamous night, that vigilance led to a lopsided “battle” between a U.S. Navy Task Force and a target located 38 million miles away.
The Fu-Go Scare: A High-Altitude Menace

The Japanese Fu-Go campaign was the first truly intercontinental weapon system. Launched from Honshu, these 33-foot-wide paper balloons carried incendiary devices and high explosives. While most landed harmlessly in the ocean or the wilderness of the Pacific Northwest, they had already caused the only civilian casualties on the U.S. mainland during the war when a family in Oregon was killed by a downed device.
By 1945, “balloon fever” had gripped the Navy. Gunners were told to scan the horizon for any drifting, spherical object.
“Enemy Insight”: The Battle of the USS New York

In early 1945, the crew of the battleship USS New York spotted a “strange, glowing object” hovering high in the sky. To the naked eye, it appeared to be a high-altitude Japanese balloon, possibly observing the fleet or preparing to drop a payload.
The Captain didn’t hesitate. He ordered the anti-aircraft batteries to open fire.
- The Engagement: The 20mm and 40mm guns began thumping, sending tracers into the night sky.
- The Adjustment: Gunners initially set their fuses for 5,000 feet. When the “balloon” didn’t pop, they raised the ceiling to 7,500 feet. Still, the tracers seemed to fall short.
- The Max Effort: Finally, the guns were cranked to their maximum elevation of 10,000 feet.
After roughly 300 rounds of ammunition were spent, the ship’s navigator tapped the Captain on the shoulder. He had been checking the celestial charts. The “enemy balloon” was actually the planet Venus.
The Lethal Side of the Story

While the “Battle of Venus” ended with nothing but bruised egos and empty shell casings, the Fu-Go balloons were no joke. Between 1944 and 1945, Japan launched nearly 9,300 of them.
The most tragic incident occurred on May 4, 1945, in Bly, Oregon. A pregnant woman and five children discovered a “strange-looking object” in the woods while on a church picnic. When they touched it, the balloon’s 33-pound high-explosive bomb detonated, killing all six instantly. They remain the only Americans to die from enemy action on the continental U.S. during WWII.
The Legacy of the “Balloon Hunt”

The Navy’s accidental attack on Venus became a legendary cautionary tale in Gunnery Schools. It highlighted the “fog of war” and the dangers of confirmation bias—where you see exactly what you’ve been told to look for.
The Fu-Go program was eventually scrapped as Japan’s resources dwindled, but the story of the Navy’s war with the solar system lives on as a reminder that in wartime, even the stars can look like the enemy.
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The Night the U.S. Navy Task Force Attacked the Planet Venus
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