It allowed the US to bypass needless islands, that would just be waste of men and resources, and pick and capture strategic ones that were more likely to offer to strategic rescources... Deepwater ports, Radio/Radar relay stations, and most important of all Airfields that would allow bombers to land and refuel from.
Island Hopping
Island hopping, also called leapfrogging, was an important military strategy in the Pacific Theater of World War II. The strategy was to bypass heavily fortified Japanese positions and instead concentrate the limited Allied resources on strategically important islands that were not well defended but capable of supporting the drive to the main islands of Japan
island hopping
US was attacking in the island hopping campaign, not Japan. Japan was defending. Island hopping started midway, and went through Iwo Jima, Tarawa, and so on. again, US was attacking.
The Americans decided that they would adopt a "Europe First" strategy, and fight a war of attrition against the Germans in tandem with a Soviet offensive campaign coming from the East to defeat Hitler. Against Japan the Americans took an island-hopping strategy to avoid the cost of rooting out the Japanese defenders on every single island that Japan had taken during their sweeping offensives of 1938-1942.
Island hopping
USA
Island hopping. (In NovaNET: "leap frogging")
Island Hopping
During World War II, the American strategy in the Pacific against the Japanese became known as 'island-hopping.' Through this approach to defeating their enemy, the U.S. military by-passed (or, hopped over) Japanese strong-points for the sake of securing selected islands elsewhere. These islands, once occupied, would then serve as forward bases for the next 'hop' forward -- closer to Japan itself.
Island Hopping
Island hopping, also called leapfrogging, was an important military strategy in the Pacific Theater of World War II. The strategy was to bypass heavily fortified Japanese positions and instead concentrate the limited Allied resources on strategically important islands that were not well defended but capable of supporting the drive to the main islands of Japan
Island hopping was a strategy for gaining ground in the Pacific during World War II. The plan was to take control of an island, then jump to the next one. Eventually, this allowed the US to get close enough to Japan to bomb them repeatedly.
island hopping
the strategy of "island hopping" was used by the United States in the Pacific theater of world war two. Thought of by Douglas MacArthur, "island hopping" was a strategy that used the technique of jumping from island to island on a chain to control the chain as a whole vs attacking all the islands at once. This helped establish air base's on islands in order to conduct further operations and expand supply lines to more islands. Actually, both Nimitz and MacArthur based their Island Hopping on Plan Orange created by a joint war college of the War Department and Navy Department for action in the Western Pacific in the 1930s.
During World War 2, General Douglas MacArthur developed the strategy of island hopping. He would capture certain islands. The Americans would use those islands to get closer to their goal. He would leave Japanese troops on the other islands. He would not waste American lives trying to capture those islands. The objective was to get close enough to Japan to establish bomber bases capable of dropping bombs on Japan.
The "Island Hopping Strategy", was "Hit em where they ain't." Translation: Instead of having a "blood bath" on every island that is garrisoned by enemy troops. By pass those islands; and only assault the islands that are NEEDED (for airfields & bases, etc.).