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The Battle of Coral Sea is a conflict of the First Alliance-PLANT War featured in the photonovel Mobile Suit Gundam SEED MSV: Battlefield Record.

Prelude[]

In April 2nd C.E.70, ZAFT dropped the disassembled components of a military base from orbit to the Gulf of Carpentaria in Oceania Union. Within 48 hours, the foundations of the Carpentaria Base have been laid and ZAFT also destroyed an invading Atlantic Federation fleet. Thus establishing ZAFT's first military presence on Earth.

A few days later, a ZAFT fleet in the Tasman sea was to travel through the Coral Sea and the Torres Strait to the Gulf of Carpentaria. Determined to prevent that ZAFT fleet from reinforcing Carpentaria base, Atlantic Federation Navy sent the 21st Anti-Submarine Warfare Fleet to the Coral sea, with the mission to intercept this ZAFT reinforcement fleet.

The Battle[]

On April 10th, C.E.70, the ZAFT fleet engaged the Atlantic Federation's 21st ASW Fleet in the Coral Sea. During the battle, the ASW Fleet deployed many Kingfisher 33SP Anti-Submarine Warfare helicopters, one of which was piloted by Ensign Jane Houston. On ZAFT's side, Marco Morassim sortied in his new GINN FEMWS.

The battle started when Jane's Kingfisher detected the approaching ZAFT fleet, however, the anti-submarine rockets launched by 21st ASW Fleet were ineffective and did not hit any ZAFT naval asset. In the battle, the Canageon and Bradford of the ASW Fleet tried to circumvent the Vosgulov-class submarines and the mobile suits to destroy the supply submarine convoy, but they were unsuccessful and were quickly destroyed. Eventually, the 21st ASW Fleet's flagship, the Cumberland, the carrier Kingsvilel, along with all the other ships and Kingfisher helicopters were destroyed by the ZAFT fleet.[1]

Aftermath[]

The battle proved to be a total disaster for the Atlantic Federation; its entire 21st ASW Fleet was wiped out with only one survivor; Jane Houston.

Gallery[]

Notes & Trivia[]

  • The Battle of Coral Sea is a reference to the real-life World War 2 naval battle in the same sea; see the Battle of the Coral sea. This battle is historically significant as the first action in which aircraft carriers engaged each other and the first in which the opposing ships neither sighted nor fired directly upon one another.

Appearances[]

Novels

References[]


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