Haguro at anchor in April of 1936 | |
| History | |
|---|---|
| Name | Haguro |
| Namesake | Mount Haguro |
| Ordered | 1924 |
| Builder | Mitsubishi shipyard,Nagasaki |
| Laid down | 16 March 1925 |
| Launched | 24 March 1928 |
| Commissioned | 25 April 1929 |
| Stricken | 20 June 1945 |
| Fate | Sunk in theStrait of Malacca, 16 May 1945 |
| General characteristics | |
| Class & type | Myōkō-classcruiser |
| Displacement | 13,300long tons (13,513 t) |
| Length | 201.7 m (661 ft 9 in) |
| Beam | 20.73 m (68 ft 0 in) |
| Draft | 6.32 m (20 ft 9 in) |
| Installed power |
|
| Propulsion | 4 × shafts; 4 × gearedsteam turbines |
| Speed | 36knots (67 km/h; 41 mph) |
| Range | 8,000 nmi (15,000 km) at 14 knots (26 km/h; 16 mph) |
| Complement | 773 |
| Armament |
|
| Armor | |
| Aircraft carried | 2 ×floatplanes |
| Aviation facilities | 1 ×catapult |
Haguro (羽黒) was aMyōkō-classheavy cruiser of theImperial Japanese Navy, named afterMount Haguro inYamagata Prefecture. Commissioned in 1929,Haguro saw significant service duringWorld War II, participating in nine naval engagements between 1942 and 1945. As a heavy cruiser, she was better armed and armored than most surface vessels, and had multiple battles during her combat career. In the early part of the war, she engaged in vigorousshore bombardment duties to support the Japanese invasions of thePhilippines andDutch East Indies, and took part in the destruction of theAllied cruiser force defending the Dutch East Indies in theBattle of the Java Sea from 27 February to 1 March 1942. Withtorpedo hits,Haguro sank the Alliedflagship, thelight cruiserHNLMS De Ruyter, and thedestroyerHNLMS Kortenaer, and received primary credit for sinking the heavy cruiserHMS Exeter with gunfire, and was not damaged during the entire battle.[2]
After patrol duty, from 7–8 May,Haguro escortedaircraft carriers during theBattle of the Coral Sea, escorted the invasion force at theBattle of Midway, and escorted carriers during theBattle of the Eastern Solomons on 24 August. After a long series of patrol and escorting duties,Haguro fought an American cruiser-destroyer force at theBattle of Empress Augusta Bay, where she helped to damage the light cruiserUSS Denver, but was hit by ten 6-inch (152 mm) shells from enemy cruisers, but most were duds, so she got off with light damage. After more patrol duties and surviving the occasional air raid,Haguro escorted carriers at theBattle of the Philippine Sea, where she aided the sinking aircraft carrierTaihō, and fought in theBattle of Leyte Gulf, surviving thesubmarine and air attacks that sank several Japanese ships, and in turn damaging several American warships and helping to sink the destroyerUSS Hoel, while taking minor damage from shell and bomb hits.[2][3]
After escaping back to mainland Japan,Haguro spent most of 1945 transiting between bases transporting cargo. In May, she was transporting troops when she was ambushed byRoyal Navy destroyers in theMalacca Strait, the last surface battle between enemy warships.Haguro was sunk by at least nine torpedo hits and nearly an hour of gunfire. The wreck was discovered in 2010 and illegally salvaged in 2014.[2]

Haguro was the third of the four-memberMyōkō class ofheavy cruisers (sometimes referred to as theNachi class due to the second ship,Nachi, being completed beforeMyōkō, despite starting construction after);[4] the other ships wereMyōkō (妙高),Nachi (那智), andAshigara (足柄).[5] The ships of this class displaced 13,300 tons, were 201 metres (659 ft) long, and were capable of 36knots (67 km/h; 41 mph).
Haguro was originally equipped with ten20 cm (7.9-inch)/50 naval guns in five twin turrets, three forward and two aft, making her the most powerful heavy cruiser in the world at the time of her commissioning. Her secondary battery consisted of sixType 10 12 cm (4.7-inch) dual purposed guns in six single mounts, a pair of13.2 mm machine guns, and twelve 61 cm (24 inch) torpedo tubes in four triple mounts, a pair on each side.[4]
In the mid 1930s,Haguro's offensive capabilities were drastically improved. Her 20 cm (7.9 inch) guns were removed and replaced by ten 203 mm (8-inch) guns, improving rate of fire and penetration power. Her 12 cm (4.7 inch) dual guns were replaced by eight127 mm/40 dual purposed naval gun in four twin turrets, a pair on each side, and her triple torpedo tubes were replaced by quadruple torpedo mounts, making her total torpedo tubes a number of sixteen.Haguro's new AA battery also consisted of various 25 mm (1 inch) machine guns.[4]
Haguro's main belt was very thick for a cruiser, at 102 mm (4 inches) in thickness. She also carried 35 mm (1.4 inch) deck armor. She carried 76 mm (3 inch) barbette armor, and 25 mm (1 inch) turret armor. Her superstructure was mostly unarmored to avoid stability issues.[4]

Haguro waslaid down at theMitsubishi shipyard inNagasaki on 16 March 1925,launched and named on 24March 1928, and wascommissioned into the Imperial Navy on 25 April 1929. In October 1930,Haguro embarked on a voyage carryingEmperor Hirohito fromKobe to the battleshipKirishima from the 22nd to 25th.[2]
Between 1931 and 1933 she was commanded byNomura Naokuni who subsequently achieved flag rank. In 1936,Haguro received her first modernizations, and took part in a variety of troop-ferrying and convoy-escorting missions during theSino-Japanese war, but did not see combat.[2]

By the time of Japan's entry intoWorld War II with theattack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941,Haguro was en route to thePhilippines as part of a large cover force to support Japanese landings.Haguro saw her first action just four days later bombardingLegaspi, then she bombardedDavao on the night of 19–20 December after escortingtroop transports, before she conducted more shore bombardment onJolo on 24 December. On 4 January 1942, she survivedB-17 bombing attacks undamaged, then took part in several more shore bombardment missions to aid in the invasion ofCelebes. On 26 January, the submarineUSS Sailfish fired four torpedoes atHaguro, but none hit their mark. On 10 February,Haguro bombardedMakassar, then on 20 January bombardedTimor to support Japanese troop landings.[2]
On 26 February,Haguro and her sister shipNachi were escorting a large Japanese troop convoy passing through theJava Sea to support the Japanese invasion of the Dutch East Indies. En route, one ofNachi's floatplanes spotted a large Allied task force consisting of two heavy cruisers, three light cruisers, and nine destroyers attempting to intercept and destroy Japanese troop convoys.Haguro sped at full speed asNachi's floatplane radioed the Allied ships' action.[6]
By 6:00 on 27 FebruaryHaguro located the enemy ships and closed to a reasonable firing range. At around 28,000 yards (26,000 m),Haguro fired her eight 203 mm (8 in) guns, immediately targeting the Allied flagship, the Dutch light cruiserHNLMS De Ruyter. As the range drew closer,Haguro succeeded in hittingDe Ruyter twice. The first hit the auxiliary motor room and started a small fire, killing one crewman and injuring six others, while the second penetrated unarmored portions of the ship without exploding. Even when they did not hit,Haguro's shells still straddledDe Ruyter several times, causing light damage. In turn, several Allied cruisers targetedHaguro, which they reported to have blown up and sunk with gunfire damage.[2]
In reality,Haguro was not hit once, and as a torpedo attack from Japanese destroyers forced the Allied ships to conduct evasive maneuvers,Haguro switched fire to the heavy cruiserHMS Exeter, one of the most capable ships of the task force.Exeter responded back, but gunnery was poor, and by the eighth salvo she had only managed to straddleHaguro. In stark contrast, closing to about 22,000 yards (20,000 m)Haguro hitExeter twice. One 203 mm (8 in) shell stuck the stern below the waterline, and more critically the other penetrated deep inside the ship and exploded, destroying six of her eight boilers and killing 14 men.Exeter's speed dropped to 5 knots (9.3 km/h; 5.8 mph), and the crippled ship was forced to withdraw from the battle. Almost simultaneously,Haguro fired a spread of eighttype 93 torpedoes, and around 15 minutes later, one of these torpedoes hit the Dutch destroyerHNLMS Kortenaer. The destroyer was blown in half, the bow section rapidly sinking, and the stern section sinking several minutes later. Forty sailors went down with the ship. Fired from a distance of 22,000 yards, this was probably the longest ranged torpedo hit in history.[4][2][7][6]
Immediately afterwards, Japanese ships sank the destroyerHMS Electra, and with one cruiser crippled and two destroyers sunk, AdmiralDoorman aboardDe Ruyter ordered a false retreat from the battle and seemed to do so successfully. However, unknown to Doorman, one ofHaguro's floatplanes tracked down his ships and trailed the force.Haguro, joined byNachi, used the details given to them to sail to an interception point. It was just before midnight thatHaguro located the enemy force again, which were unaware of her presence. At around 16,000 yards (15,000 m), a stealthy torpedo attack was prepared,Nachi fired eight torpedoes, whileHaguro unleashed four. A torpedo fromNachi hit the light cruiserHNLMS Java, which ignited her main battery magazines, blowing the cruiser in two and sinking her in two minutes with the loss of all but 19 men. Four minutes later, one ofHaguro's torpedoes hitDe Ruyter. The explosion immediately killed many of the cruiser's damage control team and started a large fire. Overwhelming flooding disabled her engines, andDe Ruyter stopped dead in the water. Over three hours,De Ruyter capsized and sank with the loss of 367 men, including Admiral Doorman and CaptainEugène Lacomblé. Having sunk the Allied flagship,Haguro steamed from the battlefield. Depending on the source, she was either undetected, or spotted but Allied gunfire was ineffective.[2][4][6]

On 1 March 1942,Haguro was assisting in the Java Sea landings when intelligence informed her that the still crippledExeter, escorted by the destroyersHMS Encounter andUSS Pope, unintentionally stumbled into her sister shipsMyōkō andAshigara while trying to escape from the Java Sea, with a long-range gunfight ensuing.Haguro andNachi joined the battle almost an hour later, but neither side managed to land a single hit. TogetherHaguro andNachi engaged the cruiser, scoring their first hit five minutes later as a critical 8-inch (203 mm) shell hit disabledExeter's electrical power, followed by another that exploded and destroyedExeter's two remaining boilers, leaving her dead in the water.[8] Gunfire from all four cruisers then destroyedExeter's guns and lit her aflame, leading to her crew scuttling her.[9][10] By this point,Haguro was almost entirely out of ammunition, with enough rounds for 13 salvos and just 4 torpedoes, causing her to retire from the engagement, whileMyōkō andAshigara and the destroyersKawakaze andYamakaze combined to sinkEncounter.[11]Pope temporarily escaped, but within two hours was crippled by aircraft from the light carrierRyūjō[12] and then finished off by gunfire with the arrival ofAshigara andMyōkō.[13][14][15]


After the battle, the almost completely depletedHaguro returned toKendari on 3 March, and spent the rest of the month transiting between various naval facilities before returning to mainland Japan. On April 18,Haguro was present during theattack on Tokyo by the aircraft carrierUSS Hornet but was not damaged, and in turn served in the force that failed to track down the American task force responsible for the air raid, anchoring atYokosuka on 22 March.Haguro spent the rest of the month preparing to support the planned invasion ofPort Moresby. This commenced on 1 May whenHaguro,Myōkō and six destroyers departed Truk as part of a larger escort to the aircraft carriersShōkaku andZuikaku, which fought in theBattle of the Coral Sea.Haguro's crew watched as the first aircraft carrier battle in history unfolded from 7–8 May, and for her part survived the carrier raids which crippledShōkaku without suffering any damage herself before helping to assist the mauled but still-floating carrier.Haguro arrived back at Truk on 17 May, and returned to Kure on 22 May, then on the 27 May arrived atHashirajima in preparation for theBattle of Midway, whereHaguro escorted a large troop convoy for the planned invasion ofMidway Island, a convoy which was called off on 6 June after the battle turned into a devastating defeat in which Japan lost four aircraft carriers and a heavy cruiser.Haguro spent the rest of the month assisting invasion convoys.[2]

Haguro did not sortie during July, only seeing her next action as an escort for Japanese aircraft carriers during theBattle of the Eastern Solomons on 24 August, coming under light air attacks but receiving no damage. In turn,Shōkaku andZuikaku crippled the aircraft carrierUSS Enterprise, but failed to stop the sinking of the light carrierRyūjō, the destroyerMutsuki, and a troop transport by enemy dive and torpedo bombers, resulting in an American victory.Haguro spent the rest of August and into September transiting between ports, surviving attacks by B-17 bombers without damage, before being docked for refit on 5 October. On 27 November,Haguro departedSasebo alongsideMyōkō on a troop transport mission to Truk, then returned to Kure by the end of the year.[2]On 31 January 1943,Haguro escorted Japanese aircraft carriers which served as a cover force for theevacuation of Guadalcanal. She returned to Truk on 9 February. For the next few months,Haguro engaged in a series of uneventful patrol duties throughout theIndian Ocean, finally returning to Yokosuka later that May, before escorting navy responses[clarification needed] to the invasion of Attu until June, when she was docked for refit which installed new sets of radar and several anti-aircraft guns. She returned to Japan on 19 July. Throughout August and September,Haguro engaged in troop and supply transport missions, surviving a raid from US carrier aircraft on 18 September without damage. At the end of September,Haguro attempted to track down the US Navy's Task Force 15, but failed to make contact, then took part in convoy escorting missions throughout October.[2]
After a very, very long series of patrol and escorting duties without seeing combat,Haguro finally saw some significant action on 1 November, as she was moored near Rabaul when the Japanese command hatched a plan.Haguro andMyōkō, with an escort of the light cruisersAgano andSendai and six destroyers, theShiratsuyu,Shigure,Samidare,Hatsukaze,Naganami, andWakatsuki, were tasked with intercepting and destroying the Allied protection forces escorting American troop convoys destined forBougainville Island, in an attempt to replicate aBattle of Savo Island-style victory. While underway, one ofHaguro's floatplanes spotted her target, an American task force consisting of four light cruisers,USS Cleveland,Columbia,Denver, andMontpelier, escorted by eight destroyers.Haguro and the others steamed in hopes of engaging the enemy force.[2][3]
By 2:25 the next morning, the two forces came into contact of each other.Haguro fired, her salvos extremely tight, but missed her mark as her optics-based fire control was having trouble scoring early hits. In stark contrast, the four American cruisers with radar all opened fire onSendai, immediately striking her with 6-inch (152 mm) gunfire, setting her on fire and disabling her guns and engines. In turn,Shiratsuyu,Shigure, andSamidare all fired their torpedoes at 16,000 yards, with one ofSamidare's torpedoes blowing off the entire stern of the destroyerUSS Foote and taking the destroyer out of action. However, due to her proximity toSendai,Samidare was hit by three stray 6-inch (152 mm) shells before colliding withShiratsuyu, heavily damaging both ships.Haguro avoided colliding withWakatsuki, whileMyōkō collided withHatsukaze, damaging both ships.[2][3][16]
Shortly afterwardsHaguro finally found the range, and along withMyōkō displayed excellent marksmanship. With just three salvos each at 22,000 yards, they hitDenver with three 8-inch (203 mm) shell hits at the waterline, causing her to fall out of formation due to a flooded bow, damagedColumbia with an 8-inch (203 mm) shell that punched through her plating and landed in a sail locker, and straddledMontpelier several times. However,Cleveland,Columbia, andMontpelier all fired onHaguro, hitting the ship with ten 6-inch (152 mm) shells over a ten minute period, smashing intoHaguro's turret 2, port flight deck and catapult, aft deck hospital room, and paint shed. But six out of the ten hits were duds, and thus only superficial damage was inflicted, killing only one ofHaguro's men and injuring five others. Shortly afterwards,Myōkō hit the destroyerUSS Spence with an 8-inch (203 mm) waterline hit right as the destroyer began to shell the already damagedHatsukaze which forced her back.[3][17]

However, the Japanese received far more damage than they inflicted.Sendai had already been turned into a floating flaming wreck by gunfire from the four American cruisers and sunk with most of her crew in a one-sided massacre.Spence then called upon CaptainArleigh Burke's Destroyer Division 45, consisting ofUSS Charles Ausburne,Claxton,Dyson, andStanly, to deliver the final blow to the crippledHatsukaze, which they finished off with gunfire. Deciding to cut their losses,Haguro and the other Japanese ships retreated. Not only had they lost more tonnage than they damaged, they failed to disrupt the American landings in any way.[3][17] Upon arriving back at Rabaul, the port came under attack from nearly 160 American aircraft in thebombing of Rabaul, which ended the Japanese threat to Bougainville.Haguro was attacked and photographed several times, but was not damaged. Three days later,Haguro left Rabaul for Truk, arriving five days later, before further retreating to Sasebo for repairs.Haguro spent the rest of the year ferrying ground troops to Truk.[2]
Throughout the first half of 1944,Haguro often transited between various Japanese occupied ports, but did not see combat. On 13 June,Haguro joined a large force assembled in Tokyo and intended to defend the Philippines against American recapture.Haguro departed two days later as an escort for Japanese aircraft carriers, specifically the new armored carrierTaihō. However, the force was immediately spotted by American submarines and tracked for the next few days. On 19 June, the force was attacked by the submarineUSS Albacore, which unleashed a spread of six torpedoes, one of which hitTaihō. The damage was initially manageable, but gas fumes leaked throughout the ship, causing the carrier to ignite in a fiery explosion and sink.Haguro assisted the sinking carrier, but the idea of takingTaihō under tow was abandoned, and the carrier was left to sink. The destroyerWakatsuki then ferriedAdmiral Ozawa from the sinkingTaihō toHaguro, with the cruiser serving as the Japanese flagship for the rest of the day before Ozawa again transferred, toZuikaku.Haguro the next day survived the followup attacks by American aircraft carrier planes, watching as the aircraft carrierHiyō and two oil tankers were sunk.[2][18]
Haguro returned to Okinawa on 22 June, and two days later was drydocked in Kure for refit, receiving 52 additional AA guns and upgraded type 13 and 22 radar. She was undocked six days later and immediately departed on a troop transport mission to Manila. She then spent July operating off Singapore, before spending the next few months on vigorous training duties.[2]

On 18 October 1944,Haguro departed with a massive Japanese fleet forBrunei, arriving two days later. The fleet, led by AdmiralTakeo Kurita, consisted of Japan's two "super battleships"Yamato andMusashi, the largest and most powerful battleships in the world, supported by the older battleshipsNagato,Kongō, andHaruna, ten heavy cruisers (includingHaguro), two light cruisers, and 15 destroyers. Their plan was to intercept the extremely critical American invasion convoys heading through Leyte Gulf for the Philippine invasion, as the Philippines served as a crucial supply point between the Dutch East Indies and Japan.[2][19]

On 22 October, the fleet departed Brunei for battle,Haguro in a line of cruisers following the battleships. However, in the darkness of the early morning of 23 October, the fleet was intercepted by the submarinesUSS Darter andDace, which torpedoed and sank the heavy cruisersAtago andMaya, respectively. Shortly afterwards, two torpedoes from a salvo fromDarter forcedHaguro to maneuver to avoid damage. The heavy cruiserTakao was hit by two torpedoes and forced to retire from the battle, taking the destroyersAsashimo andNaganami for protection.[2][19]
With three heavy cruisers and two destroyers out of the fight, the fleet regrouped into two circular formations,Haguro serving in the leading group centering aroundYamato in anticipation of air attacks. These fears proved correct when aircraft from five American fleet carriers raided the center force in the afternoon of 24 October.Haguro came under attack several times, being strafed, but was not hit. This was because the majority of the air attacks were focused onMusashi, which over nine hours was hit by at least 17 bombs and 19–20 torpedoes, sinking by the bow that evening. Meanwhile,Myōkō was hit by an aerial torpedo which dropped her speed to 15 knots and forced her to retire, resulting in Vice AdmiralHashimoto transferring his flag toHaguro as she continued on with the fleet.[2][19]
On the morning of 25 October,Haguro was underway when the Japanese Center Force encountered Taffy 3, a task force of six American escort carriers, three destroyers, and four destroyer escorts. Admiral Kurita aboardYamato mistook the escort carriers for fleet carriers, and by size comparison the destroyers for cruisers and destroyer escorts for destroyers, and ordered an all-out attack.Haguro charged at the enemy fleet, hoping to catch up to the carriers, but at 7:23, at 10,300 yards,Haguro located a US "cruiser" attempting a torpedo attack and turned to engage. This "cruiser" was actually the destroyerUSS Hoel, which was attempting to engageKongō. On her first salvo,Haguro hitHoel with two 8-inch (203 mm) shells, one hitting her bridge and the other her main rangefinder, destroying her mark 37 director, FD radar, PPI scope, machine gun control, and all voice radio communications. A second salvo hitHoel with another 8-inch (203 mm) shell above her boiler room.Haguro's third salvo then hit with three more 8-inch (203 mm) shells, the first two destroying the after generator and port engine, flooding the after engine and disabling all lighting aft. The third hit her No 3 handing room, starting a powder fire and destroying her turret 3. This damage promptedHoel to unleash five torpedoes and retreat, only to be hit by three more 8-inch (203 mm) shells, two knocking turrets 4 and 5 out of action, while the third destroyed two 20 mm AA guns. Finally, one ofHaguro's 5-inch (127 mm) secondary shells hitHoel's bow below the waterline, causing minor flooding.[20][21]

With four salvos,Haguro hitHoel with nine 8-inch (203 mm) shells and one 5-inch (127 mm) shell, destroying three ofHoel's five 5-inch (127 mm) guns, her port engine, after generator, bridge, and main battery director, as well as inflicting other damage. HadHaguro correctly identifiedHoel as a destroyer and not a cruiser, the hits to the turrets and handing room would have likely detonated her magazines and sank her then and there. However,Haguro fired armor-piercing shells that penetratedHoel's unarmored hull without exploding. Still, the damage was significant, and the crippledHoel was later finished off by gunfire fromYamato andNagato.[20][21]
After helping to sinkHoel,Haguro continued on to engage the escort carriers. At 7:50,Haguro twice hit the escort carrierUSS Fanshaw Bay at a distance of 17,200 yards. Both 8-inch (203 mm) shells hit her flight deck near the bow, poking holes in the ship but not causing any significant damage, again due to the use of AP shells. Shortly after 8:00,Haguro switched fire to the escort carrierUSS Kalinin Bay, with the carrier responding with her lone 5-inch (127 mm) gun. In a running gun duel, which the heavy cruiserTone joined in at 8:18,Kalinin Bay was hit by three 8-inch (203 mm) shells, two of which hit the stern and caused minor flooding, while the third holed her bow. Two near misses also detonated underneath her fantail, causing more damage than the direct hits and flooding her stern. In turn,Haguro was hit by two 5-inch (127 mm) shells fromKalinin Bay, neither of which caused notable damage. However, at 8:25 planes fromFanshaw Bay hitHaguro with two 100-pound bombs, one of which hit the ammunition storage of her turret 2, killing 30 sailors and injuring 12, forcing the flooding of her turret 2 barbette to prevent a magazine detonation and taking the turret out of action for the rest of the battle.[2][22][23][24][25]
Haguro temporally retreated to conduct repairs. After 8:30, she returned to the battlefield, where she joinedTone in continuing to poundKalinin Bay. Closing to 10,100 yards,Haguro andTone struckKalinin Bay with another eleven 8-inch (203 mm) shell hits, the first two punching through her hangar bay, while the third holed her below the waterline, passed through the ship, and detonated after coming out the other side and hitting the water, effectively acting as a near miss. This shell disabled the ship's fuel lines, shredded her forward bulkhead, and caused notable flooding. The next two hits again punched through the flight deck, while another holed her bow above the waterline. The rest of the hits all plunged intoKalinin Bay's flight deck, starting a fire which raged throughout the hangar bay. In addition to the direct hits, several damaging near misses resulted in seawater flooding the ship. In total,Kalinin Bay took fourteen direct 8-inch (203 mm) rounds, seven each fromHaguro andTone, a 14-inch (356 mm) shell fromHaruna, and after the surface action twokamikazes. Despite this, she would not sink, undoubtedly due to the use of armor-piercing shells that failed to explode upon hitting the ship, when high explosive shells would have detonated and sunk the carrier.[23][24]
Concluding her target had sunk, at 8:55,Haguro andTone switched fire back toFanshaw Bay,Tone hitFanshaw Bay once,Haguro three times, the combined damage starting four small fires in her hangar bay as a result of cutting power lines and disabling one of her catapults. Finally,Haguro engaged the destroyer escortUSS Dennis, and succeeded in hitting her with four 8-inch (203 mm) shells, resulting in minor flooding to her bow and disabling her forward 5-inch (127 mm) gun turret.[21][25][26]

Haguro fired her last salvo at 9:12. During the course of the engagement, she unleashed a total of 345 8-inch (203 mm) rounds. With the sinking of the heavy cruisersChikuma,Chōkai, andSuzuya to air attacks, and the damaging of several more, while believing his ships had sunk at least two fleet carriers (if not more) and multiple cruisers and destroyers, Kurita ordered a withdrawal.Haguro, while retreating with the other Japanese ships, spotted the formation of escort carriers that made up Taffy 2, but chose not to attack.[27] Just before 11:00, aircraft from American carriers attacked.Haguro's AA guns responded, but failed to shoot down any planes.Haguro was undamaged, as most of the planes ignored her and targetedYamato, which they too failed to damage.[28] More air attacks ensued the next two days, sinking the light cruiserNoshiro and the destroyersHayashimo,Fujinami, andShiranui. However,Haguro was attacked by a single plane whose bomb landed a damaging near miss to her port side.[29]
On 28 October,Haguro returned to Brunei with the rest of the fleet. The battle was a devastating defeat. Japan had lost three battleships, an aircraft carrier, three light carriers, six heavy cruisers, three light cruisers, and 11 destroyers, and in turn sank just one American light carrier, two escort carriers, two destroyers, and two destroyer escorts. This battle crippled the Japanese navy, rendering it unable to effectively operate as a fleet due to the oil fields of the Dutch East Indies being cut off and the sheer number of Japanese ships sunk in both the battle and its immediate aftermath. Despite helping to sink a destroyer and damaging several other ships,Haguro failed to engage her intended target of the American troop convoys, as with the rest of the fleet, rendering the Battle of Leyte Gulf both a crushing tactical and strategic victory for the Allied forces.[2][19]
The day after reaching Brunei,Haguro was refueled byTone, and on 6 November the aircraft carrierJunyō and her escorts arrived at Brunei to restockHaguro's guns (excluding the unrepaired turret 2). On the 8th, with the allied invasion of the Philippines increasing in successHaguro attempted to escort the fleet out of Brunei, only for the fleet to return to Brunei on the 11th. The 16th saw an attack by US army aircraft lightly damageHaguro with bomb near miss and splinter damage. Three days later,Haguro left Brunei for the last time escorting the battleshipHaruna to Lingga, but the 22nd sawHaruna run aground and damage herself, which resulted the group redirecting for Singapore whereHaguro arrived later that afternoon. The start of December sawHaguro drydocked for hull repairs, where the barrels to her still unrepaired turret 2 were removed and a makeshift roof was attached to protect the exposed turret from weather.Haguro left drydock on 16 December, where her crew was informed of her sister shipMyōkō – still unrepaired from the torpedo damage inflicted at the battle of Leyte Gulf – being hit by another torpedo from the submarineUSS Bergall and left limping at 6 knots without steering. Two days later,Haguro let Singapore to takeMyōkō under tow.Haguro found her crippled sister ship the next day, but rough seas prevented a tow line from connecting for the next 4 days. It was only on the 23rd that the weather calmed enough forHaguro to finally takeMyōkō under tow, where they arrived at Singapore two days later.[2][30]
With the start of 1945Haguro was reassigned to the Southwest area fleet, and from 22 to 30 January was drydocked for repairs to her number 3 oil tank. She immediately departed for Lingga and arrived on the 31st, where she remained at anchor for the entirety of February; the 5th sawHaguro reassigned to Tenth area fleet before the 24th sawHaguro survive an attack by US air force bombers undamaged.Haguro finally left Lingga on 20 March on a return journey to Singapore, where a mine exploded nearby and spooked the cruiser's crew, but no damage was inflicted.[2]
In May 1945,Haguro was the target of the British "Operation Dukedom" and was ambushed. The 26th Destroyer Flotilla found her with the destroyerKamikaze just after midnight on 16 May, and began the attack. During the battle,Kamikaze was lightly damaged, butHaguro was hit by gunfire and threeMark IX torpedoes from the British destroyers. She soon began to slow down and took a 30-degree list to port.
At 02:32, after receiving an hour of gunfire and around nine torpedoes,Haguro finally began to go down stern first in theMalacca Strait, 55 mi (48 nmi; 89 km) offPenang;Kamikaze rescued 320 survivors, but 751 men,[31] including Vice AdmiralHashimoto and Rear AdmiralSugiura, perished with her.[32] Rear Admiral Sugiura was posthumously promoted to vice admiral on 16 May.Haguro was the last major Japanese warship to be sunk in a surface action during the war.[33]
Haguro was stricken from theNavy list on 20 June.

On 4 March 2003, a group of specialized shipwreck divers operating off MVEmpress discovered the wreck ofHaguro in 67 metres (220 ft) of water in the Malacca Strait south of Penang.[34] The wreck sits upright, covered in places by discarded trawler nets with her hull opposite her forward turrets buried in the seabed to about her original waterline, but this level gradually reduces until at the stern her outer propellers and shafts are actually up above the seabed. Her foremast and the top half of the bridge structure are missing/collapsed. Her mainmast is collapsed. Her funnels are missing. British hits are visible in places. The bow section forward of no. 2 turret is badly damaged by torpedo hits.Haguro's no. 1 turret and barbette are uprooted and lie against the hull, the rear of the turret on the starboard sea bed and the barrels pointing vertically towards the surface. Her no. 2 turret is trained to starboard at approximately the 1 o'clock position, with its roof collapsed and both barrels and breeches missing, as they were not replaced after being damaged by a bomb at the earlier Battle of Leyte Gulf. Her no. 3 turret's guns are askew and trained to the port quarter at the 8 o'clock position. Both her stern main turrets' guns point almost directly astern. Just behind the no. 5 turret, the wreck is broken in half, although the very stern section is still "partially" attached and heavily damaged on the port side.[2]
In 2010 a further diving expedition surveyed the wreck in detail.[32] In 2014 the wreck was among five located in the region reported to have been heavily destroyed by illegal salvors.[35]