Japanese invasions In late 1941,
Nachi was based at
Mako Guard District in the
Pescadores Islands, and at the time of the
attack on Pearl Harbor,
Myōkō and
Nachi formed
Sentai-5 of the
IJN 3rd Fleet.
Sentai-5 was commanded by Rear Admiral
Takeo Takagi, and deployed from
Palau to provide cover for the landings of Japanese forces under "Operation M" — the invasion of the southern
Philippine Islands. After covering the landings of Japanese forces at
Legaspi on 11 December 1941,
Myōkō and
Nachi returned to Palau, and were then reassigned to Rear Admiral
Raizō Tanaka, whose attack force covered landings at
Davao on 19 December and
Jolo on 24 December. Later that same evening,
Nachi and
Haguro tracked down the allied force again and closed to 16,000 yards, firing their torpedo batteries. A torpedo from
Nachi struck the Dutch light cruiser , blowing up her 5.9-inch (15 cm) magazines, tearing the cruiser in two as it sank in two minutes. Several minutes later a torpedo from
Haguro hit the light cruiser , resulting in the cruiser sinking to progressive flooding over nearly three hours, and killing Admiral
Karel Doorman. Two days later, on 1 March,
Nachi and
Haguro and their accompanying destroyers spotted the crippled
Exeter as she attempted to escape the Java Sea, and joined forced with the cruisers
Myōkō and
Ashigara (and their accompanying destroyers). The four cruisers hit
Exeter with shells that disabled her electrical power and guns, set her aflame, and destroyed her remaining boilers, leaving her dead in the water, leading to the allied cruiser's scuttling via her own crew.
Nachi then retreated alongside
Haguro, while
Myōkō and
Ashigara both engaged the destroyer , which they overpowered and sank. The destroyer , which was accompanying the two British ships, initially escaped the melee only to be caught and crippled about two hours later by planes from the
Japanese light carrier Ryūjō,
and finished off by
Myōkō and
Ashigara.
Operations in northern waters Later in March,
Nachi received a refit at Sasebo for operations in northern waters, and patrolled the
Kurile Islands in April and May. On 26 May,
Nachi departed from
Ōminato Guard District as flagship of Vice Admiral
Boshiro Hosogaya's force for the
invasion of the Aleutian islands, and patrolled south of
Attu, returning to Ōminato on 23 June. She departed Ōminato to escort another convoy to
Kiska from 28 June, remaining in the
Aleutian Islands until 7 July. After a refit at
Yokosuka Naval Arsenal from 14–30 July,
Nachi was reassigned to the
IJN 5th Fleet with and . She continued patrols of the Kurile Islands though March 1943, and was sent as an escort for a reinforcement convoy to Attu from 7–10 March. While escorting another convoy towards Attu on 26 March,
Nachi spotted an American force consisting of the cruisers and and destroyers , , , and . Vice Admiral Hosogaya had the cruisers ,
Tama, and , in addition to two destroyers. However,
Maya was not carrying any aircraft, and
Nachi had left one of her three planes behind for repairs. Hosogaya ordered
Nachis aircraft to launch, but before they did so, he also ordered that the cruiser's main battery open fire. The aircraft on the starboard catapult was damaged by the blast and had to be jettisoned. The remaining aircraft launched and provided reconnaissance during the subsequent
Battle of the Komandorski Islands.
Nachi launched her Type 93 "Long Lance" torpedoes at the American task force, but failed to hit. In a four-hour gun battle, the Japanese fleet damaged
Salt Lake City and
Bailey, but five shells hit
Nachi, killing 14 crewmen, and
Maya suffered damage to her number-one gun turret. Hosogaya abandoned the attempt to reinforce Attu, and was relieved of command in disgrace.
Nachi was then repaired at Yokosuka, with eight Type 96 AA guns installed, returning to
Paramushiro on 15 May, and then returning to Kiska from 10–15 July to evacuate the Japanese garrison. On 6 September, after departing Ōminato,
Nachi was attacked by the
submarine , which fired four torpedoes, two of which struck
Nachi in her starboard side, but the torpedoes were duds and damage was minimal.
Nachi remained based at Ōminato through July 1944.
Operations in the Philippines and sinking Nachi was reassigned to
Kure Naval District from 31 July 1944 and spent the month of August in training. Her antiaircraft defenses were updated with an additional two twin-mount and 20 single-mount Type 96 25-mm autocannon, bringing her final total to 48 barrels in September. In October 1944, she was sent to the Philippines as part of a cruiser force under the command of Vice Admiral
Kiyohide Shima. During the
Battle of Leyte Gulf from 24 October,
Nachi and
Ashigara were part of Vice Admiral
Shoji Nishimura's force, which included the
battleships , and the cruiser . On 25 October, after the
Battle of Surigao Strait,
Nachi and
Mogami collided, resulting in severe damage to both vessels.
Nachi was forced to retire to Manila to repair damage to her bow. While under repair at Manila on 29 October,
Nachi and were attacked by aircraft from USN
Task Force 38.
Nachi was hit by a single bomb to her aircraft deck, and this, as well as strafing attacks, killed 53 crewmen and further delayed repairs. On 5 November, again in Manila Bay,
Nachi was attacked by three waves of U.S. planes from the
aircraft carriers and . She escaped the first wave undamaged, but was hit by five bombs and two or three torpedoes in the second wave while attempting to get underway. During the third wave,
Nachi was hit by five torpedoes in her port side, which severed her bow and stern, and by an additional 20 bombs and 16 rockets.
Nachis flag commander, Vice Admiral
Kiyohide Shima, was ashore for a conference at the time of the attack, but arrived at dockside in time to see his flagship blown apart. The central portion of the vessel sank in of water about northeast of
Corregidor (around ). The original wartime caption of a picture taken of the sinking
Nachi by
Lexington aircraft reads, Of the crew, 807 were lost, including the
captain, while 220 survived and were rescued by the destroyers and . ==Wreck==