After the narrator says that General MacArthur had nine days to prepare in the Philippines but failed to protect parked aircraft, historic photos appear of a radioman, aircraft parked, and then (with bombing sound effects) a photo meant to convey a bomb-damaged airplane. The latter photo however really shows a salvage yard hulk with all four propellers neatly and cleanly removed from the motor housings - at the seams. Bombs inflict jagged random damage; the "bomb damage" photo shows the methodical results of workers with wrenches rather than the chaos of high explosives.
In describing the Battle of Midway, Midway is described as being the "westernmost Japanese occupied island in the Pacific." In fact, Midway was always a US possession and was never held by the Japanese (one of the main purposes of the battle from the Japanese point of view was to capture the island) and even if it was, it would have been the eastern, not the western-most of their possessions.