The thing is Stavka could do that (and did do that) because they had "more men then the Wehrmacht had bullets" to use your commentary. The Western allies at the point of the Bulge only had the Airborne divisions as a reserve.
Here's a fun layout of carrier strengths supposing the Japanese had wiped out the US at Midway.Using the same criteria as above. (Which excludes Ranger and anything not able to make 28 knots or both launch and recover aircraft, otherwise this gets
really nasty.) Say they bit off an extra carrier at Midway. We'll say...Hornet, perhaps.
Saratoga (88), Wasp (76), Enterprise (85), grand total of 249 aircraft.
Meanwhile we'll give them back one of the IJN's carriers, say, Akagi (Dick Best missed in this reality), and Hiryu to do it.
Zuikaku (84), Shokaku (84), Ryujo (38), Zuiho (30), Hiryu (73), Akagi (91), grand total of 400 aircraft.
By January 1st 1943, the United States has added Essex, Princeton, and Independence, with another 148 aircraft for a grand total of 397 aircraft. The IJN has received no new fleet carriers.
By 7/1/43, the United States has further added Bunker Hill, Yorktown II, Lexington II, Intrepid, and five light carriers of the Independence class, for another 529 aircraft and a grand total of 926. The IJN still has not commissioned a new fleet-capable carrier and remains at 400 aircraft. (They will not commission a new fleet carrier until Chitose, in November. She and her sister Chiyoda, which will be ready in December, will carry a mere 60 aircraft combined.)
But it's worse than it looks. The US ships are mechanically superior in pretty much every way. US doctrine regarding antiaircraft defense, damage control, and even basic shiphandling as part of a task force is markedly superior. Japan's one doctrinal advantage, being able to successfully mass aircraft from multiple carriers into coherent strikes from long practice, will have been matched. Japan's love of complex maneuvers and dispersed forces mean that even when outnumbered US carrier forces can hit and run, taking on small groups of Japanese carriers that are isolated. By early 1943 the US is issuing the new Avengers (which first saw action at Midway) and Hellcats to carrier air groups, meaning they have erased the Zero's margin of superiority and presented it with a lineup of strike aircraft that can run the defending Zeros of useful ammo very quickly, as only their cannons are truly sufficient to damage an aircraft like an Avenger or Hellcat and they only have sixty rounds.
During the entire war, Japan would build only
one carrier truly fit to fight an Essex, Taiho.