The
attack on Pearl Harbor (or Hawaii
Operation, Operation Z, as it was called by the
Japanese
Imperial
General Headquarters) was an unannounced military strike conducted by the Japanese
navy against
the United
States
' naval base at Pearl Harbor
, Hawaii
, on the
morning of Sunday, December 7, 1941 (Hawaiian time, December 8 by
Japan Standard Time), later
resulting in the United States becoming militarily involved in
World War II. It was intended as
a
preventive action to keep the
U.S. Pacific Fleet from influencing the war
the Empire of
Japan
was planning to wage in Southeast Asia against Britain
, the Netherlands
, and the United States. The attack consisted
of two aerial attack waves totaling 353 aircraft, launched from six
Japanese
aircraft carriers.
The attack sank four
U.S. Navy battleships (two of
which were raised and returned to service later in the war) and
damaged four more. The Japanese also sank or damaged three
cruisers, three
destroyers,
and one
minelayer, destroyed 188 aircraft,
and caused personnel losses of 2,402 killed and 1,282 wounded. The
power station, shipyard, maintenance, and fuel and torpedo storage
facilities, as well as the submarine piers and headquarters
building (also home of the
intelligence
section) were not hit. Japanese losses were minimal, at 29
aircraft and five
midget
submarines, with 65 servicemen killed or wounded.
The attack was a major engagement of World War II.
It occurred before a
formal declaration of war and
before the last part of a 14-part message was delivered to the
State
Department
in Washington, D.C.
The Japanese Embassy in Washington had been
instructed to deliver it immediately prior to the scheduled time of
the attack in Hawaii. The attack, and especially the surprise
nature of it, were both factors in changing U.S. public opinion
from an
isolationist position to
support for direct participation in the war. Germany's prompt
declaration of war, unforced by any
treaty commitment to Japan, quickly brought
the United States into the
European Theater as well.
Despite numerous historical precedents of unannounced military
action, the lack of any formal declaration prior to the attack led
President
Franklin D. Roosevelt to proclaim
"December 7th, 1941 — a date which will live in
infamy".
Background to conflict
The strike was intended to neutralize the U.S.
Pacific Fleet, and
hence protect Japan's advance into Malaya and the Dutch East Indies
, where Japan sought access to natural resources such as oil and rubber. Both the U.S. and Japan
held long-standing contingency plans for war in the Pacific which
were continuously updated as tensions between the two countries
steadily increased during the 1930s, with the Japanese expansion
into
Manchuria and
mainland China.
In 1940, following Japan's
invasion of French Indochina
and under the authority granted by the
Export Control Act, the United States
halted shipments of airplanes, parts,
machine tools, and
aviation
gasoline, which was perceived by Japan as an unfriendly act.
The U.S. did not stop oil exports to Japan at that time in part
because prevailing sentiment in Washington was that such an action
would be an extreme step, given Japanese dependence on U.S. oil,
and likely to be considered a provocation by Japan.
Japanese
planning staff studied the 1940 British attack on the Italian
fleet
at Taranto
intensively. It was of great use to them when planning their
attack on US naval forces in Pearl Harbor.
Following
Japanese
expansion into French Indochina after the fall of France, the
U.S. ceased oil exports to Japan in the Summer of 1941, in part
because of new American restrictions on domestic oil
consumption.
President
Franklin D. Roosevelt had earlier moved the
Pacific Fleet to Hawaii
and ordered
a military buildup in the Philippines
in the hope of discouraging Japanese aggression in
the Far East. As the Japanese high command was (mistakenly)
certain any attack on the United Kingdom's Southeast Asian colonies
would bring the U.S. into the war, a devastating preventive strike
appeared to be the only way for Japan to avoid U.S. naval
interference. An invasion of the Philippines was also considered to
be necessary by Japanese war plans, while for the U.S., reconquest
of the islands had been a given of
War
Plan Orange in the
interwar
years.
War between Japan and the United States had been a possibility each
nation had been aware of (and developed contingency plans for)
since the 1920s, though tensions did not begin to grow seriously
until Japan's 1931 invasion of Manchuria. Over the next decade,
Japan continued to expand into China, leading to
all out war in 1937. In 1940, Japan
invaded French
Indochina in both an effort to control supplies reaching China,
and as a first step to improve her access to resources in Southeast
Asia. This move prompted an American embargo on oil exports to
Japan, which in turn caused the Japanese to initiate their planned
takeover of oil production in the Dutch East Indies. Furthermore,
the transfer of the U.S.
Pacific Fleet from its previous base in
San
Diego
to its new base in Pearl Harbor was seen by the
Japanese military as the U.S. readying itself for a potential
conflict between the two countries.

Pearl Harbor on October 30,
1941.
Preliminary planning for an attack on Pearl Harbor to protect the
move into the "Southern Resource Area" (the Japanese term for the
Dutch East Indies and Southeast Asia generally) had begun in very
early 1941, under the auspices of Admiral Yamamoto, then commanding
Japan's
Combined Fleet. He won assent
to formal planning and training for an attack from the
Imperial Japanese Navy
General Staff only after much contention with Naval
Headquarters, including a threat to resign his command. Full-scale
planning was underway by early spring 1941, primarily by Captain
Minoru Genda. Over the next several
months, pilots trained, equipment was adapted, and intelligence
collected. Despite these preparations, actual approval of the
attack plan was not issued by
Emperor
Hirohito until November 5, after the third of four Imperial
Conferences to consider the matter. Final authorization was not
given by the emperor until December 1, after a majority of Japanese
leaders advised him the "
Hull Note" would
"destroy the fruits of the China incident, endanger
Manchukuo and undermine Japanese control of
Korea." By late 1941 U.S. Pacific bases and facilities had been
placed on alert on multiple occasions, with hostilities between the
U.S. and Japan expected by many observers. U.S. officials doubted
Pearl Harbor would be the first target in any war with Japan,
instead expecting the Philippines to be attacked first due to the
threat it posed to
sea lanes to the south
and the erroneous belief that Japan was not capable of mounting
more than one major naval operation at a time.
Objectives
The attack had several major aims. First, it was supposed to
destroy American fleet units, thereby preventing the Pacific Fleet
from interfering with Japanese conquest of the Dutch East Indies.
Second, it was a means to buy time for Japan to consolidate her
position and increase her naval strength, before the shipbuilding
of the
Vinson-Walsh Act erased
any chance of victory. Finally, it was intended as a blow against
American morale, which might discourage further fighting and enable
Japan to conquer Southeast Asia without interference.
Making battleships the main target was a means of striking at
morale, since they were the prestige ships of any navy at the time.
Because both Japanese and American strategic thinking and doctrine
was derived from the work of Captain
Alfred Mahan, which held battleships
were decisive in
naval warfare, it was
also a means of striking at the fighting power of the Pacific
Fleet; if it succeeded, it meant the ultimate Pacific battle
("decisive battle", in Japanese Navy thinking), which would
inevitably be fought by battleships, would be postponed, if not
prevented entirely. With that in mind, Yamamoto intended the
Pacific Fleet should be sought and attacked "wherever it might be
found in the Pacific". A 14 November 1941 tabletop exercise
suggested alert defenders could sink two carriers and damage two
more, even with providential weather, which amounted to all the
strength Naval General Staff had wanted to allocate to the
operation. Japanese planners also knew that attacking the US
Pacific fleet while it was at anchor in Pearl Harbor carried two
distinct disadvantages: the targeted ships would be in very shallow
water, meaning that it would be relatively easy to salvage and
possibly repair them; and most of the crews would survive the
attack, since many would be on
shore
leave or would be rescued from the harbor. Despite these
concerns, Yamamoto pressed ahead.
Japanese confidence in their ability to achieve a short, victorious
war also meant other targets in the harbor, especially the Navy
Yard, oil tank farms, and Submarine Base, could safely be ignored,
since the war would be over before the influence of these
facilities would be felt.
Approach and attack

Route followed by the Japanese fleet
to Pearl Harbor and back
On November 26, 1941, a Japanese task force (the
Striking Force) of six aircraft carriers departed
northern Japan
en route to a position to northwest of
Hawaii, intending to launch its aircraft to attack Pearl Harbor. In
all, 408 aircraft were intended to be used: 360 for the two attack
waves, 48 on defensive
combat air
patrol (CAP), including nine fighters from the first
wave.
The first wave was to be the primary attack, while the second wave
was to finish whatever tasks remained. The first wave contained the
bulk of the weapons to attack
capital
ships, mainly specially adapted
Type
91 aerial torpedoes which were
designed with an anti-roll mechanism and a
rudder extension that let them operate in shallow
water. The aircrews were ordered to select the highest value
targets (battleships and
aircraft
carriers) or, if either were not present, any other high value
ships (cruisers and destroyers).
Dive
bombers were to attack ground targets. Fighters were ordered to
strafe and destroy as many parked aircraft as possible to ensure
they did not get into the air to counterattack the bombers,
especially in the first wave. When the fighters' fuel got low they
were to refuel at the aircraft carriers and return to combat.
Fighters were to serve CAP duties where needed, especially over US
airfields.
Before the attack commenced, two
reconnaissance aircraft launched from
cruisers were sent to scout over Oahu and report on enemy fleet
composition and location.
Another four scout planes patrolled the area
between the Kido Butai and Niihau
, in order to
prevent the task force from being caught by a surprise
counterattack.
Submarines
Fleet submarines
I-16,
I-18,
I-20,
I-22, and
I-24 each embarked a
Type A midget submarine for transport to the
waters off Oahu. The five I-boats left
Kure Naval District on November 25,
1941, coming to 10 nm (19 km) off the mouth of Pearl
Harbor and launched their charges, at about 01:00 December 7. At
03:42
Hawaiian
Time, the
minesweeper
USS Condor spotted a
midget submarine periscope southwest of the Pearl Harbor entrance
buoy and alerted destroyer
USS
Ward. That midget probably entered Pearl Harbor, but
Ward sank another at 06:37 in the
first American shots
fired in World War II. A midget on the north side of Ford
Island missed
Curtiss
with her first torpedo and missed the attacking
Monaghan with her other one
before being sunk by
Monaghan at 08:43.
A third midget submarine grounded twice, once outside the harbor
entrance and again on the east side of Oahu, where it was captured
on December 8. Ensign
Kazuo Sakamaki
swam ashore and became the first Japanese
prisoner of war. A fourth had been damaged
by a depth charge attack and abandoned by its crew before it could
fire its torpedoes. A
United States Naval Institute
analysis of photographs from the attack conducted in 1999 indicated
a midget may have successfully fired a torpedo into
USS West Virginia.
Japanese forces received a radio communications from a midget
submarine at 00:41 December 8 claiming damage to one or more large
war vessels inside Pearl Harbor. That submarine's final disposition
is unknown but it did not return to its carrier sub.
Japanese declaration of war
While the attack ultimately took place before a formal declaration
of war by Japan, Admiral Yamamoto originally stipulated the attack
should not commence until thirty minutes after Japan had informed
the United States he considered the peace negotiations at an end.
In this way, the Japanese tried both to uphold the conventions of
war as well as achieving surprise. Despite these intentions, the
attack had already begun when the 5,000-word notification was
delivered. Tokyo transmitted the message to the Japanese embassy
(in two blocks), which ultimately took too long transcribing the
message to deliver it in time, while U.S. code breakers had already
deciphered and translated most of it hours before the Japanese
embassy was scheduled to deliver it. While sometimes described as a
declaration of war, "this dispatch neither declared war nor severed
diplomatic relations". The declaration of war was printed in the
front page of Japan's newspapers in the evening edition on December
8.
First wave

The Japanese attacked in two
waves.
The first wave was detected by U.S.
Army radar at , but was misidentified as USAAF bombers
arriving from mainland U.S.A.
Top:
A.
[[Image:Pearlmap2.png|thumb|right|250px|

Attacked targets:
1:
USS
California
2:
USS
Maryland
3:
USS
Oklahoma
4:
USS
Tennessee
5:
USS West
Virginia
6:
USS Arizona
7:
USS Nevada
8:
USS
Pennsylvania
9:
Ford Island NAS
10:
Hickam field
Ignored infrastructure targets:
A: Oil storage tanks
B:
CINCPAC headquarters building
C: Submarine base
D: Navy Yard]]
The first attack wave of 183 planes was launched north of Oahu,
commanded by
Captain Mitsuo Fuchida. Six planes failed to launch
due to technical difficulties. It included:
- 1st Group (targets: battleships and aircraft
carriers)
- 2nd Group — (targets:
Ford
Island
and Wheeler
Field
)
- 3rd Group — (targets: aircraft at Ford Island,
Hickam Field, Wheeler Field, Barber’s Point, Kaneohe)
As the first wave approached Oahu a U.S.
Army SCR-270 radar at Opana
Point
near the island's northern tip (a post not yet
operational, having been in training mode for months) detected them
and called in a warning. Although the operators reported a
target echo larger than anything they had ever seen, an untrained
officer at the new and only partially activated Intercept Center,
Lieutenant
Kermit A. Tyler, presumed the scheduled arrival of six
B-17 bombers was the source. The direction from which the aircraft
were coming was close (only a few degrees separated the two inbound
courses), while the operators had never seen a formation as large
on radar; they neglected to tell Tyler of its size, while Tyler,
for security reasons, could not tell them the B-17s were due (even
though it was widely known).
Several U.S. aircraft were shot down as the first wave approached
land, and one at least radioed a somewhat incoherent warning. Other
warnings from ships off the harbor entrance were still being
processed or awaiting confirmation when the attacking planes began
bombing and strafing. Nevertheless it is not clear any warnings
would have had much effect even if they had been interpreted
correctly and much more promptly.
The results the Japanese achieved in the
Philippines
were essentially the same as at Pearl Harbor,
though MacArthur had almost nine
hours warning that the Japanese had already attacked at Pearl and
specific orders to commence operations before they actually struck
his command.
The air portion of the attack on Pearl Harbor began at 7:48 a.m.
Hawaiian Time (3:18 a.m. December 8
Japanese Standard Time, as kept by
ships of the
Kido Butai), with the attack on Kaneohe. A
total of 353 Japanese planes in two waves reached Oahu. Slow,
vulnerable torpedo bombers led the first wave, exploiting the first
moments of surprise to attack the most important ships present (the
battleships), while dive bombers attacked U.S. air bases across
Oahu, starting with Hickam Field, the largest, and Wheeler Field,
the main U.S. Army Air Force fighter base.
The 171 planes in the
second wave attacked the Air Corps' Bellows Field
near Kaneohe on the windward side of the island,
and Ford
Island
. The only aerial opposition came from a
handful of
P-36 Hawks,
P-40 Warhawks and some
SBD Dauntlesss from the carrier
USS Enterprise.
Men aboard U.S. ships awoke to the sounds of alarms, bombs
exploding, and gunfire, prompting bleary-eyed men into dressing as
they ran to
General Quarters
stations. (The famous message, "Air raid Pearl Harbor. This is not
drill.", was sent from the headquarters of Patrol Wing Two, the
first senior Hawaiian command to respond.) The defenders were very
unprepared. Ammunition lockers were locked, aircraft parked wingtip
to wingtip in the open to deter sabotage, guns unmanned (none of
the Navy's 38_caliber_gun" href="/5"/38_caliber_gun">5"/38s,
only a quarter of its
machine guns, and
only four of 31 Army batteries got in action). Despite this and low
alert status, many American military
personnel responded effectively during the battle. Ensign Joe
Taussig got his ship,
USS
Nevada, underway from dead cold during the attack. One
of the destroyers,
USS
Aylwin, got underway with only four officers aboard,
all Ensigns, none with more than a year's sea duty; she operated at
sea for four days before her commanding officer managed to get
aboard. Captain
Mervyn Bennion,
commanding
USS West
Virginia (Kimmel's flagship), led his men until he was cut
down by fragments from a bomb hit to
USS Tennessee, moored
alongside.
Gallantry was widespread. In all, 14 officers and sailors were
awarded the
Medal of Honor. A special
military
award, the
Pearl
Harbor Commemorative Medal, was later authorized for all
military veterans of the attack.
Second wave composition
The second wave consisted of 171 planes: 54 B5Ns, 81 D3As, and 36
A6Ms, commanded by
Lieutenant-Commander Shigekazu Shimazaki. Four planes failed
to launch because of technical difficulties. This wave and its
targets comprised:
- 1st Group — 54 B5Ns armed with and general
purpose bombs
- 27 B5Ns — aircraft and hangars on Kaneohe, Ford Island, and
Barbers Point
- 27 B5Ns — hangars and aircraft on Hickam Field
- 2nd Group (targets: aircraft carriers and
cruisers)
- 81 D3As armed with general purpose bombs, in four sections
- 3rd Group — (targets: aircraft at Ford Island,
Hickham Field, Wheeler Field, Barber’s Point, Kaneohe)
- 36 A6Ms for defense and strafing
The second wave was divided into three groups. One was tasked to
attack Kāne ohe, the rest Pearl Harbor proper. The separate
sections arrived at the attack point almost simultaneously, from
several directions.
Ninety minutes after it began, the attack was over. 2,386 Americans
died (55 were civilians, most killed by unexploded American
anti-aircraft shells landing in civilian areas), a further 1,139
wounded. Eighteen ships were sunk or run aground, including five
battleships.
Of the
American fatalities, nearly half of the total were due to the
explosion of Arizona
's forward magazine after it was hit by a modified
40 cm (16 in.) shell.
Already damaged by a torpedo and on fire forward,
Nevada
attempted to exit the harbor. She was targeted by many Japanese
bombers as she got under way, sustaining more hits from 250 lb
(113 kg) bombs, and she was deliberately beached to avoid
blocking the harbor entrance.
California was hit
by two bombs and two torpedoes. The crew might have kept her
afloat, but were ordered to abandon ship just as they were raising
power for the pumps. Burning oil from
Arizona and
West
Virginia drifted down on her, and probably made the situation
look worse than it was.
The disarmed target
ship Utah
was holed twice by torpedoes. West Virginia was hit by
seven torpedoes, the seventh tearing away her rudder.
Oklahoma was hit by four
torpedoes, the last two above her
belt
armor, which caused her to
capsize.
Maryland was hit by
two of the converted 40 cm shells, but neither caused serious
damage.
Although the Japanese concentrated on battleships (the largest
vessels present), they did not ignore other targets. The
light cruiser Helena was torpedoed, and the
concussion from the blast capsized the neighboring minelayer
Oglala. Two destroyers in
dry dock,
Cassin and
Downes were destroyed when
bombs penetrated their fuel
bunker. The leaking fuel caught fire;
flooding the dry dock in an effort to fight fire made the burning
oil rise, and both were burned out.
Cassin slipped from
her keel blocks and rolled against
Downes. The light
cruiser
Raleigh was
holed by a torpedo. The light cruiser
Honolulu was damaged but
remained in service. The repair vessel
Vestal, moored alongside
Arizona, was heavily damaged and beached. The
seaplane tender Curtiss was also damaged. The
destroyer
Shaw was badly
damaged when two bombs penetrated her forward magazine.
Of the 402 American aircraft in Hawaii, 188 were destroyed and 159
damaged, 155 of them on the ground. Almost none were actually ready
to take off to defend the base. Of 33
PBYs in
Hawaii, 24 were destroyed, and six others damaged beyond repair.
(The three on patrol returned undamaged.)
Friendly fire brought down some U.S. planes on
top of that, including five from an inbound flight from
Enterprise. Japanese attacks
on barracks killed additional personnel.
Fifty-five Japanese airmen and nine submariners were killed in the
action, and one was captured. Of Japan's 414 available planes, 29
were lost during the battle (nine in the first attack wave, 20 in
the second), with another 74 damaged by antiaircraft fire from the
ground.
Possible third wave
Several Japanese junior officers, including
Mitsuo Fuchida and
Minoru Genda, the chief architect of the
attack, urged Nagumo to carry out a third strike in order to
destroy as much of Pearl Harbor's fuel and torpedo storage,
maintenance, and dry dock facilities as possible. Military
historians have suggested the destruction of these would have
hampered the U.S. Pacific Fleet far more seriously than loss of its
battleships. If they had been wiped out, "serious [American]
operations in the Pacific would have been postponed for more than a
year" ; according to American Admiral
Chester Nimitz, later Commander in Chief of
the Pacific Fleet, "it would have prolonged the war another two
years." Nagumo, however, decided to withdraw for several
reasons:
- American anti-aircraft performance had improved considerably
during the second strike, and two thirds of Japan's losses were
incurred during the second wave. Nagumo felt if he launched a third
strike, he would be risking three quarters of the Combined Fleet's
strength to wipe out the remaining targets (which included the
facilities) while suffering higher aircraft losses.
- The location of the American carriers remained unknown. In
addition, the Admiral was concerned his force was now within range
of American land-based bombers. Nagumo was uncertain whether the
U.S. had enough surviving planes remaining on Hawaii to launch an
attack against his carriers.
- A third wave would have required substantial preparation and
turnaround time, and would have meant returning planes would have
had to land at night. At the time, only the Royal Navy had
developed night carrier techniques, so this was a substantial
risk.
- The task force's fuel situation did not permit him to remain in
waters north of Pearl Harbor much longer, since he was at the very
limits of logistical support. To do so risked running unacceptably
low on fuel, perhaps even having to abandon destroyers en
route home.
- He believed the second strike had essentially satisfied the
main objective of his mission — the neutralization of the Pacific
Fleet — and did not wish to risk further losses. Moreover, it was
Japanese Navy practice to prefer the conservation of strength over
the total destruction of the enemy.
At a conference aboard
Yamato the following morning,
Yamamoto initially supported Nagumo. In retrospect, sparing the
vital dockyards, maintenance shops, and oil depots meant the U.S.
could respond relatively quickly to Japanese activities in the
Pacific. Yamamoto later regretted Nagumo's decision to withdraw and
categorically stated it had been a great mistake not to order a
third strike.
Gallery
Image:Jap Zero leaves Akagi-Pearl Harbor.jpg|A Japanese
Mitsubishi A6M2 "Zero" fighter airplane of
the second wave takes off from the aircraft carrier
Akagi on the
morning of December 7, 1941.Image:Carrier shokaku.jpg|Zeroes of the
second wave preparing to take off from
Shokaku for Pearl HarborImage:Jap plane leaves
Shokaku-Pearl Harbor.jpg|A Japanese
Nakajima B5N2 "Kate" torpedo bomber takes off
from
Shokaku.Image:Jap_planes_preparing-Pearl_Harbor.jpg|Japanese
Aichi D3A1 "Val" dive bombers of the
second wave preparing for take off.
Aircraft carrier Soryu
in the background.Image:USS California
sinking-Pearl Harbor.jpg|Battleship
USS California
sinking
Image:Pearlharborcolork13513.jpg|Battleship
USS
Arizona
explodes.Image:USS SHAW exploding Pearl
Harbor Nara 80-G-16871 2.jpg|Destroyer
USS Shaw exploding after her
forward magazine was detonatedImage:USS Nevada attempts escape from
Pearl 80G32558.jpg|Battleship
USS
Nevada attempting to escape from the harbor.Image:USS
West Virginia;014824.jpg|Battleship
USS West Virginia took
two aerial bombs, both duds, and seven torpedo hits, one of which
may have come from a midget submarine.Image:NARA 28-1277a.gif|A
destroyed
B-17 after the attack on
Hickam Field.
Image:PLanes_burning-Ford_Island-Pearl_Harbor.jpg|Hangar
in Ford
Island
burnsImage:Pearl harbour.png|Aftermath: USS West Virginia
(severely damaged), USS
Tennessee (damaged), and the USS
Arizona
(sunk).
Salvage
After a systematic search for survivors, formal salvage operations
began. Captain
Homer N. Wallin, Material Officer for Commander,
Battle Force, U.S. Pacific Fleet, was immediately retained to lead
salvage operations.
Around Pearl Harbor, divers from the Navy (shore and tenders), the
Naval Shipyard, and civilian contractors
(Pacific Bridge and others) began work on the ships which could be
refloated. They patched holes, cleared debris, and pumped water out
of ships. Navy divers worked inside the damaged ships. Within six
months, five battleships and two cruisers were patched or refloated
so they could be sent to shipyards in Pearl and on the mainland for
extensive repair.
Intensive salvage operations continued for another year, a total of
some 20,000 hours under water.
Oklahoma, while
successfully raised, was never repaired.
Arizona and the
target ship
Utah were too heavily damaged for salvage,
though much of their armament and equipment was removed and put to
use aboard other vessels.
Today, the two hulks remain where they were
sunk, with Arizona becoming a war
memorial
.
Aftermath
In the wake of the attack, 16 Medals of Honor, 51 Navy Crosses, 53
Silver Crosses, four Navy and Marine Corps Medals, one
Distinguished Flying Cross, four Distinguished Service Crosses, one
Distinguished Service Medal, and three Bronze Stars were awarded to
the American servicemen who distinguished themselves in combat at
Pearl Harbor.
In Europe, Nazi Germany and the Kingdom of Italy subsequently
declared war on the United States immediately after they began
operations against a fellow Axis member, with Hitler stating in a
delivered speech:
“The fact that the Japanese Government, which has been negotiating
for years with this man [Franklin D. Roosevelt], has at last become
tired of being mocked by him in such an unworthy way, fills us all,
the German people, and all other decent people in the world, with
deep satisfaction ... Germany and Italy have been finally
compelled, in view of this, and in loyalty to the
Tripartite Pact, to carry on the struggle
against the U.S.A. and England jointly and side by side with Japan
for the defense and thus for the maintenance of the liberty and
independence of their nations and empires ... As a consequence of
the further extension of President Roosevelt's policy, which is
aimed at unrestricted world domination and dictatorship, the U.S.A.
together with England have not hesitated from using any means to
dispute the rights of the German, Italian and Japanese nations to
the basis of their natural existence ... Not only because we are
the ally of Japan, but also because Germany and Italy have enough
insight and strength to comprehend that, in these historic times,
the existence or non-existence of the nations, is being decided
perhaps forever.”
Though the attack inflicted large-scale destruction on US vessels
and aircraft, it did not affect Pearl Harbor's fuel storage,
maintenance, submarine, and intelligence facilities.
The attack was an initial shock to all the Allies in the Pacific
Theater. Further losses compounded the alarming setback. Three days
later, the
Prince of Wales
and Repulse were sunk off the coast of
Malaya, causing British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill later to
recollect "In all the war I never received a more direct shock. As
I turned and twisted in bed the full horror of the news sank in
upon me. There were no British or American capital ships in the
Indian Ocean or the Pacific except the American survivors of Pearl
Harbor who were hastening back to California. Over this vast
expanse of waters Japan was supreme and we everywhere were weak and
naked".
Fortunately for the United States, the American aircraft carriers
were untouched by the Japanese attack, otherwise the Pacific
Fleet's ability to conduct offensive operations would have been
crippled for a year or so (given no diversions from the Atlantic
Fleet). As it was, the elimination of the battleships left the U.S.
Navy with no choice but rely on its aircraft carriers and
submarines — the very weapons with which the U.S. Navy halted and
eventually reversed the Japanese advance. Five of the eight
battleships were repaired and returned to service, but their slow
speed limited their deployment, serving mainly in shore bombardment
roles. A major flaw of Japanese strategic thinking was a belief the
ultimate Pacific battle would be fought by battleships, in keeping
with the doctrine of Captain
Alfred
Mahan. As a result, Yamamoto (and his successors) hoarded
battleships for a "decisive battle" that never happened.
Ultimately, targets not on Genda's list, such as the submarine base
and the old headquarters building, proved more important than any
battleship. It was submarines that immobilized the Imperial
Japanese Navy's heavy ships and brought Japan's economy to a
standstill by crippling the transportation of oil and raw
materials. Also, the basement of the Old Administration Building
was the home of the
cryptanalytic unit
which contributed significantly to the Midway ambush and the
Submarine Force's success.
One further consequence of the attacks on Pearl Harbor was that
Japanese American residents and citizens were relocated to
Japanese American internment
camps. Within hours of the attack, hundreds of Japanese American
leaders were rounded up and brought to high-security camps. Later,
over 110,000 Japanese Americans, including United States citizens,
were removed from their homes and transferred to internment
camps.
Strategic implications
Admiral
Hara Tadaichi summed up the
Japanese result by saying, "We won a great tactical victory at
Pearl Harbor and thereby lost the war."
While the attack accomplished its intended objective, it turned out
to be largely unnecessary. Unbeknownst to
Isoroku Yamamoto, who conceived the
original plan, the U.S. Navy had decided as far back as 1935 to
abandon 'charging' across the Pacific towards the Philippines in
response to an outbreak of war (in keeping with the evolution of
Plan Orange). The U.S. instead adopted "
Plan
Dog" in 1940, which emphasized keeping the
Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) out of
the eastern Pacific and away from the shipping lanes to Australia
while the U.S. concentrated on defeating Nazi Germany.
Author
Robert Leckie observed that "Franklin
Roosevelt wisely suppressed the details of that disaster rather
than risk a panic, only publishing them after the American
counterattack has begun at Guadalcanal
" in August 1942.
Controversy
There has been ongoing controversy due to allegations made by
conspiracy theorists, and
former
armed forces personnel that some
members of the
Roosevelt
administration had
advance knowledge of
the attack, and that this was purposefully ignored in order to gain
public and
Congressional
support for America entering the war on the side of the British
Empire and her allies.
Media
Films and books
Fiction
Historical fiction
- Air
Force A 1943 Propaganda film
deplicting the fate of the crew of the Mary-Ann, one of
the B-17 Flying Fortress
bombers that fly into Hickam Field
during the attack.
- Hawai Middouei daikaikusen: Taiheiyo no arashi
(Hawaii-Midway Battle of the Sea and Sky: Storm in the Pacific
Ocean) was produced by the Japanese studio Toho
Company Ltd. in 1960 telling the story of Japanese airmen who
served in the Pearl Harbor Raid and Battle of Midway. An edited
version dubbed into English as I Bombed Pearl Harbor was
given a US release in 1961.
- Tora! Tora! Tora! is a movie about the Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor. Many consider this to be the most faithful
movie re-telling of the attack as it deals with many aspects of the
battle with attention to historical fact.
- Pearl Harbor is the
title of a 2001 film about the 1941 attack. The film is a love
story rather than an accurate chronicle of the event, although some
of the events portrayed actually took place. A number of the
shipboard scenes were filmed on the in Corpus Christi, Texas. The
film is directed by Michael Bay and
stars Ben Affleck, Josh Hartnett, Cuba Gooding Jr. and Kate Beckinsale.
- December 7th,
directed by John Ford for the U.S. Navy in
1943, is a film that recreates the attacks of the Japanese forces.
Other documentaries, as well as media stories, have mistakenly
replayed images from this film, passing them off as authentic
footage of the actual Pearl Harbor attack.
Non-fiction/historical
- Day of Infamy by Walter
Lord was one of the most popular nonfiction accounts of the
attack on Pearl Harbor.
- At Dawn We Slept: The Untold Story of Pearl Harbor by
Gordon W. Prange is an extremely comprehensive
account of the events leading up to the Pearl Harbor attack. It is
a balanced account that gives both the perspective of the Japanese
and United States. Prange spent 37 years researching the book by
studying documents about Pearl Harbor and interviewing surviving
participants to attempt the most exhaustive truth about what
happened to bring the Japanese to attack the United States at Pearl
Harbor, why the United States intelligence failed to predict the
attack, and why a peace agreement was not attained. The Village
said about At Dawn We Slept, "By far the most exhaustive
and complete account we are likely to have of exactly what happened
and how and why."
- The Attack on Pearl Harbor: An Illustrated History by
Larry Kimmett and Margaret Regis is a careful recreation of the
"Day of Infamy" using maps, photos, unique illustrations, and an
animated CD. From the early stages of Japanese planning, through
the attack on Battleship Row, to the
salvage of the U.S. Pacific fleet, this book provides a detailed
overview of the attack.
- Pearl Harbor Countdown: Admiral James O.
Richardson by Skipper Steely is an insightful and detailed
account of the events leading up to the Pearl Harbor disaster.
Through his comprehensive treatment of the life and times of
Admiral James O. Richardson, Steely explores four decades
of American foreign policy, traditional military practice, U.S.
intelligence, and the administrative side of the military, exposing
the largely untold story of the events leading up to the Japanese
attack.
- Pearl Harbor: Final Judgment by Henry C. Clausen and Bruce Lee tells of Clausen's
top-secret investigation of the events leading up to the Pearl
Harbor attack. Much of the information in this book was still
classified when previous books were published.
Alternate history
- Days of Infamy is a
novel by Harry Turtledove in which
the Japanese attack on Hawaii is not limited to a strike on Pearl
Harbor, but is instead a full-scale invasion and eventual
occupation after U.S. forces are driven off the islands (something
that one of the key planners of the attack, Commander Minoru Genda wanted but the higher-ups
rejected). The many viewpoint characters (a Turtledove trademark)
are drawn from Hawaiian civilians (both white and Japanese) as well
as soldiers and sailors from both Japan and the USA. Turtledove has
to date written one sequel, The End of the Beginning.
- The airstrike and Hawaii-invasion premise of Days of
Infamy was earlier used in the first episode of the anime OVA
series Konpeki no Kantai.
In the episode, Japan carries out the attack in the early hours of
the morning, having perfected night carrier operations. The raid
begins with a flare drop by pathfinders. The
entire base (including the repair facilities) and a number of
supply ships in the harbor are destroyed by daybreak. As for the
main body of the Pacific Fleet, the Combined Fleet regroups and
annihilates them while they return to Pearl Harbor. The episode,
which is divided into three stages in the series' game version,
ends with Japanese troops landing at all islands in Hawaii.
See also
References
Notes
- Fukudome, Shigeru, "Hawaii Operation". United States Naval
Institute, Proceedings, 81 (December 1955),
pp.1315-1331
- Full Pearl Harbor casualty list [1]
- After it was announced in September iron and steel scrap export
would also be prohibited, Japanese Ambassador Horinouchi protested
to Secretary Hull on October 8, 1940 warning this might be
considered an "unfriendly act".
- Toland, Japan's War.
- "The Dorn report did not state with certainty that Kimmel and
Short knew about Taranto. There is, however, no doubt that they did
know, as did the Japanese. Lt. Cdr. Takeshi Naito, the assistance
naval
attaché to Berlin, flew to Taranto to investigate the attack
first hand, and Naito subsequently had a lenghty conversation with
Cdr. Mitsuo
Fuchida about his observations. Fichida led the Japanese attack
on 7 December 1941." Kimmel, Short, and Pearl Harbor: The Final
Report Revealed. By Frederic L. Borch, Daniel Martinez
Contributor Donald M. Goldstein Published by Naval Institute Press,
2005, pp. 53-54. ISBN 1591140900
- "A torpedo
bomber needed a long, level flight, and when released, its
conventional torpedo would plunge nearly a hundred feet deep before
swerving upward to strike a hull. Pearl Harbor deep averages 42
feet. But the Japanese borrowed an idea from the British
carrier-based torpedo raid on the Italian naval base of Taranto.
They fashioned auxiliary wooden tail fins to keep the torpedoes
horizontal, so they would dive to only 35 feet, and they added a
break-away "nosecone" of soft wood to cushion the impact with the
surface of the water." Hellions of the Deep: The Development of
American Torpedoes in World War II. By Robert Gannon Published
by Penn State Press, 1996, page 49. ISBN 027101508X
- This was mainly a Japanese Navy preference; the Japanese Army
would have chosen to attack the Soviet Union. ; Coox,
Kobun.
- Peter Wetzler, Hirohito and War, 1998, p.39
- Bix, Herbert. Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan,
2000, p.417, citing the Sugiyama memo)
- Noted by Arthur MacArthur in the 1890s.
Manchester, William. American Caesar.
- Peattie & Evans, Kaigun
- Willmott, Barrier and the Javelin, p.14.
- Fukudome, Shigeru. Shikan: Shinjuwan
Kogeki (Tokyo, 1955), p.150.
- Miller, Edward S. War Plan Orange: The U.S. Strategy to
Defeat Japan, 1897–1945 (Annapolis, MD: United States Naval
Institute Press,1991).
- quoting Fukudome interview, in Prange et al., At
Dawn We Slept (New York: Penguin, 1991), p.15.
- Prange et al., At Dawn We Slept, pp.228 &
230.
- Prange et al., At Dawn We Slept.
- Willmott, Barrier and the Javelin
- p. 145.
- Order of Battle - Pearl Harbor - December 7,
1941
- Stewart, A.J., Lieutenant Commander, USN. "Those Mysterious
Midgets", United States Naval Institute Proceedings,
December 1974, p.56
- Stewart, p.56
- Stewart, "Those Mysterious Midgets", p.57
- Stewart, "Those Mysterious Midgets", p.58
- She was located by a University of Hawaii research
submersible on August 28, 2002 in 400 meters of water, five miles
outside the harbor.
- Stewart, pp.59-61
- Sakamaki's unexpected survival was despised by many Japanese,
who referred to his dead companions as "The Nine Young Gods."
- Stewart, "Those Mysterious Midgets", p.61-2
- Ofstie, R.A., Rear Admiral, USN. The Campaigns of the
Pacific War (United States Government Printing Office, 1946),
p.19
- Calvocoressi et al., The Penguin History of the
Second World War, p.952
- Toland, Infamy.
- Declaration of War handout
- AIRCRAFT ATTACK ORGANIZATION The Japanese
Attack on Pearl Harbor, Planning and Execution. First wave: 189
planes, 50 Kates w/bombs, 40 Kates with torpedoes, 54 Vals, 45
Zekes Second wave: 171 planes, 54 Kates w/bombs, 81 Vals, 36 Zekes.
The Combat Air Patrol over the carriers alternated 18 plane shifts
every two hours with 18 more ready for takeoff on the flight decks
and an additional 18 ready on hangar decks.
- Prange et al., At Dawn We Slept, p.500.
- Prange et al., At Dawn We Slept, p.501.
- In the twenty-five sorties flown, USAF Historical Study No.85
credits six pilots with ten planes destroyed: 1st Lt Lewis M.
Sanders (P-36) and 2nd Lts Philip M Rasmussen (P-36), Gordon H.
Sterling Jr. (P-36, killed in action), Harry W. Brown (P-36),
Kenneth
M. Taylor (P-40, 2), and George S. Welch (P-40, 4). Three
of the P-36 kills were not verified by the Japanese and may have
been shot down by naval anti-aircraft fire.
- Odd though it may sound, "not" is correct, in keeping with
standard Navy telegraphic practice. This was confirmed by Beloite
and Beloite after years of research and debate.
- The gunners that did get in action scored most of the victories
against Japanese aircraft that morning, including the first of the
attack, by Tautog, and Dorie Miller's
Navy Cross-worthy
effort. Miller was an African-American cook aboard West
Virginia who took over an unattended anti-aircraft gun
on which he had no training. He was the first African-American
sailor to be awarded the Navy Cross.
- (Navy and Marines: 2,117 killed in action or died of wounds,
779 wounded; Army 215 killed in action or died of wounds, 360
wounded).
- The wreck has become a memorial to those lost that day,
most of whom remain within the ship. She continues to leak small
amounts of fuel oil,
over 60 years after the attack.
- USAAF pilots of the 46th
and 47th Pursuit Squadrons, 15th Pursuit Group, claim to have
destroyed 10.
- In the event, loss of these might have been a net benefit to
the U.S. Blair, passim.
- Willmott, Barrier and the Javelin; Blair, Silent
Victory.
- p. 327
- Willmott, p.16.
- Commander Edward Ellsberg was ordered to Massawa as his replacement, to assist
the British in clearing scuttled Italian and German ships. This arguably
delayed by several months British hopes for a useful port on the
Red Sea. Commander Edward Ellsberg, O.B.E. Under the Red
Sea Sun (Dodd, Mead, and Co., 1946).
- Raymer, E.C: "Descent Into Darkness", Presidio Press,
1996.
- Post-attack ship salvage 1942-1944
- =Pearl Harbor 1941=Osprey Campaign Series #62
- Levine, E. (1995). A fence away from freedom: Japanese
Americans and World War II. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons.
- Daniels, R. (1972). Concentration camps USA: Japanese Americans
and World War II. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc.
- Haufler, Herve. Codebreaker's Victory: How the Allied
Cryptographers Won World War II (New York: NAL, 2003), quoted
p.127.
- Walter Lord, Day of Infamy (Henry Holt and Co., 1957.
ASIN: B002A503FA; Holt Paperbacks, 60th ed. 2001, ISBN 0805068031,
ISBN 978-0805068030)
Bibliography
Books
U.S. Government Documents
Magazine articles
Online sources
Further reading
- James Dorsey. "Literary Tropes, Rhetorical Looping, and the
NIne Gods of War: 'Fascist Proclivities' Made Real," in The
Culture of Japanese Fascism, ed. by Alan Tansman (Durham &
London: Duke UP, 2009), pp 409-431. A study of Japanese wartime
media representations of the submarine component of the attack on
Pearl Harbor.
- McCollum memo A 1940 memo from a
Naval headquarters staff officer to his superiors outlining
possible provocations to Japan, which might lead to war
(declassified in 1994).
- Gordon W. Prange, At Dawn We Slept
(McGraw-Hill, 1981), Pearl Harbor: The Verdict of History
(McGraw-Hill, 1986), and December 7, 1941: The Day the Japanese
Attacked Pearl Harbor (McGraw-Hill, 1988). This monumental
trilogy, written with collaborators Donald M. Goldstein and
Katherine V. Dillon, is considered the authoritative work on the
subject.
- Larry Kimmett and Margaret Regis, The Attack
on Pearl Harbor: An Illustrated History (NavPublishing,
2004). Using maps, photos, unique illustrations, and an animated
CD, this book provides a detailed overview of the surprise attack
that brought the United States into World War II.
- Walter Lord, Day of Infamy
(Henry Holt, 1957) is a very readable, and entirely anecdotal,
re-telling of the day's events.
- W. J. Holmes, Double-Edged Secrets: U.S. Naval
Intelligence Operations in the Pacific During World War II
(Naval Institute, 1979) contains some important material, such as
Holmes' argument that, had the U.S. Navy been warned of the attack
and put to sea, it would have likely resulted in an even greater
disaster.
- Michael V. Gannon, Pearl Harbor Betrayed (Henry Holt,
2001) is a recent examination of the issues surrounding the
surprise of the attack.
- Frederick D. Parker, Pearl
Harbor Revisited: United States Navy Communications Intelligence
1924–1941 (Center for Cryptologic History, 1994) contains
a detailed description of what the Navy knew from intercepted and
decrypted Japan's communications prior to Pearl.
- Henry C. Clausen and Bruce Lee, Pearl Harbor: Final
Judgment, (HarperCollins, 2001), an account of the secret
"Clausen Inquiry" undertaken late in
the war by order of Congress to Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson.
- Robert A. Theobald, Final Secret of Pearl
Harbor (Devin-Adair Pub, 1954) ISBN 0-8159-5503-0 ISBN
0-317-65928-6 Foreword by Fleet Admiral William F. Halsey, Jr.
- Albert C. Wedemeyer, Wedemeyer
Reports! (Henry Holt Co, 1958) ISBN 0-89275-011-1 ISBN
0-8159-7216-4
- Hamilton Fish, Tragic
Deception: FDR and America's Involvement in World War II
(Devin-Adair Pub, 1983) ISBN 0-8159-6917-1
- John Toland, Infamy: Pearl Harbor and Its Aftermath
(Berkley Reissue edition, 1986 ISBN 0-425-09040-X) is an excellent
account by a Pulitzer Prize winning author, though thought by some
not to back up his claims as thoroughly as expected by academic
conventions.
- Robert Stinnett, Day of Deceit: The
Truth About FDR and Pearl Harbor (Free Press, 1999) A
study of the Freedom of Information Act documents that led Congress
to direct clearance of Kimmel and Short. ISBN 0-7432-0129-9
- Edward L. Beach, Scapegoats: A Defense of
Kimmel and Short at Pearl HarborISBN 1-55750-059-2
- Andrew Krepinevich, (Center for Strategic and Budgetary
Assessments) contains a passage regarding the Yarnell attack,
as well as reference citations.
- Roberta Wohlstetter, Pearl Harbor: Warning and
Decision, (Stanford University Press: 1962). Regarded by many
as the most important work in the attempt to understand the
intelligence failure at Pearl Harbor. Her introduction and analysis
of the concept of "noise" persists in understanding intelligence
failures.
- John Hughes-Wilson, Military Intelligence Blunders and
Cover-Ups. Robinson, 1999 (revised 2004). Contains a brief but
insightful chapter on the particular intelligence failures, and
broader overview of what causes them.
- Seki, Eiji. (2006). Mrs. Ferguson's Tea-Set, Japan and the Second
World War: The Global Consequences Following Germany's Sinking of
the SS Automedon in 1940. London: Global Oriental. ISBN 1-905-24628-5; ISBN
978-1-905-24628-1 (cloth) Reprinted by University of Hawaii Press,
Honolulu, 2007. Previously announced as Sinking of the SS
Automedon and the Role of the Japanese Navy: A New
Interpretation.
- Daniel Madsen, Resurrection-Salvaging the Battle Fleet at
Pearl Harbor. U.S. Naval Institute Press. 2003. Highly
readable and thoroughly researched account of the aftermath of the
attack and the salvage efforts from December 8, 1941 through early
1944.
External links
Accounts
Media
Historic documents