Sequence of Events
Saturday, December 6 - Washington D.C. - U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt makes a final appeal to the Emperor of Japan for peace. There is no reply. Late this same day, the
U.S. code-breaking service begins intercepting a 14-part
Japanese message and deciphers the first 13 parts, passing them on to the President and Secretary of State. The Americans
believe a Japanese attack is imminent, most likely somewhere in Southeast Asia.
Sunday, December 7 - Washington D.C. - The last part of the Japanese message, stating that diplomatic
relations with the U.S. are to be broken off, reaches Washington in the morning and is decoded at approximately 9 a.m. About an hour later, another Japanese message is intercepted. It instructs the Japanese embassy to deliver the main
message to the Americans at 1 p.m. The Americans
realize this time corresponds with early morning time in Pearl Harbor, which is several hours behind. The U.S. War Department then sends out an alert but uses a commercial telegraph because radio contact with Hawaii is temporarily broken. Delays prevent the alert from arriving at headquarters in
Oahu until noontime (Hawaii time) four hours after the attack
has already begun.
Sunday, December 7 - Islands of Hawaii, near Oahu - The Japanese attack force under the command of
Admiral Nagumo, consisting of six carriers with 423 planes, is about to attack. At 6 a.m., the first attack wave of 183 Japanese planes takes off from the carriers located
230 miles north of Oahu and heads for the U.S. Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbor.
Pearl
Harbor - At 7:02 a.m., two Army operators at Oahu's northern shore radar station detect the Japanese air attack approaching
and contact a junior officer who disregards their reports, thinking they are American B-17 planes which are expected in from
the U.S. west coast.
Near Oahu - At 7:15 a.m., a second attack wave of 167 planes takes off from the Japanese carriers and heads for Pearl Harbor.
Pearl
Harbor is not on a state on
high alert. Senior commanders have concluded, based on available intelligence, there is no reason to believe an attack is
imminent. Aircraft are therefore left parked wingtip to wingtip on airfields, anti-aircraft guns are unmanned with many ammunition
boxes kept locked in accordance with peacetime regulations. There are also no torpedo nets protecting the fleet anchorage.
And since it is Sunday morning, many officers and crewmen are leisurely ashore.
At 7:53
a.m., the first Japanese assault wave, with 51 'Val' dive bombers, 40 'Kate' torpedo bombers, 50 high level bombers and 43
'Zero' fighters, commences the attack with flight commander, Mitsuo Fuchida, sounding the battle cry: "Tora! Tora! Tora!"
(Tiger! Tiger! Tiger!).
The Americans
are taken completely by surprise. The first attack wave targets airfields and battleships. The second wave targets other ships
and shipyard facilities. The air raid lasts until 9:45 a.m. Eight battleships are damaged, with five sunk. Three light cruisers, three destroyers and three smaller vessels are
lost along with 188 aircraft. The Japanese lose 27 planes and five midget submarines which attempted to penetrate the inner
harbor and launch torpedoes.
Escaping
damage from the attack are the prime targets, the three U.S. Pacific Fleet aircraft carriers, Lexington, Enterprise
and Saratoga, which were not in the port. Also escaping damage are
the base fuel tanks.
The casualty
list includes 2,335 servicemen and 68 civilians killed, with 1,178 wounded. Included are 1,104 men aboard the Battleship USS
Arizona killed after a 1,760-pound air bomb penetrated into the forward magazine causing catastrophic explosions.
In Washington, various delays prevent the Japanese diplomats from presenting their war message
to Secretary of State, Cordell Hull, until 2:30 p.m. (Washington time) just as the first reports of the air raid at
Pearl Harbor are being read by Hull.
News of
the "sneak attack" is broadcast to the American public via radio bulletins, with many popular Sunday afternoon entertainment
programs being interrupted. The news sends a shockwave across the nation and results in a tremendous influx of young volunteers
into the U.S. armed forces. The attack also unites the nation behind
the President and effectively ends isolationist sentiment in the country.
Monday, December 8 - The United States and Britain declare war on Japan with President Roosevelt calling
December 7, "a date which will live in infamy..."
Thursday, December 11 - Germany and Italy declare war on the United States. The European and Southeast Asian wars have now become a global conflict with the Axis powers; Japan, Germany and Italy, united against America, Britain, France, and their Allies.
Wednesday, December 17 - Admiral Chester W. Nimitz becomes the new commander of the U.S. Pacific Fleet.
Both senior
commanders at Pearl Harbor; Navy Admiral Husband E. Kimmel, and Army Lt. General
Walter C. Short, were relieved of their duties following the attack. Subsequent investigations will fault the men for failing
to adopt adequate defense measures.
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Under the greatest secrecy, Nagumo took his ships to sea on 26 November 1941, with orders to abort the mission if he was discovered, or should diplomacy work an unanticipated miracle. Before
dawn on the 7th of December, undiscovered and with diplomatic prospects firmly at an end, the Pearl Harbor Striking Force was less than three-hundred miles
north of Pearl Harbor. A first attack wave of over 180 aircraft, including torpedo planes, high-level bombers, dive bombers and fighters,
was launched in the darkness and flew off to the south. When first group had taken off, a second attack wave of similar size,
but with more dive bombers and no torpedo planes, was brought up from the carriers' hangar decks and sent off into the emerging
morning light. Near Oahu's southern shore, the five midget submarines had already cast loose from their "mother" subs and were trying to make
their way into Pearl Harbor's narrow entrance channel.
All six of Japan's first-line aircraft carriers, Akagi, Kaga, Soryu, Hiryu, Shokaku and Zuikaku,
were assigned to the mission. With over 420 embarked planes, these ships constituted by far the most powerful carrier task
force ever assembled. Vice Admiral Chuichi Nagomo, an experienced, cautious officer, would command the operation. His Pearl Harbor Striking Force also included fast
battleships, cruisers and destroyers, with tankers to fuel the ships during their passage across the Pacific. An Advance Expeditionary
Force of large submarines, five of them carrying midget submarines, was sent to scout around Hawaii, dispatch the midgets into
Pearl Harbor to attack
ships there, and torpedo American warships that might escape to sea.
When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, this brought the United
States of America into the 2nd World War
U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs the declaration of war against Japan, December 8, 1941.
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