Pearl Harbor Betrayed

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Pearl Harbor Betrayed Page 43

by Michael Gannon


  40. The New York Times, 17 December 1941.

  41. Prange, At Dawn We Slept, pp. 592–95.

  42. PHA, Pt. 7, p. 3280.

  43. Robert Neuleib, “Kimmel, the Roberts Commission and Public Myths,” a lecture presented to the Tenth Naval History Symposium, U.S. Naval Academy, September 1991. The writer is grateful to Mr. Neuleib for a copy of his remarks.

  44. PHA, Pt. 23, p. 987.

  45. Ibid., Pt. 22, pp. 379, 418.

  46. Short’s testimony is given in ibid., Pt. 22, pp. 31–106, Pt. 23, pp. 975–92; Kimmel’s testimony is found in ibid., Pt. 22, pp. 317–459, Pt. 23, pp. 893–901, 931–47, 1049–51, 1123–1244.

  47. Ibid., Pt. 39, p. 21. The entire Report of the Roberts Commission is given in pp. 1–21.

  48. Brownlow, The Accused, p. 148. The speech was given on 6 April 1942.

  49. From the writer’s notes of Mr. Neuleib’s lecture; see n. 43, above.

  50. These were, in abbreviated form, the:

  Hart Investigation

  Clausen Investigation

  12 February–15 June 1944

  24 January–12 September 1945

  Army Pearl Harbor Board

  Hewitt Inquiry

  20 July–20 October 1944

  14 May–11 July 1945

  Navy Court of Inquiry

  Joint Congressional Committee

  24 July–19 October 1944

  15 November 1945–23 May 1946

  Clarke Investigation

  Dorn Investigation

  4 August–20 September 1944

  27 April–1 December 1995

  The last named investigation, directed by Edwin Dorn, Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness, was prompted by a rising tide of support for Kimmel and Short that gathered from 1986 to 1995, and continues to the present. The crest of that tide has been formed by the Pearl Harbor Survivors Association, the Naval Academy Alumni Association, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, and thirty-four retired four-star admirals, whose numbers include two former chairs of the joint chiefs of staff and five former chiefs of naval operations. The Dorn Investigation resulted in five findings, the first of which was: “Responsibility for the Pearl Harbor disaster should not fall solely on the shoulders of Admiral Kimmel and General Short; it should be broadly shared.” This finding constituted the first admission by the military establishment in fifty-four years that the War and Navy Departments of 1941 were guilty of mistakes, be they of commission or omission, in the matter of Pearl Harbor. Subsequently, the United States Congress, in Section 547 of the Defense Authorization Act for 2001, recommended that the President of the United States advance Kimmel and Short posthumously to their highest temporary rank held during the war, admiral and lieutenant general, respectively, as provided by the Officer Personnel Act of 1947, from which they alone, among flag and general officers, had been punitively excluded by the two services. There, at the date of this writing, the matter stands.

  51. Quoted in Kimmel, Admiral Kimmel’s Story, p. 144. The language “dereliction of duty” originated, apparently, in the White House executive order establishing the Roberts Commission, dated 18 December 1941. It mandated that the commission determine whether “dereliction of duty” or “errors of judgment” on the part of Army or Navy personnel had contributed to the Japanese success.

  52. Prange, At Dawn We Slept, p. 622; interview with Kimmel, 1 December 1963.

  53. Report of Navy Court of Inquiry and Addendum to Court’s Finding of Facts, PHA, Pt. 39, pp. 319–21, 330.

  54. Letter of Vice Admiral David C. Richardson, USN (Ret.), to the writer, 7 February 2001.

  55. PHA 39, Army Pearl Harbor Board Report, pp. 175–76.

  56. Ibid., p. 344. Use of the language “most dangerous sectors” reminds one of historian Gordon W. Prange, on two counts. First, because, as Prange wrote, the Martin-Bellinger estimate of 31 March 1941 was an “historic work” “famous to all students of the Pacific war,” At Dawn We Slept, p. 93. Second, because he (or his two collaborators) wrote that the Martin-Bellinger estimate of 31 March 1941 postulated that the “most dangerous sectors” from which an air attack on Pearl might be mounted were “the north and northwest.” Gordon W. Prange, with Donald M. Goldstein and Katherine V. Dillon, Pearl Harbor: The Verdict of History (New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1986), p. 441. But Martin-Bellinger states no such thing; the text can be found in three places in the JCC record: Pt. 1, pp. 379–82; Pt. 22, pp. 349–54; and Pt. 33, pp. 1182–86. It appears that the “famous” “historic work” is also an unread work. Two other historians, Paolo E. Coletta and Michael Slackman, have also alleged that Martin-Bellinger stated that a Japanese attack would most likely come from the south or from the north, respectively. But Martin-Bellinger names no likely or most dangerous sector—neither “north,” “northwest,” nor “south,” nor any equivalent nautical or numerical terms. See Paolo E. Coletta, “Rear Admiral Patrick N.L. Bellinger, Commander Patrol Wing Two, and General Frederick L. Martin, Air Commander, Hawaii,” in William P. Cogar, ed., New Interpretations in Naval History: Selected Papers from the Eighth Naval History Symposium (Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1989), p. 269; Slackman, Target: Pearl Harbor, p. 56. Elsewhere in his book Slackman makes the pertinent statement: “A body of folklore has developed around the Pearl Harbor attack as stories and ‘facts’ are passed from source to source with little critical examination;” p. ix.

  57. Ibid., Pt. 16, pp. 2393–2431.

  58. KFP, “Memorandum of Interview with Admiral King in Washington on Thursday, 7 December 1944,” signed Husband E. Kimmel, 6 pp., n.d.

  59. Simpson, Stark, p. 265.

  60. Prange, with Goldstein and Dillon, Pearl Harbor, p. 230.

  61. KFP (copy), King to Secretary John L. Sullivan, 14 July 1948.

  62. The most recent such expression of that conspiracy revision appears in Golden Age (New York: Doubleday, 2000), a novel by Gore Vidal. Apart from the fact, several times mentioned in this volume, that no one has yet produced an original document connecting Roosevelt to perfidy on that scale, it offends credulity to think that FDR, a former assistant secretary of the Navy, who had a passionate affection for the naval service, would coldly and deliberately have sacrificed the heart of his fleet and the lives of 2,403 servicemen and civilians. As to the charge that he set up the Pacific Fleet for destruction or crippling damage as a means of getting the nation into war with Germany, two things might be said: (1) Germany was not obligated to declare war against the United States if Japan attacked the United States; and (2) in his address to Congress on 8 December FDR did not ask for a declaration of war against Germany. One need not hold FDR to blame for what happened at Pearl Harbor if one’s wish is to exonerate Kimmel and Short. One need only cite the faithlessness and ineptitude of the War and Navy Departments, about which much has been written in these pages.

  63. KC, Roll 35. The draft letter is undated, but it appears among Kimmel’s correspondence and papers from 1968. As noted earlier, he broke off his friendship with Stark in 1944, when he first learned of the Magic information that had not been sent him. His feelings toward Stark in 1945 are revealed in a letter he wrote to his older brother Singleton on 15 February, in which he wrote about Stark’s behavior at the time of Kimmel’s retirement. Claiming that Stark said one thing but did another, Kimmel wrote: “I tell you this to show what an awful liar this fellow has turned out to be.” KC, Roll 28.

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  I am grateful to many persons who assisted me in the research for this book. I thank archivists John E. Taylor, Barry Zerby, and Sandy Smith at the National Archives and Records Administration, Archives II, at College Park, Maryland; Sally A. Cravens and her fellow librarians in the Documents Collection of the University of Florida Libraries; and Jim Craig, of Micrographics, Inc. Leonidas Roberts, Professor Emeritus of Physical Sciences and Mathematics at the University of Florida and a Martin PBM Mariner pilot in the Pacific War, devoted many hours to helping me solve the time-to-interc
ept problem described in chapter 6. Daniel A. Martinez, National Park Service historian at the USS Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor, kindly conducted me on a detailed tour of the harbor and base installations. Vice Admiral David C. Richardson, former deputy commander in chief, Pacific Fleet, who has spent many years studying the operational history of the Pearl Harbor attack, generously shared his information with me at the admiral’s home in Julian, California.

  For biographical research on Admiral Husband E. Kimmel, I express my thanks to the admiral’s sons, Thomas K., now deceased, and Edward R., in Wilmington, Delaware. The admiral’s grandson, Thomas K., Jr., in McLean, Virginia, who is an accomplished Pearl Harbor scholar, has helped me on more occasions than I can count. Others from whom I have learned are: Captain Edward L. Beach, USN (Ret.), a distinguished naval historian and good friend; the late John Costello; B. Mitchell Simpson III; Commander Thomas Buell, USN (Ret.); Paul Stillwell; David Hackett Fischer; Robert Neuleib; David W. Richmond; George Victor; and David Chalmers.

  A special thanks is given to my agent, Michael Congdon, and to my editor at Henry Holt, the esteemed Jack Macrae. Barbara Smerage assisted with preparation of the manuscript. And, as usual, my best helper, critic, and friend during the writing was my spouse, Genevieve.

  Three paragraphs in chapter 2 and two in chapter 6 derive from my article “Reopen the Kimmel Case,” in Naval Institute Proceedings, vol 120/12/1, 102 (December 1994), pp. 51-56. I thank the Naval Institute for their permission to use that material.

  INDEX

  The index that appeared in the print version of this title does not match the pages in your eBook. Please use the search function on your eReading device to search for terms of interest. For your reference, the terms that appear in the print index are listed below.

  ABC-1 Staff Agreement

  Adams, Emory S.

  ADB Agreement

  Admiral Scheer

  Advance Expeditionary Force

  aerial reconnaissance

  see also distant aerial reconnaissance

  air attack (Pearl Harbor)

  danger of

  defense against

  air attacks, carrier-borne

  air power

  air raid drills

  aircraft

  Japanese

  lack of,

  lost in Pearl Harbor attack

  Aircraft Warning Service (AWS) Radar

  Akagi

  Akigumo

  alerts

  Alwyn (DD-355)

  American public

  American Volunteer Group (Flying Tigers)

  Anderson, Walter S.

  Andrews, Adolphus “Dolly”

  antiaircraft (AA) armament

  in Pearl Harbor attack

  Antiaircraft Intelligence Service (AAAIS)

  Azake

  Arizona (BB-30)

  attacked/sunk

  Memorial

  Army Air Corps

  Army Department

  Army Pearl Harbor Board

  Arnold, Henry H. “Hap”

  Asiatic Fleet

  Atlantic Charter

  Atlantic Conference

  Atlantic Fleet

  Australia

  B-17 Flying Fortresses

  Baecher, John Ford

  Bagley (DD-386)

  Barnes, Harry Elmer

  barrage balloons

  Battle Force

  Battle Force Destroyers

  Battle of Midway

  Battle of the Atlantic

  Battle of the Santa Cruz Islands

  Battle of Tsushima Strait

  Battleship Row

  attack on

  battleships

  in defense plan

  displaced by carriers

  failure to protect

  German

  Japanese strike force

  lost in Pearl Harbor attack

  at Pearl Harbor

  primacy of

  Beardall, John R.

  Beatty, Frank E.

  Bellinger, Patrick N. L.

  Bellows Field

  Berle, Adolf A.

  Bicknell, George W.

  Biesemeier, Harold

  Bismarck

  Black, R. B.

  Bloch, Claude C.,

  and attack on Pearl Harbor

  testimony by

  and war warnings

  Blue (DD-387)

  Bofors gun

  bomb plot messages

  Bothne, Adolph Marcus

  Bratton, Rufus C.

  and Roberts Commission

  Breese (DM-18)

  Briggs, Ralph T.

  British East Indies

  British Grand Fleet

  British Home Fleet

  Brooke Popham, Robert

  Brooklyn (CL-40)

  Brown, Wilson

  Bryden, William

  Bundy, Charles W.

  Burgin, Henry T.

  Calhoun, William L.

  California (BB-44)

  capital ships

  proportionality in strength of

  Carmichael, Richard H.

  Caroline Islands

  carrier battles

  carrier-borne air strike(s)

  carrier pilots (Japanese)

  carriers

  displaced battle ships

  premium on

  carriers (Japanese)

  defeat at Midway

  locating

  striking force

  Cassin (DD-372)

  Cast Station

  casualties in attack on Pearl Harbor

  Chiang Kai-shek

  Chicago, (CA-136)

  Chigusa, Sadao

  Chikuma

  China

  Japan’s presence in

  and U.S.-Japan negotiations

  “China hands”

  “China Incident”

  Churchill, Winston

  Clark Field

  Clark, Thurston

  Code and Signal section

  codes and ciphers

  ordered destroyed

  Combined Fleet

  intelligence regarding

  radio silence

  in strike force

  Connally, Thomas T. “Tom”

  conspiracy theory

  Cooke, Charles M. “Savvy,” Jr.

  Coral Sea

  Costello, John

  Crocker, Edward S.

  cruisers

  limitations on

  Cruisers, Battle Force

  cryptanalysts/cryptographers

  Cummings (DD-365)

  Curtiss (AV-4)

  Curts, Maurice “Germany”

  Dale (DD-353)

  Davao Gulf

  Davis, Arthur C.

  Dawn Patrol

  Deane, John R.

  deceit plan messages

  declaration of war

  decryption equipment

  decryptions

  defense plan/defenses

  DeLany, Walter S.

  dereliction of duty

  Kimmel charged with

  Destroyer Squadron (Desron) 3

  destroyers

  Detroit (CL-8)

  diplomatic (DIP) ciphers

  diplomatic (DIP) radio traffic

  diplomatic relations/negotiations

  breakdown of

  disarmament compacts

  distant aerial reconnaissance

  dive bombers (Japan)

  attack on Pearl Harbor

  Dönitz, Karl

  Doolittle, James H.

  Downes (DD-375)

  Draemel, Milo F.

  Dutch East Indies

  Earle, John B.

  Elliot, George

  Emmerson, John K.

  Emmons, Delos C.

  Enigma cipher

  Enterprise (CV-6),

  Ewa Marine air station

  Fabian, Rudolph J.

  Far East Air Force

  Feis, Herbert

  Ferguson, Homer

  Fielder, Kendall J.

&
nbsp; fighters (Japan)

  Fitch, Aubrey W.

  Flag Officers Code

  Fleet General Purpose System (JN-25)

  Fletcher, Frank Jack

  Ford Island

  aircraft at

  Naval Air Station

  Navy Field

  Formosa (Taiwan)

  Forrestal, James V.,

  Fort Kamehameha

  Fort Shafter

  Four Principles

  France

  French, Edward F.

  French Indo-China

  Fuchida Mitsuo,

  and attack on Pearl Harbor

  and decision not to pursue American fleet

  Fukudome Shigero

  Gailey, Charles K.

  Gallup Poll

  Genda Minoru

  German Navy (Kreigsmarine)

  Germany

  attacks on U.S. ships

  defeat of, as goal of U.S. policy

  invasion of Russia

  Roosevelt and

  Tripartite Pact

  war with

  “Germany first” strategy

  Gerow, Leonard T.

  blame in Pearl Harbor defeat

  and Roberts Commission

  and war warnings

  Ghormley, Robert L.

  Gilbert Islands

  Goepner, Oscar W.

  Great Britain

  aerial torpedo attacks

  merchant fleet

  support to

  war against Germany

  and war plans

  war with Japan

  Great White Fleet

  Greater East Asia

  Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere

  Greer (DD-145)

  Grew, Joseph C.

  grid system

  Grunert, George

  Guam

  Hague Conference of 1907

  Halifax, Edward F. L. W.

  Halsey, William Frederick “Bull,” Jr.,

  raid on Tokyo

  Task Force Eight

  Hart, Admiral

  grid messages sent to

  war warnings

  Hart Inquiry

  Hata Shuroku

  Hawaii

  probability of attack

  Hawaii Operation (Hawai Sakusen)

  Hawaiian Department

  Short commanding general of

  war warnings

  Heard, William A.

  Helena (CL-50)

  Helm (DD-288)

  Henley (DD-391)

 

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