Read Pearl Harbor Betrayed Online
Authors: Michael Gannon
5
. NARA, RG 80, PHLO, Box 25, Kimmel to Stark, 22 October 1941; Kimmel,
Kimmel's Story,
pp. 40â41. Two days before the warning of 16 October, Kimmel reissued security order No. 2 CL-41, which contained the advisory that a Japanese declaration of war may be preceded by “a surprise attack on ships in Pearl Harbor.”
6
. PHA, Pt. 5, pp. 2382â84.
7
. NARA, RG 80, PHLO, Box 29, Stark to Cooke, 31 July 1941.
8
. PHA, Pt. 5, pp. 2175â76.
9
. Ibid., Pt. 5, pp. 2176â77.
10
. Ibid., Pt. 5, p. 2019; 1975. Turner identified the three times he claimed he received the denials by Noyes that Kimmel had Magic decryption equipment in January, July or August, and early November, all in 1941. Ibid., p. 2040.
11
. For Noyes see ibid., Pt. 33, p. 897. Noyes later testified that Turner, if he asked such a question as that suggested, may have had “traffic analysis” and “decrypted traffic” confused in his mind; ibid., pp. 1975â77, 2029; Pt. 10, pp. 4714â15. Or, as Roberta Wohlstetter has theorized, Turner may have had “intercepts” (which Kimmel had) confused with decrypts and translations (which he did not have); Wohlstetter,
Warning and Decision,
pp. 182â83. For Beatty, see
U.S. News & World Report
(28 May 1954), pp. 49â50. In his posthumously published book, “
And I Was There,
” pp. 19â20, then Rear Admiral (Ret.) Layton recounted how, when a personal guest of Admiral Nimitz on board his flagship
South Dakota
during the Japanese formal surrender ceremonies on 2 September 1945, then full Admiral Turner, another personal guest, strode into the wardroom. “The war had made âTerrible' Turner a naval legend,” Layton wrote. “As commander of Nimitz's amphibious forces, he had executed all our landing operations from Guadalcanal to Iwo Jima with brilliant distinction.” His booming voice stopped all conversation. “âThat goddamned Kimmel had all the information and didn't do anything about it. They should hang him higher than a kite!'
“Turner continued to hold forth. Time and again he said, âKimmel was given all that information and didn't do anything about it.'
“I sat there stunned. I knew that what he was saying was not only untrue, but a monstrous slur on my former commander in chief.” Rear Admiral Edwin T. Layton, USN (Ret.), with Captain Roger Pineau, USNR (Ret.), and John Costello,
“And I Was There”: Pearl Harbor and MidwayâBreaking the Secrets
(New York: William Morrow and Company, Inc., 1985.)
Before the JCC on 21 December 1945, Turner was forced by evidence that had been presented earlier to the NCI, to admit that he “was entirely in error as regards the diplomatic codes”; PHA, Pt. 4, p. 1976.
Others who believed that Kimmel was Magic-equipped were Rear Admiral Theodore S. Wilkinson, Director of the Office of Naval Intelligence (ONI) who testified to that effect before the Roberts Commission in January 1942 (ibid., Pt. 24, p. 1361), and three Army G-2 officers at the War Department: Brig. Gen. Sherman Miles, chief of military intelligence (G-2); Lt. Col. Moses Pettigrew, executive officer of G-2; and Col. Carlisle Dusenbury, assistant to Col. Rufus S. Bratton, chief, Far Eastern Section, G-2. “I understood,” Dusenbury testified, “the Navy had about four or five hundred Naval personnel in Hawaii doing monitoring, breaking, and translating of the Japanese diplomatic codes.” Ibid., Pt. 35, p. 25.
The accuracy of Turner's predictions of Japanese intent and action may be measured right up to the morning of 6 December, when this exchange took place between the War Plans chief and Secretary Knox: “âAre they going to hit us?' Knox asked. To which Admiral Turner replied, âNo, Mr. Secretary, they are going to attack the British. They are not ready for us yet.'” Vice Admiral Frank E. Beatty, “The Background of the Secret Report,”
National Review
(13 December 1966), p. 1261.
12
. The Knox-Turner exchange was recorded by Knox's aide Captain Frank E. Beatty. See Vice Admiral Frank E. Beatty (Ret.), “Another Version of What Started War with Japan,”
U.S. News & World Report
(28 May 1954), p. 49. The Morison letter is found in KC, Roll 18, Morison to Shafroth, Northeast Harbor, ME, 1961, no date, but shortly before Morison's article “The Lessons of Pearl Harbor” appeared in the
Saturday Evening Post
(28 October 1961), pp. 19â27.
13
. PHA, Pt. 32, pp. 560â62.
14
. E.g., ibid., Pt. 14, p. 1062.
15
. Ibid., Pt. 32, p. 560.
16
. Memorandum, “Reinforcement of the Philippines,” Gerow to Marshall, 14 August 1941, cited in Costello,
Days of Infamy,
p. 84.
17
. Forrest C. Pogue,
George C. Marshall: Ordeal and Hope, 1939â1942
(New York: The Viking Press, Inc., 1966), pp. 185â87.
18
. PHA, Pt. 16, pp. 2211â12; NARA, RG 80, PHLO, Box 29, Memorandum, Marshall to Stark, 12 September 1941. Cf. Wesley Frank Craven and James Lea Cate,
The Army Air Forces in World War II
, vol. 1,
Plans and Early Operations, January 1939 to August 1942
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1948), pp. 178â79.
19
. PHA, Pt. 16, pp. 2211â12.
20
. PHA, Pt. 3, pp. 1119â20.
21
. NARA, RG 80, PHLO, Box 29, Stark to Cooke, 31 July 1941.
22
. Ibid., Box 25, Kimmel to Stark, 26 May 1941.
23
. See PHA, Pt. 16, p. 2229, Kimmel to Stark, 18 February 1941; ibid., p. 2160, Stark to Kimmel, 22 March 1941, ibid., p. 2160; ibid., pp. 2233â38, Kimmel to Stark, 26 May 1941, also found in NARA, RG 80, PHLO, Box 25; ibid., Box 29, Stark to Kimmel, 19 August 1941. For Kimmel's letter to Stark of 12 September, see ibid., Box 29; and for Stark's interrogation see ibid., Box 23, NCI, OT, vol. 1, p. 129 ff.
24
. Ibid., Box 29, Stark to Kimmel, 17 October 1941.
25
. Cecil Woodham-Smith,
The Reason Why
(New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc., 1953), pp. 228â34.
26
. Gannon,
Operation Drumbeat
, pp. 90â92.
27
. NARA, RG 80, PHLO, Box 29, “Betty” to “Mustapha,” 25 November 1941.
28
. Ibid., Kimmel to Betty, 12 August 1941.
29
. Ibid., Box 25, Kimmel to Betty, 22 August, and Betty to Mustapha, 12 September 1941.
30
. Ibid., Box 29, Kimmel to Stark, 15 November 1941; cf. Box 25, Kimmel to Stark, 26 May 1941.
31
. Ibid., Box 25, Kimmel to Stark, 22 October 1941.
32
. Ibid., Kimmel to Stark, “Survey of Conditions in the Pacific Fleet,” 26 May 1941. He could have mentioned the role of battleship gunfire in softening up invasion beaches, but as late as Betio Island, Tarawa, in the Gilberts on 20 November 1943, it was not understood how important it was to saturate a landing beach with heavy, sustained bombardment. Kimmel's prediction that carriers and light forces would dominate sea warfare in its opening stages was confirmed by the Japanese Navy not only at Pearl Harbor but in their advances, built around air power, through the Philippines and the NEI. See Fleet Admiral Ernest J. King, U.S. Navy,
U.S. Navy at War, 1941â1945: Official Reports to the Secretary of the Navy
(Washington, D.C.: United States Navy Department, 1946), p. 42. Of course, the main confirmations of the primacy of the carriers and air power came in the battles of the Coral Sea (7â8 May 1942) and Midway (3â6 June 1942).
33
. Ibid., Box 25, Kimmel to Stark, 26 May 1941. See Chapter 4
infra
for the tanker numbers, and see Kimmel to Stark, 2 December 1941.
34
. Ibid., Box 25, Kimmel to Stark, 2 December 1941.
35
. Ibid., Box 29, Betty to Mustapha, 25 November 1941.
36
. Fukudome, “Hawaii Operation,” p. 1316.
37
. This point was made during the Hart Inquiry in 1944 by then Captain Vincent R. Murphy, who had been Kimmel's assistant war plans officer: “I did not think they [the Japanese] would attack at Pearl Harbor because I did not think it was necessary for them to do so, from my point of view. We could not have materially affected their control of the waters that they wanted to control, whether or not the battleships were sunk at Pearl Harbor. In other words, I did not believe that we could move the United States Fleet to the Western Pacific until such time as auxiliaries were available.” PHA, Pt. 26, p. 207. Cf. Morison,
Rising Sun,
p. 132.
Admiral Stark wrote to Roosevelt a month before the attack: “At the present time the United States Fleet in the Pacific is inferior to the Japanese Fleet and cannot undertake an unlimited strategic offensive in the Western Pacific ⦠[which] would require tremendous merchant tonnage, which could only be withdrawn from services now considered essential.” KC, Roll 7, Memorandum for the President, 5 November 1941, p. 2.
38
. See Miller,
War Plan Orange,
pp. 294â308. The Navy Plan Option Dash One that
was
approved by the Navy Department, on 9 September 1941, is summarized in NARA, RG 80, PHLO, Box 5, Statement of Evidence, pp. 103â16. Cf. ibid., Box 25, Kimmel to Stark, 2 December 1941.
39
. Miller,
War Plan Orange,
pp. 306â07. Another version of his statement, and the one used here, appears in Miller, “Kimmel's Hidden Agenda,”
MHQ, The Quarterly Journal of Military History
(autumn 1991), p. 42.
40
. Frederic L. Borch III, “Guilty As Charged?”
MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History
vol. 13, no. 2 (winter 2001), p. 61.
41
. NARA, RG 80, PHLO, Box 5, Statement of Evidence, Japanese Diplomatic Dispatches, pp. 332â33. Neither of these two messages was sent to Kimmel or Short.
42
. Kirby et al.,
Loss of Singapore,
pp. 90â93.
43
. For Proposal A, see Feis,
Road to Pearl Harbor
, p. 295; for Proposal B, see William A. Langer and S. Everett Gleason,
The Undeclared War, 1940â1941
(New York: Harper & Brothers Publishers, 1953), pp. 233â34. Neither of these two proposals, decrypted as Magic, was sent to Kimmel or Short.
44
. NARA, RG 80, PHLO, Box 5, Statement of Evidence, Japanese Diplomatic Dispatches, p. 334. This message was not sent to Kimmel or Short.
45
. Ibid., Box 29, Stark to Kimmel, 17 October 1941.
46
. PHA, Pt. 3, p. 1167.
47
. NARA, RG 80, PHLO, Box 5, Statement of Evidence, Estimate Prepared by Admiral Stark and General Marshall for the President, 5 November 1941, pp. 355Aâ58; PHA, Pt. 14, pp. 1061â62. This estimate was sent to Kimmel. The estimate did recommend that military action should be taken against Japan in the following contingencies: “(1) A direct attack of war by Japanese armed forces against the territory or mandated territory of the United States, the British Commonwealth, or the Netherlands East Indies. (2) The movement of Japanese forces into Thailand to the west of 100° east or south of 10° north; or into Portuguese Timor, New Caledonia, or the Loyalty Islands.”
48
. KC, Roll 3, Stimson, Statement of Facts as Shown by My Current Notes and My Recollection as Refreshed Thereby, typescript, pp. 12â42.
49
. KC, Roll 8, Sumner Welles, Memorandum of Conversation, Monday, August 11, 1941, at Sea, p. 10. Welles noted further that “Mr. Churchill dissented very strongly from” the President's insistence that “no future commitments had been entered into.” See Costello,
Days of Infamy,
p. 77 and n. 38.
50
. KC, Roll 3, Address of Winston S. Churchill, 27 January 1942. The address was not published in the United States at the time.
51
. Quoted in Costello,
Days of Infamy,
p. 145. See his Chapter 6, “If the British Fought, We Would Have to Fight,” pp. 131â49.
51
. NARA, RG 80 PHLO, Box 23, ALUSNA SINGAPORE TO CINCAF Ã61526. As the reader will notice, “A firm” [sic], “Baker,” and “Cast” are code for A, B, and C; double Xs represent periods. In 1946 then Captain John X. Creighton, USN, testified that he was the officer who sent the cable to Hart but that his memory was blank about its particulars. He doubted that he had received the information from Brooke-Popham because he was not close to the air marshal. For Creighton see PHA, Pt. 10, pp. 4803, 4809, 4818â19, 5075, 5080â89; Pt. 11, 5207, 5484, 5514â15; Pt. 18, p. 3344; Pt. 33, p. 838; Pt. 40, n. 170, n. 414.
53
. CINCAF to OPNAV, 6 December 1941, reproduced in Kemp Tolley,
The Cruise of the Lanikai
(Annapolis: U.S. Naval Institute Press, 1973), p. 265.
54
. NARA, RG 80, PHLO, Box 23, Stark's Testimony Before the NCI, OT, vol. 1, p. 129.
55
. Ibid., Kimmel's Testimony Before the NCI, excerpt.
56
. Hull,
Memoirs,
II, p. 1062.
57
. NARA, RG 80, PHLO, Box 9, “Pencilled Memorandum Given By the President to the Secretary of State (Not Dated but Probably Written Shortly After November 20, 1941).” According to Langer and Gleason, “Logic as well as internal evidence” work against the postâ20 November dating;
Undeclared War
, p. 872.
58
. White's memorandum was entitled “Suggested Approach for Elimination of United States-Japanese Tension; see ibid., p. 875 ff. The full text is given in PHA, Pt. 19, p. 3667ff.
59
. PHA, Pt. 12, p. 155.
60
. PHA, Hull, Statement to JCC;
Memoirs
, p. 1070.
61
. See, e.g., Langer and Gleason,
Undeclared War,
p. 880; Feis,
Road to Pearl Harbor,
pp. 310â11; Roberta Wohlstetter,
Pearl Harbor: Warning and Decision
(Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1961), p. 234.