Part of the Japanese plan for the attack included breaking off negotiations with the United States 30 minutes before the attack began. Diplomats from the Japanese embassy in
Washington, D.C., including the Japanese ambassador, Admiral
Kichisaburō Nomura and Special Representative
Saburō Kurusu, had been conducting extended talks with the
U.S. State Department regarding reactions to the Japanese move into French Indochina in the summer. In the days before the attack, a long 14-part message was sent to the embassy from the Foreign Office in Tokyo that was encrypted with the Type 97 cypher machine, in a cipher named
PURPLE by U.S.
cryptanalysts, who were able to decode it. A short separate message gave instructions to deliver the 14-part message to Secretary of State Cordell Hull at . The last part arrived late Saturday night (Washington Time), along with the 1 p.m. delivery message. But because of decryption and typing delays, due to the Japanese embassy refusing to hire local typists to maintain secrecy, and the embassy staff, unfamiliar with English, taking much longer to write the message, as well as Tokyo's failure to give early enough warning of the crucial necessity of the timing, the message wasn't delivered to Hull until over an hour after the attack started. The United States had decrypted the 14th part well before the Japanese did so, and long before, embassy staff had composed a clean typed copy. The short message, with its instruction for the time of delivery, had been decoded Saturday night but was not acted upon until the next morning, according to
Henry Clausen. Nomura asked for an appointment to see Hull at but later asked it be postponed to 1:45 as Nomura was not quite ready. Nomura and Kurusu arrived at and were received by Hull at 2:20. Nomura apologized for the delay in presenting the message. After Hull had read several pages, he asked Nomura whether the document was presented under instructions of the Japanese government. Nomura replied that it was. After reading the full document, Hull turned to the ambassador and said: I must say that in all my conversations with you... during the last nine months I have never uttered one word of untruth. This is borne out absolutely by the record. In all my fifty years of public service I have never seen a document that was more crowded with infamous falsehoods and distortions—infamous falsehoods and distortions on a scale so huge that I never imagined until today that any Government on this planet was capable of uttering them. Japanese records, which were admitted into evidence during congressional hearings on the attack after the war, established that Japan had not even written a declaration of war until it had news of the successful attack. The two-line declaration was finally delivered to U.S. Ambassador
Joseph Grew in Tokyo about ten hours after the completion of the attack. Grew was allowed to transmit it to the United States, where it was received late Monday afternoon (Washington time). Once word got out throughout the fleet that the attack had commenced before war was officially declared, even some of the pilots and aircrew involved expressed outrage and dismay, considering such an action without a formal declaration of war dishonorable.
War (1937–1939, 1940–1941)
Konoe Fumimaro (1941–1944)
Hideki Tojo In July 1941, IJN headquarters informed Emperor Hirohito its reserve
bunker oil would be exhausted within two years if a new source was not found. In August 1941, Japanese Prime Minister
Fumimaro Konoe proposed a summit with Roosevelt to discuss differences. Roosevelt replied that Japan must leave China before a summit meeting could be held. On September 6, 1941, at the second Imperial Conference concerning attacks on the Western colonies in Asia and Hawaii, Japanese leaders met to consider the attack plans prepared by
Imperial General Headquarters. The summit occurred one day after the emperor had reprimanded General
Hajime Sugiyama, chief of the IJA
General Staff, about the lack of success in China and the speculated low chances of victory against the United States, the
British Empire, and
their allies. Konoe argued for more negotiations and for possible concessions to avert war. However, military leaders such as Sugiyama,
Minister of War General Hideki Tōjō, and chief of the
IJN General Staff Fleet Admiral Osami Nagano asserted that time had run out and that additional negotiations would be pointless. They urged swift military actions against all American and European colonies in Southeast Asia and Hawaii. Tōjō argued that yielding to the American demand to withdraw troops would wipe out all the gains of the Second Sino-Japanese War, depress Army
morale, endanger
Manchukuo and jeopardize the control of Korea. Hence, doing nothing was the same as defeat and a
loss of face. On October 16, 1941, Konoe resigned and proposed
Prince Naruhiko Higashikuni, who was also the choice of the army and navy, as his successor. Hirohito appointed
Hideki Tojo instead and was worried, as he told Konoe, about having the
Imperial House being held responsible for a war against Western powers on
Kōichi Kido's advice. Prince Naruhiko Higashikuni became prime minister on 17 August 1945, after the
surrender of Japan. (younger brother of Emperor Hirohito) On November 3, 1941, Nagano presented a complete plan for the attack on Pearl Harbor to Hirohito. At the Imperial Conference on November 5, Hirohito approved the plan for a war against the United States, Britain and the Netherlands that was scheduled to start in early December if an acceptable diplomatic settlement were not achieved before then. Over the following weeks, Tōjō's military regime offered a final deal to the United States. It offered to leave only Indochina in return for large American economic aid. On November 26, the so-called Hull Memorandum (or Hull Note) rejected the offer and stated that in addition to leaving Indochina, the Japanese must leave China and agree to an
Open Door Policy in the Far East. (advisor to Emperor Hirohito from 1940 to 1945) On 30 November 1941,
Nobuhito, Prince Takamatsu warned his eldest brother, Hirohito, that the navy felt that Japan could not fight more than two years against the United States and wished to avoid war. After consulting with
Kōichi Kido, who advised him to take his time until he was convinced, and Tōjō, Hirohito called
Shigetarō Shimada and Nagano, who reassured him that war would be successful. On December 1, Hirohito finally approved a "war against United States, Great Britain and Holland" during another Imperial Conference, to commence with a surprise attack on the
U.S. Pacific Fleet at its main forward base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.
Intelligence gathering On February 3, 1940, Yamamoto briefed Captain Kanji Ogawa of Naval Intelligence on the potential attack plan and asked him to start intelligence gathering on Pearl Harbor. Ogawa already had spies in Hawaii, including Japanese Consular officials with an intelligence remit, and he arranged for help from a German already living in Hawaii who was an
Abwehr agent. None had been providing much militarily useful information. He planned to add the 29-year-old Ensign
Takeo Yoshikawa. By the spring of 1941, Yamamoto officially requested additional Hawaiian intelligence, and Yoshikawa boarded the liner
Nitta-maru at
Yokohama. He had grown his hair longer than military length and assumed the cover name Tadashi Morimura. Yoshikawa began gathering intelligence in earnest by taking auto trips around the main islands, touring Oahu in a small plane, and posing as a tourist. He visited Pearl Harbor frequently and sketched the harbor and location of ships from the crest of a hill. Once, he gained access to
Hickam Field in a taxi and memorized the number of visible planes, pilots, hangars, barracks and soldiers. He also discovered that Sunday was the day of the week on which the largest number of ships were likely to be in harbor, that
PBY patrol went out every morning and evening, and there was an antisubmarine net in the mouth of the harbor. Information was returned to Japan in coded form in Consular communications and by direct delivery to intelligence officers aboard Japanese ships calling at Hawaii by consulate staff. In June 1941, German and Italian consulates were closed, and there were suggestions that those of Japan should be closed, as well. They were not because they continued to provide valuable information (
via MAGIC), and neither Roosevelt nor Hull wanted trouble in the Pacific. Had they been closed, however, it is possible
Naval General Staff, which had opposed the attack from the outset, would have called it off since up-to-date information on the location of the Pacific Fleet, on which Yamamoto's plan depended, would no longer have been available.
Planning Expecting war and seeing an opportunity in the forward basing of the U.S. Pacific Fleet in Hawaii, the Japanese began planning in early 1941 for an attack on Pearl Harbor. For the next several months, planning and organizing a simultaneous attack on Pearl Harbor and invasion of British and Dutch colonies to the south occupied much of the Japanese Navy's time and attention. The plans for the Pearl Harbor attack arose out of the Japanese expectation the U.S. would be inevitably drawn into war after a Japanese attack against Malaya and Singapore. The intent of a preventive strike on Pearl Harbor was to neutralize American naval power in the Pacific and to remove it from influencing operations against American, British, and Dutch colonies. Successful attacks on colonies were judged to depend on successfully dealing with the Pacific Fleet. Planning had long anticipated a battle in Japanese home waters after the U.S. fleet traveled across the Pacific while it was under attack by submarines and other forces all the way. The U.S. fleet would be defeated in a
"decisive battle", as Russia's
Baltic Fleet had been in 1905. A surprise attack posed a twofold difficulty compared to longstanding expectations. First, the Pacific Fleet was a formidable force and would not be easy to defeat or to surprise. Second, Pearl Harbor's shallow waters made using conventional
aerial torpedoes ineffective. On the other hand, Hawaii's distance meant a successful surprise attack could not be blocked or quickly countered by forces from the
Continental U.S. Several Japanese naval officers had been impressed by the British action at the
Battle of Taranto in which 21 obsolete
Fairey Swordfish disabled half of the 's battleships (three out of six). Admiral Yamamoto even dispatched a delegation to Italy, which concluded a larger and better-supported version of Cunningham's strike could force the U.S. Pacific Fleet to retreat to bases in California, which would give Japan the time needed to establish a "barrier" defense to protect Japanese control of the Dutch East Indies. The delegation returned to Japan with information about the shallow-running torpedoes Cunningham's engineers had devised. Japanese strategists were undoubtedly influenced by Admiral
Heihachiro Togo's surprise attack on the
Russian Pacific Fleet at the
Battle of Port Arthur in 1904. Yamamoto's emphasis on destroying the American battleships was in keeping with the
Mahanian doctrine shared by all major navies during this period, including the
U.S. Navy and the
Royal Navy.
Minoru Genda stressed that surprise would be critical. In a letter dated January 7, 1941, Yamamoto finally delivered a rough outline of his plan to
Koshiro Oikawa, the Navy Minister, from whom he also requested to be made commander-in-chief of the air fleet to attack Pearl Harbor. A few weeks later, in yet another letter, Yamamoto requested for Admiral
Takijiro Onishi, chief of staff of the
Eleventh Air Fleet, to study the technical feasibility of an attack against the American base. Onishi gathered as many facts as possible about Pearl Harbor. After first consulting with
Kosei Maeda, an expert on aerial torpedo warfare, and being told that the harbor's shallow waters rendered such an attack almost impossible, Onishi summoned Commander
Minoru Genda. After studying the original proposal put forth by Yamamoto, Genda agreed that "the plan is difficult but not impossible." Yamamoto gave the bulk of the planning to Rear Admiral
Ryunosuke Kusaka, who was very worried about the area's air defenses. Yamamoto encouraged Kusaka by telling him, "Pearl Harbor is my idea and I need your support." Genda emphasized the attack should be carried out early in the morning and in total secrecy and use an
aircraft carrier force and several types of bombing. Although attacking the U.S. Pacific Fleet anchorage would achieve surprise, it also carried two distinct disadvantages. The targeted ships would be sunk or damaged in very shallow water and so they could quite likely be salvaged and possibly returned to duty (as six of the eight battleships eventually were). Also, most of the crews would survive the attack since many would be on
shore leave or would be rescued from the harbor afterward. Despite those concerns, Yamamoto and Genda pressed ahead. By April 1941, the Pearl Harbor plan became known as
Operation Z, after the famous Z signal that was given by Admiral Tōgō at the
Battle of Tsushima. Over the summer, pilots trained in earnest near
Kagoshima City on
Kyūshū. Genda chose it because its geography and infrastructure presented most of the same problems bombers would face at Pearl Harbor. In training, each crew flew over the mountain behind Kagoshima, dove into the city, dodged buildings and smokestacks, and dropped to at the piers. Bombardiers released torpedoes at a breakwater some away. However, even that low-altitude approach would not overcome the problem of torpedoes from reaching the bottom in the shallow waters of Pearl Harbor. Japanese weapons engineers created and tested modifications to allow successful shallow water drops. The efforts resulted in a heavily modified version of the
Type 91 torpedo, which was outfitted with wooden tail fins that let it operate at shallower depths and inflicted most of the ship damage during the eventual attack. Japanese weapons technicians also produced special
armor-piercing bombs by fitting fins and release shackles to 14- and 16-inch (356- and 406-mm) naval shells. They could penetrate the lightly armored decks of the old battleships.
Concept of Japanese invasion of Hawaii At several stages during 1941, Japan's military leaders discussed the possibility of launching an invasion to seize the
Hawaiian Islands to provide Japan with a strategic base to shield its new empire, deny the United States any bases beyond the
West Coast and further isolate
Australia and
New Zealand. Genda, who saw Hawaii as vital for American operations against Japan after war began, believed that Japan must follow any attack on Pearl Harbor with an invasion of Hawaii or risk losing the war. He viewed Hawaii as a base to threaten the West Coast of North America and perhaps as a negotiating tool for ending the war. He believed that after a successful air attack, 10,000–15,000 men could capture Hawaii, and he saw the operation as a precursor or an alternative to a
Japanese invasion of the Philippines. In September 1941, Commander Yasuji Watanabe of the Combined Fleet staff estimated two divisions (30,000 men) and 80 ships, in addition to the carrier strike force, could capture the islands. He identified two possible landing sites, near
Haleiwa and
Kaneohe Bay, and proposed for both to be used in an operation that would require up to four weeks with Japanese air superiority. Although the idea gained some support, it was soon dismissed for several reasons: • Japan's ground forces, logistics, and resources were already fully committed not only to the
Second Sino-Japanese War but also for
offensives in Southeast Asia, which were planned to occur almost simultaneously with the Pearl Harbor attack. • The
Imperial Japanese Army (IJA) insisted it needed to focus on operations in China and Southeast Asia and so refused to provide substantial support elsewhere. Because of a lack of co-operation between the services, the IJN never discussed the Hawaiian invasion proposal with the IJA. • Most of the senior officers of the Combined Fleet, particularly Admiral Nagano, believed an invasion of Hawaii was too risky. With an invasion ruled out, it was agreed that a massive carrier-based three-wave airstrike against Pearl Harbor to destroy the Pacific Fleet would be sufficient. Japanese planners knew that Hawaii, with its strategic location in the Central Pacific, would serve as a critical base from which the U.S. could extend its military power against Japan. However, the confidence of Japan's leaders that the conflict would be over quickly and that the U.S. would choose to negotiate a compromise, rather than fight a long bloody war, overrode that concern. Watanabe's superior, Captain Kameto Kuroshima, who believed the invasion plan unrealistic, would later call his rejection of it the "biggest mistake" of his life. ==Strike force==