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Planning the Attack


Date of observance : December 7
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In preparation for the expected war, planning began in early 1941 for a Pearl Harbor attack. For the next several months, planning, training, weapons development, espionage, and coordination with other plans to invade British and Dutch colonies to the South occupied much of the Japanese military's time and attention. Pearl Harbor attack planning was a part of the Japanese expectation the U.S. would be inevitably drawn into the war after a Japanese attack against Malaya and Singapore.

The intent of a preemptive strike on Pearl Harbor was to neutralize American naval power in the Pacific to allow unmolested operations against American, British, and Dutch colonies. Thus, the success of war plans was judged to depend on successfully dealing with the American Pacific Fleet. The difficulties of such an attack were twofold. First, the Pacific Fleet was a formidable force, and would not be easy to defeat or to surprise. Second, for aerial attack, Pearl Harbor's shallow waters made using conventional air-dropped torpedoes ineffective. On the other hand, Hawaii's isolation 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 British Admiral Andrew Cunningham's Operation JUDGMENT, in which 20 obsolete carrier-based Fairey Swordfish disabled half the Italian fleet. Admiral Yamamoto 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, thus giving Japan the time necessary to erect 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 Heihachiro Togo's destruction of the Russian Baltic Fleet at Tsushima, and may have been influenced by U.S. Admiral Harry Yarnell's performance in the 1932 joint Army-Navy exercises, which simulated an invasion of Hawaii. Yarnell, as commander of the attacking force, placed his carriers northwest of Oahu and simulated an air attack. The exercise's umpires noted Yarnell's aircraft were able to inflict serious "damage" on the defenders, who for 24 hours after the attack were unable to locate his fleet.

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 Royal Navy.

In early 1941, Yamamoto began considering an attack on Pearl Harbor. He was authorized to create the Carrier Striking Task Force, and assigned Commander Minoru Genda to develop the actual attack plan. Genda's plan stressed surprise would be essential, given the expected balance of forces. By April 1941, the Pearl Harbor plan became known as Operation Z, after the famous Z signal given by Admiral Togo at Tsushima.

Over the summer, pilots trained in earnest on the Japanese island of Kyushu. Genda chose Kagoshima City for a training area because its geography and infrastructure presented most of the same problems torpedo bombers would face at Pearl Harbor. In training, each crew would fly over the 5000-foot (1500 m) mountain behind Kagoshima, dive down into the city, dodging buildings and smokestacks before dropping to an altitude of 25 feet (7 m) at the piers. Bombardiers would release a torpedo at a breakwater some 300 yards (270 m) away.

Yet even skimming the water would not solve the problem of torpedoes bottoming in the shallow waters of Pearl Harbor. Japan created and tested modifications allowing successful shallow water drops. The effort resulted in a heavily modified version of the Type 91 torpedo which inflicted most of the ship damage during the 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. These were able to penetrate the armored decks of battleships and cruisers.


 
 




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