Attack on Pearl Harbor (47 page)

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Authors: Alan D. Zimm

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War was officially declared by Japan when the Privy Council met and issued an Imperial Declaration of War against England and the United States, at 1045 Tokyo time (1515 Pearl Harbor time), seven hours after the beginning of the attack.
85
The dramatic race to deliver the Fourteen-Part Message, included in Prange’s
At Dawn We Slept
, and afterwards a staple in movies and other historical accounts, is misleading. When Prange quotes the President, after reading the 14th part, as saying, “This means war,”
86
he should have added that there was a world of difference between “This means war” and “This
declares
war
today
.”

Did Yamamoto really believe that war was to be declared at 0800 Hawaiian time? Was he intentionally deceived by the government? Or, did he know that the “Fourteen-Part Message” only terminated a particular set of negotiations, and misrepresented it to his staff? If he thought it was a declaration of war and later discovered it was not, why didn’t he or the Combined Fleet staff protest to the government?

Or, have Yamamoto’s apologists just imaged a 0800 declaration of war so they can disassociate Yamamoto from violating international law? The lack of a 0800 declaration of war can also be claimed to be the cause of the American people’s anger and intransigence to a negotiated peace. If a declaration of war had been delayed, it would reduce the apparent significance of Yamamoto’s horrendous misjudgment of the American people’s reaction to the Pearl Harbor attack.

Even if a declaration of war was to be issued at 0800 Pearl Harbor time, Yamamoto’s forces committed numerous acts of war earlier. A Japanese submarine violated American waters when it investigated Lahaina Roads off Maui the day before. Japanese midget submarines violated sovereign waters the night before. American airspace was violated by reconnaissance planes over an hour before. Further afield, Japanese military reconnaissance planes violated Philippine sovereign air space, as well as Singapore’s, almost daily for weeks before the commencement of hostilities.

The late delivery of the Fourteen-Part memorandum has been made a thing of high drama in books and movies. In fact, it was irrelevant—the document itself is a vague curiosity, and had it been delivered on time nothing would have changed.

A Japanese midget submarine, captured after her scuttling charge failed to detonate. A truck pulled the submarine onto the beach for salvage. Note the scrapes on the submarine’s bow where it grounded on the reefs. The size of the midget submarine can be gauged from the length of the shovels in the right foreground. A wood beam and some sandbags prevent the submarine from rolling.
Source: Naval Archives, Washington DC

CHAPTER ELEVEN
THE FIFTH MIDGET SUBMARINE: A CAUTIONARY TALE

Mission and Accomplishments, Known and Presumed

The Japanese transported five two-man midget submarines to the Hawaiian Islands. They were to penetrate into the confines of Pearl Harbor on the night before the beginning of the war, lay on the bottom of the harbor, and in the dark of night after the aerial strike rise up and attack.

This concept did not sit well with the submariners—they wanted to attack at the same time as the aircraft, adding their 10 torpedoes to the 40 carried by the aviators. They petitioned Yamamoto and he granted their request.

If the midget submarines’ torpedoes were held until after the air attack they could finish off partially damaged ships or hit remaining undamaged ships. There was no good operational reason to have them attack at the same time as the aviators other than a sense of romanticism.

The submarines first had to penetrate the air and surface antisubmarine patrols off the harbor, get past the torpedo netting stretched across the channel entrance, and navigate the channel in the dark using navigational lines of bearing taken from a small periscope that might only be a foot above the water. This last would be nearly an impossible task—experienced navigators have approached unfamiliar coastlines before, trying to pick out navigation lights from a background of shore lights, and found it difficult even with radar helping to pick out the navigation aids. The midgets were “nearly blind.”
1
It would require incredible skill coupled with incredible good fortune to penetrate the harbor.

Alternately, one could let the enemy do the navigating, by following behind a ship transiting the channel. At least one midget submarine attempted this, trailing the cargo ship
Antares
. The submarine was visually spotted by the crew of the destroyer
Ward
. This was significant, because it was not always possible to conclusively classify sonar contacts, particularly in the poor sonar conditions around the islands. Whales, schools of fish, temperature inversions, and oil bubbles have often been classified as submarines.

A report of the sighting, identification, attack, and sinking was radioed to the Commandant of the 14th Naval District over an hour before the main attack. This incident illustrates the major flaw in the concept of the midget submarine launch. By attempting to penetrate the harbor before the attack, they ran the risk of putting the defenses on alert. We have earlier shown the possible consequences of early warning.

Just prior to the submariners’ departure Yamamoto had second thoughts. He dispatched Captain Takayasu Arima, the torpedo staff officer at Combined Fleet Headquarters, to make it understood that the midgets were to slip into the harbor quietly, without raising any alarm. If they could not do this, they were to abandon the mission.
2

Considering the restricted sensors on the midget submarines, this restriction was totally unrealistic. The midget submarine commanding officers were specifically selected for dash and determination. Why Yamamoto would think these men would exhibit so little
Yamato damashii
and the spirit of
kesshitai
(self-sacrifice) as to break off their mission is also unknown. Throughout the war, the Japanese had a weakness for expecting unrealistic results from unconventional means of attack, especially any that could be thought of as particularly reliant upon individual bravery, spirit, and force of will.

There was a peculiar psychology surrounding the Japanese planning processes. Failure was dishonorable, something for which one might be expected to apologize to the emperor or even end one’s own life; thus, the possibility of failure was a very serious thing. To consider failure as a possibility was almost like an accusation of failure, or an evaluation that the warrior charged with the execution of a mission did not have the requisite fighting spirit or patriotism to succeed, a very serious charge. To plan for alternative eventualities was almost like an insult to those who were to execute the primary plan. Time and again during the course of the war this resulted in a lack of flexibility in Japanese plans, a lack of alternative courses of action in the planning process, and a hesitation to adapt to alternative circumstance. These factors made the expectation of success from the midget submarine attacks high, and made the staffs overly receptive to optimistic reports of success.

On the evening of the day of the attack, the submarine I-16 received a short radio message transmitting “se, se, se,” short for seiko, or success. According to Prange:

On this slender evidence the Japanese Navy concluded that at least three midget submarines had penetrated Pearl Harbor and, after the raid, had inflicted severe damage, including the destruction of a capital ship. Quickly the word spread that the minisubs had sunk the
Arizona
. During the spring of 1942, the Japanese Navy released this to the press, and the midget submariners were venerated as veritable gods…
3

The Japanese also received a report from a South American embassy source that said a battleship was sunk on the evening of 7 December by midget submarines. Willmott, Tohmatsu and Johnson champion the claim, stating that “two battleships were torpedoed by one midget submarine.”
4

A Matter of Ten Torpedoes

The evidence indicates that the midget submarine attack was a failure. Of the five midget submarines and ten torpedoes:


One midget submarine penetrated the harbor and was underway west of Ford Island when it was discovered by the destroyer
Monaghan
. It hastily fired its torpedoes. One torpedo exploded near a pier while the other fetched up unexploded on the shore. This submarine was sunk by the destroyer, and eventually raised, inspected, and then buried in a landfill.

Another was sunk by a 4-inch shell fired by the destroyer
Ward
. This submarine has been located by deep-submergence research submarines with both torpedoes still on board. It remains in place as a war grave.

Another suffered from a loss of depth control and a failed gyro, grounded, and was abandoned by her crew after the main battery failed. It washed up onto the shore off Weimanalo, Oahu, with both torpedoes on board.

Another sank off the harbor entrance in Keehi Lagoon, Oahu, and was recovered in 1960 with both torpedoes still on board.

The last midget submarine fired one or two torpedos at the light cruiser
St. Louis
as she was heading down the entrance channel for the open sea. As reported in her AR dated 10 December 1941:

When just inside entrance buoy No. 1 two torpedoes were fired at this ship from a distance of approximately 2,000 yards on the starboard beam. The torpedoes, although running shallow, struck the shoal inside buoy No. 1 and exploded, no damage to this vessel resulting. An object near the origin of the torpedo tracks was taken under fire by the 5” battery but no hits were observed.

Another report stated:

At 1004 when just inside the channel entrance buoys (Buoys #1 and 2) two torpedoes were seen approaching the ship from starboard from a range of between 1,000 to 2,000 yards. Just before striking the ship, they hit the reef to westward of the dredged channel and exploded doing no damage to the ship.
5

Possibly only one torpedo was fired at
St. Louis
. One of the witnesses interviewed post-war said that the two explosions might actually have been one: “Well, it was really one explosion…. just, you know, it’s practically instantaneous when the one blew up, it blew the other one up.’”
6
Considering that the MRI (minimum release interval) for a midget submarine’s torpedoes was 60 seconds, it would have been impossible for two torpedoes to explode at the same point at the same time.

An hour before
St. Louis
’ engagement, the destroyer
Helm
appeared to have encountered a midget submarine. From its AR:

0817 Sighted conning tower of submarine to right of channel, northward of buoy #1. [Note: this was in waters too shallow for a conventional submarine to operate.] Gave orders to open fire, pointer fire, but submarine submerged before guns could get on.

0818 Increased speed to 25 knots, cleared entrance buoys, turned right. 0819 Submarine conning tower surfaced.

0820 Opened fire on submarine off Tripod Reef, bearing 290 distance 1200 yards from buoy #1. No hits observed, but there were several close splashes. Submarine appeared to be touching bottom on ledge of reef, and in line of breakers. While still firing at submarine it apparently slipped off ledge and submerged.

0820 Made plain language contact report of Submarine to CinCPAC on 2562 Kc.

0821 Men on after guns and amidships observed torpedo pass close under the stern on a northwesterly course. Report of this did not reach the bridge.
7

Whether there were two torpedoes fired at
St. Louis
, or one torpedo at her and one at the
Helm
, it appears that a midget submarine was operating just off the entrance to Pearl Harbor in waters right up to (and, perhaps, on) the coral reef, and expended both torpedoes.

Of the ten torpedoes carried by the midget submarines, only four were fired, two at
St. Louis
and possibly
Helm
, and two at
Monaghan
, all of which missed. The only damage inflicted was to a Ford Island pier. All six of the other torpedoes were unfired and have been visually sighted in their submarines’ tubes.

Up until recently only four of the midget submarines were located. In 1980 Burl Burlingame was examining one of the Japanese photographs of the attack on Battleship Row and saw in the center of the photograph what looked like a midget submarine with its bow pointed towards Battleship Row, trailed by three plumes of water. Torpedo tracks appear to emanate from the submarine.

Burlingame published his conjectures in a 1991 book,
Advance Force Pearl Harbor
. That was the beginning of an enthusiastic effort by many investigators examining the possibility that the last midget submarine penetrated Pearl Harbor and attacked Battleship Row. In its latest incarnation, researchers hope to prove that the fifth midget submarine penetrated into Pearl Harbor and fired two torpedoes at Battleship Row simultaneously with the torpedo bombers’ attack.

The proponents of the “fifth midget submarine in Pearl Harbor” hypothesis have come in two waves.

Wave 1: A Midget Submarine in the Photograph

The first wave of investigations was provoked by the photograph and Burlingame’s conjectures. In an investigation published in
Naval History
magazine and broadcast in a television program called
Unsolved History: Myths of Pearl Harbor
,
8
the investigators claimed the image indeed showed a midget submarine. The three plumes in the picture were caused by the midget’s props when the submarine oscillated up and down after firing a torpedo. The submarine supposedly lost trim control, broached, and her screws come out of the water kicking up the three plumes, which they called the “rooster tails.”

They re-created the geometry of the scene in one-third scale on a lake using a scale model of a midget submarine. The resulting image appeared to closely match the photograph, less the “rooster tails.”

The investigators commissioned the University of Michigan Marine Hydrodynamics Laboratories to simulate the event in a hydrodynamic model basin and duplicate the rooster tails. The results looked nothing like those on the photograph, either in size or shape. The University of Michigan investigators concluded that the plumes on the photograph were more likely the signature of Type 91 aerial torpedoes hitting the water.
9
In a rather humorous turn, the proponents then spent nearly an entire magazine article refuting the study that they themselves commissioned (without, in the opinion of many naval experts, much success).

In a letter published later in
Naval History Magazine
, other investigators analyzed the physics of the rooster tails. By using the plume heights as an estimate of the time between splashes and measuring the distance between them, it was calculated that a midget submarine would need to be traveling at well over 30 knots, ten times what a midget could do while launching torpedoes in a harbor. The article pointed out that the theorists had no explanation how a midget sub’s small counter-rotating propellers turning at “dead slow” could kick up splashes over 60 feet in the air.
10

Ignored also was direct empirical evidence. The midget submarine that fired upon
Curtiss
and
Monaghan
lost depth control and broached, but there were no reports of 60-foot rooster tails or, for that matter, any plumes of water at all being kicked up by her screws.

The splashes are more likely to have been generated by splinters from anti-aircraft shells, or by a heavy AA shell that skipped along the surface of the water.
11
A close examination of the plumes does not show any spreading from the brisk wind that was present at the time of the attack, indicating that they were created almost simultaneously, something a midget submarine at three knots could not do.

This first wave of theorists received wide attention. Their theory is repeated on many World War II web sites and in the Wikipedia article on the Pearl Harbor attack. However, it is an example of the worst kind of research, something characterized as “Advocacy Analysis,” that is, analysis designed to promote a viewpoint by presenting selected facts and arguments while ignoring all evidence to the contrary. Advocacy Analysis is promoted by postmodernist historians who do not believe in absolute truth, but rather only in viewpoints and opinions.
12
In this case, the “Midget Submarine Myth” promulgators begin their theory based on a dark area on a photograph. Most egregiously, they present arguments in favor of their case but ignore the counterarguments or opposing evidence, such as the torpedoes that were fired at
St. Louis
.

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