"None of the wicked will understand, but those who are wise will understand." Daniel 12:10 |
|||||
|
* 1 Dec. - The tanker Shiriya, which had been added to the Striking Force in an order intercepted Nov 14, radioed "proceeding to a position 30.00 N, 154.20 E. Expect to arrive at that point on 3 December." (near HI) The fact that this message is in the National Archives destroys the myth that the attack fleet maintained radio silence. They were not ordered to (Order 820). Serial numbers prove that the Striking Force sent over 663 radio messages between Nov 16 and Dec 7 or about 1 per hour. The NSA has not released any raw intercepts because the headers would prove that the Striking Force did not maintain radio silence. On Nov 29 the Hiyei sent one message to the Commander of the 3rd fleet; on Nov 30 the Akagi sent several messages to its tankers - see page 474 of the Hewitt Report. Stinnett in DAY OF DECEIT (p 209) found over 100 messages from the Striking Force in the National Archives. All Direction Finding reports from HI have been crudely cut out. Reports from Dec 5 show messages sent from the Striking Force picked up by Station Cast, P.I.
* From traffic analysis, HI
reported that the carrier force was at sea and in the North. THE MOST
AMAZING FACT is that in reply to that report, MacArthur's command sent a
series of three messages, Nov 26, 29, Dec 2, to HI lying about the
location of the carrier fleet - saying it was in the
* There were a large number of
other messages that gave the location of the Striking Force by alluding to
the
* 1 Dec. - FDR cut short his
scheduled ten day vacation after 1 day to meet with
* 1 Dec. 3:30 P.M. FDR read
Foreign Minister Togo's message to his ambassador to Germany: "Say
very secretly to them that there is extreme danger between Japan &
Anglo-Saxon nations through some clash of arms, add that the time of this
war may come quicker than anyone dreams." This was in response to
extreme German pressure on November 29 for
* 2 Dec. 2200
* 2 Dec. - Commander of the
Combined Imperial Fleet Yamamoto radioed the attack fleet in plain (uncoded)
Japanese Climb Niitakayama 1208 (Dec 8 Japanese time, Dec 7 our time).
Thus the
* 2 Dec. - General Hein Ter
Poorten, the commander of the Netherlands East Indies Army gave the Winds
setup message to the US War Department. The Australians had a center in
* 2 Dec - Japanese order No. 902
specified that old JN-25 additive tables version 7 would continue to be
used alongside version 8 when the latter was introduced on December 4.
This means the
* 4 Dec. - In the early hours,
Ralph Briggs at the Navy's East Coast Intercept station, received the
"East Winds, Rain" message, the Winds Execute, which meant war.
He put it on the TWX circuit immediately and called his commander. This
message was deleted from the files. One of the main coverups of
* 4 Dec. - The Dutch invoked the
ADB joint defense agreement when the Japanese crossed the magic line of
100 East and 10 North. The * 4 Dec. - General Ter Poorten sent all the details of the Winds Execute command to Colonel Weijerman, the Dutch military attache' in Washington to pass on to the highest military circles. Weijerman personally gave it to Marshall, Chief of Staff of the War Department. * 4 Dec - US General Thorpe at Java sent four messages warning of the PH attack. DC ordered him to stop sending warnings. * 5 Dec. - All Japanese international shipping had returned to home port. * 5 December - In the morning FDR dictated a letter to Wendell Wilkie for the Australian Prime Minister, "There is always the Japanese to consider. The situation is definitely serious and there might be an armed clash at any moment... Perhaps the next four or five days will decide the matters." * 5 Dec. - At a Cabinet meeting, Secretary of the Navy Knox said, "Well, you know Mr. President, we know where the Japanese fleet is?" "Yes, I know" said FDR. "I think we ought to tell everybody just how ticklish the situation is. We have information as Knox just mentioned...Well, you tell them what it is, Frank." Knox became very excited and said, "Well, we have very secret information that the Japanese fleet is out at sea. Our information is..." and then a scowling FDR cut him off. (Infamy, Toland, 1982, ch 14 sec 5)
|
|||||
|
Page
1 |
Page
2 |
Page
3 |
Page
4 |
Page
5 |
Page
6 |
Page7
|
Page
8 Page 9 | Page 10 | Page 11 | Page 12 | Page 13 | Page 14 | Page 15 Page 16 | Page 17 | Page 18 | Page 19 | Page 20 |
|||||
|
|||||
What's Bin Did and What's Bin Hid © 2007 All rights reserved. |