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* 5 Dec. - Washington Star reporter Constantine Brown quotes a friend in
his book The Coming of the Whirlwind p 291, "This is it! The Japs are
ready to attack. We've broken their code, and we've read their
ORDERS."
* 5 Dec. - Lt. Howard Brown of
Station Cast in the
Philippines
received urgent request from
Washington
to listen for a short message from Tokyo
which ended with the English word "stop". He heard the message
at 11:30 PM Hawaiian time Dec 6. This is the Hidden Word Code set up in a
message of November 27 (e.g. in code,
Roosevelt
= Miss Kimiko). The message was: "Relations between
Japan
and the following countries are on the brink of catastrophe:
Britain
and the United States."
* 6 December - This 18 November
J19 message was translated by the Army:
"1. The warships at anchor
in the Harbor on the 15th were as I told you in my No.219 on that day.
Area A - A battleship of the Oklahoma
class entered and one tanker left port. Area C - 3 warships of the heavy
cruiser class were at anchor.
2. On the 17th the Saratoga
was not in harbor. The carrier Enterprise, or some other vessel was in Area C. Two heavy cruisers of the
Chicago
class, one of the Pensacola
class were tied up at docks 'KS'. 4 merchant vessels were at anchor in
area D.
3. At 10:00 A.M. "on the morning
of the 17th, 8 destroyers were observed entering the Harbor..."
Of
course this information was not passed to HI.
* 6 Dec. - A Dec 2 request from Tokyo
to HI for information about the absence of barrage balloons, anti-torpedo
nets and air recon was translated by the Army.
* 6 Dec. - at 9:30 P.M FDR read
the first 13 parts of the decoded Japanese diplomatic declaration of war
and said "This means war." What kind of President would do
nothing? When he returned to his 34 dinner guests he said, "The war
starts tomorrow."
* 6 Dec. - the war cabinet: FDR,
top advisor Hopkins, Stimson, Marshall, Secretary of the Navy Knox, with
aides John McCrea and Frank Beatty "deliberately sat through the
night of 6 December 1941 waiting for the Japs to strike." (Infamy ch
16 sec 2)
* 7 December - A message from
the Japanese Consul in
Budapest
to Tokyo:
"On the 6th, the American
Minister presented to the Government of this country a British Government
communique to the effect that a state of war would break out on the
7th." The communique was the Dec 5th War Alert from the British
Admiralty. It has disappeared. This triple priority alert was delivered to
FDR personally. The Mid-East British Air
Marshall
told Col. Bonner Fellers on Saturday that he had received a secret signal
that America
was coming into the war in 24 hours. Churchill summarized the message in
GRAND ALLIANCE page 601 as listing the two fleets attacking British
targets and "Other Japanese fleets... also at sea on other
tasks." There only were three other fleets- for Guam, the Philippines
and HI. 2 paragraphs of the alert, British targets only, are printed in AT
DAWN WE SLEPT, Prange, p 464. There is no innocent purpose for our
government to hide this document.
* 7 December 1941 very early Washington
time, there were two Marines, an emergency special detail, stationed
outside the Japanese Naval Attache's door. 9:30 AM Aides begged Stark to
send a warning to Hawaii. He did not. 10 AM FDR read the 14th part, 11 A.M. FDR read the 15th part
setting the time for the declaration of war to be delivered to the State
Department at 1 PM, about dawn
Pearl Harbor
time, and did nothing. Navy Secretary Knox was given the 15th part at
11:15 A.M. with this note from the Office of Naval IQ: "This means a
sunrise attack on
Pearl Harbor
today." Naval IQ also transmitted this prediction to Hull
and about 8 others, including the White House (PHH 36:532). At 10:30 AM
Bratton informed Marshall that he had a most important message (the 15th
part) and would bring it to Marshall's quarters but Marshall said he would
take it at his office. At 11:25 Marshall
reached his office according to Bratton. Marshall
testified that he had been riding horses that morning but he was
contradicted by Harrison, McCollum, and Deane. Marshall who had read the
first 13 parts by 10 PM the prior night, perjured himself by denying that
he had even received them. Marshall, in the face of his aides' urgent
supplications that he warn Hawaii, made strange delays including reading
and re-reading all of the 10 minute long 14 Part Message (and some parts
several times) which took an hour and refused to use the scrambler phone
on his desk, refused to send a warning by the fast, more secure Navy
system but sent Bratton three times to inquire how long it would take to
send his watered down warning - when informed it would take 30 or 40
minutes by Army radio, he was satisfied (that meant he had delayed enough
so the warning wouldn't reach Pearl Harbor until after the 1 PM Washington
time deadline). The warning was in fact sent commercial without priority
identification and arrived 6 hours late. This message reached all other
addressees, like the
Philippines
and
Canal Zone, in a timely manner.
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