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THE HISTORY OF
PEARL HARBOR
THE BONES OF "STATION H"
On November
24th, 1941, Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto sent a radio message to Admiral
Chuichi Nagumo, Commander of the Pacific Striking Fleet, which read in
part, "The
task force, keeping its movement strictly secret and maintaining close
guard against submarines and aircraft, shall advance into Hawaiian waters,
and upon the very opening of hostilities shall attack the main force of
the United States fleet in Hawaii and deal it a mortal blow".
Two sources
of the above message are Admiral Homer Wallin's "Pearl Harbor", published by the US Government printing office, and the United
States Strategic Bombing Survey (Pacific) Naval Analysis Division's
"The Campaigns of the Pacific War", also published by the US
Government printing office.
Contrary to
the government propaganda that the attack on Pearl Harbor was a total
surprise, documents declassified in 5/00 confirm that Yamamoto's
message was intercepted in
Hawaii
at a radio intercept station known as "Station H" overlooking
Kaneohe
Bay
on windward
Oahu.
The location
of "Station H" was on a small peninsula screened from
Kamehameha Highway
by a Chinese laundry. Today it is Heeia
State Park
and open to the public. As one approaches the main park building, used for
community meetings, dance classes, and other gatherings, there is a paved
path leading to the right which spirals down the back of the building to
the edge of
Kaneohe
Bay. Several pieces of old concrete remain visible in the ground. These are
the remnants of the foundations of the "Station H" buildings.
Nearby are
two large lava stone planters sitting on a concrete ring.
The planters
obscure the true nature of the concrete ring, which was the footing for
one of the towers supporting the wire antennas used to listen to radio
communications in the Pacific. Close examination between the planters
reveals the remains of the bolts which held the antenna in place.
Further to
the southeast, the edge of a second antenna base, all but overgrown, is
visible. A parking lot now covers the location of the third antenna base.
Monitoring
stations such as Station H logged 129 radio messages from the Japanese
fleet between November 15th and December 6th. So powerful were the
Japanese fleet transmitters that Leslie Grogan, a radioman on the
passenger ship SS Lurline, listening to Japanese transmissions to the
fleet, was able to pick up the fleet's replies and plot the fleet
position. On arrival in Honolulu, Grogan delivered his logbook and map of the Japanese fleet's progress
across the Pacific to Lieutenant Commander George Pease of the Office of
Naval Intelligence. The date was December 4th, 1941. Naval archive records
confirm that the existence of the logbook, although the logbook itself has
vanished.
All
four of the code systems used by Admiral Yamamoto had been broken in the
fall of 1941 and were used by Station Hypo located at
Pearl Harbor. The message intercepted at Station H on November 24th was translated and
forwarded directly to Washington
DC
by Station Hypo, bypassing the local Hawaiian commanders.
Washington
DC
did not relay the translated message back to Kimmell and Short, but
instead sent an immediate order to Admiral Kimmell to terminate Exercise
191, a fleet preparedness exercise operating northwest of Hawaii
directly in the path of the oncoming Japanese Striking fleet. Kimmell was
ordered back to
Pearl Harbor. On November 25th, Winston Churchill sent an urgent message to President
Roosevelt. Of all the messages sent between Churchill and Roosevelt, only
the message of November 25th remains classified on the grounds of
"National Security". On November 28th, USS Enterprise was
ordered out of Pearl Harbor in company with 11 of the Unites States'
newest warships, ostensibly to deliver aircraft to
Wake Island. On December 5th, USS Lexington was ordered out of Pearl Harbor in
company with 8 of the Unites States' newest warships, ostensibly to
deliver aircraft to
Midway
Island. When the Japanese attack hit
Pearl Harbor
, the targets they found were older relics from a bygone age; the 21
modern ships of the Pacific fleet, including the two carriers, were safely
out of harm's way.
More about
the Pearl Harbor Deception is at
Pearl Harbor
: Mother of all conspiracies (at least until 9/11)
I highly recommend Robert B. Stinnett's
book, "Day Of Deceit". An objective telling of Pearl Harbor in
that Stinnett does not disagree with what FDR did or why, the book still
makes the case that the attack on Pearl Harbor was the result of an
intentional 8 step plan drawn up by Naval Intelligence Lieutenant
Commander Arthur H. McCollum and implemented by FDR. This book is
available in bookstores or at Amazon.com This book also has photos taken
of "Station H" during the war.
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