Pearl Harbor Notification Letter

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under those circumstances, the notification letter was sent by regular telegram. On the other hand, Japanese Commander Fuchida lead of air strike airplanes, pick up the Honolulu radio station and use it as a guide to Pearl Harbor, in the same way, U.S. Airplanes B-17s coming from California pick the radio signal too. Hence, the new U.S. Radar located in Opana Point intercept a large group of planes coming through about 140 miles north, three degrees east and notify Lieutenant Tyler in the information center. Lieutenant Tyler assumes the intercept was the upcoming B-17s in flying to Hawaii (Tora! Tora! Tora!, 1970).
On the Japanese embassy in Washington, the final fourteen part memorandum was taking longer to be completed, regarding, the prohibition on American typists to work on the last document with previous …show more content…

Fuchida does not saw the primary targets U.S. carriers. Dive-bombers strike Army air force to destroy planes and take control of the air. Torpedos hit some of the ships and sank them. The B-17s arrive from California to the war zone and most land with minor damages. The U.S.S Arizona got hit by an armor-piercing bomb setting off about a million gunpowder pounds breaking in two and sank her in nine minutes. Destroyers Helm and Monaghan blow off two Japanese submarines trying to enter the harbor. With mass damage in the harbor already the second wave of airplanes came in the harbor area and blew the Destroyer Shaw. At 1000 hours, the rest of the first and second wave left the harbor area and returned to their carriers. A third wave with the target of gasoline tanks planned ahead was not sent out by superiors fearing on the unknown location of U.S. Carriers (Green, 2013, p. 230). Briefly, every vessel sunken or damaged that morning return in service, except Arizona, Utah, and Oklahoma (Pearl Harbor Timeline - Remembering Pearl Harbor...,

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