The U.S. tried to negotiate with the Japanese to try to avoid war, trying to convince them that if war broke out between Japan and the United States, Japan, in the long run, would be devestated.So, Secretary of State Cordell Hull and Japanese ambassador Namura and Kiruzo talked on how to solve this crisis.These negotiations proceded into the summer of 1941.By this time, the Japanese had realized that if they wanted to expand their empire, they would have to fight America and, possibly, her allies.So, they decided to fight.But, in order for Japan to fight America on even terms, they would have to move south, into the East Indies (where there was a lot of raw materials for the Japanese War Machine), which, at that time, were controlled by the western powers; Britian, the Netherlands, Australia, and the United States.But, there was another thorn in Japan's side, the United States Pacific Fleet, was moved from San Diego to Pearl Harbor, in Hawaii.This was a knife at Japan's throat.If they decided to move south, then the Americans would attack.So, the Japanese had to come up with a plan to get rid of this threat.They called upon their new Commander in Cheif of the Combined Fleet, Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto.He seen that the British, in 1940, torpedoed the Italian fleet at Toranto using old Fairy Swordfish torpedo bombers.So, Yamamoto thought if the British could use old biplanes to sink three battleships at Toranto, then he could use his modern Nakajima B5N torpedo bombers and Aichi D3A dive bombers to destroy more.So, he came up with a plan.
He would use his six fleet aircraft carriers to strike Pearl Harbor from the sea.So, he ordered his invasion fleet to wait until X-Day, the Day of attack.The six aircraft carriers, commanded by Vice Admiral Chuichi Nagumo, would leave the Kurile Islands on November 26th, head towards Hawaii, bomb the airfields, torpedo the American ships, and destroy Pearl Harbor.While they were planning for war, Prime Minister Hideki Tojo instructed his ambassadors in Washington, D.C. to keep up negotiations for as long as they could, to try to decive the Americans, but what Tojo didn't know was that Amercan cryptographers had cracked the Japanese Imperial Code and were reading every message that was coming from Tokyo to all of the ambassadors in Washington and Berlin.So, the Americans knew the negotiations were not sincere and that they were planning so kind of moved on the Pacific.But, they didn't know where.I could've been the Philippines, Guam, Wake, or the East Indies (Little did they know that it was to be all of them).So, finally, the Americans started building up its armed forces, just in case.
On November 26, 1941, the First Air Fleet left Japan en route to Hawaii.This cruise had to be of the utmost secrecy.If the American found out about this force, they might destroy it and Japan would lose the war automatically.On December 6, the officals in Hawaii, Admiral Husband Kimmel and General Walter Short, recived a war warning from Washington and they went on alert, but the next day, December 7, they alert didn't take affect, because it was Sunday and everybody had the day off.Meanwhile, in Washington, American intelligence intercepted a 14-part message to the Japanese ambassadors stating for them to break diplomatic relations with the U.S.With this, the Army Chief of Staff General George Marshell sent another war warning to all of his oversea bases in the Pacific.But, this message was not recived until too late.At 8:00am, Hawaiian time, just as the island of Oahu started to wake up, 230 Japanese Zero fighters, Kate torpedo bombers, and Val dive bombers, appeared out of the north, and attacked everything; warships, airfields, and even people on the ground.In 110 minutes, the United States Navy suffered its worst disaster in history and the cost was staggering: