![]() And the dice is numbered 12 and seven – December 7. “It’s about ‘Chicago’s favorite game’ called ‘The Deadly Double.’ The headline was ‘Achtung, Warning, Alert!’ And under it, it shows people in an air raid shelter playing dice. 21, there was a series of ads – one big ad and a lot of little smaller ads,” Nelson said. Was a mysterious ad for a board game in the New Yorker really a coded warning? So pretty much one army officer in the cable office screwed everything up.” 8. And he also delayed the last-minute efforts by Roosevelt to cable Hirohito (the Japanese emperor) directly to try and negotiate a peace. “Also, a army officer in the cable office also arranged to delay the message so that it wasn’t presented to Hull until after the attack had already started. So they just said, “Our treaty negotiations are over,” which no one in Washington, except for Roosevelt, took to mean war.” But then the army got involved and decided that the announcement of war was too striking. “Their idea was that they would present this document – which was 14 parts long and took hours and hours to cable from Tokyo to Washington – and the diplomats would present this document 30 minutes before the attack on Hawaii. “Many of the Japanese wanted to give Americans a little warning,” Nelson said. Some Japanese wanted to warn American officials before the attack, but one man decided to stand in the way. The USS Shaw explodes during the attack on Pearl Harbor. “And now through all of these diaries and memoirs, we see the of the country swinging back and forth as to whether or not they’re going to. … The navy did not want to do it and the army sort of cowed them into it.” Because the Japanese navy had a very long history of friendship with the Americans. “It was very much on the sidelines but it was a huge part of their conversation in all of this. “In the scheme of things, were trying to keep the American Navy from interfering with by attacking Pearl Harbor,” Nelson said. Diaries and memoirs show some in the Japanese navy did not want to attack. “In fact, Yamamoto – the key architect of Pearl Harbor – had served as a military attaché in Washington and had traveled across the United States living in flophouses on his small military paycheck,” Nelson said. The key architect of the attacks traveled around the U.S. They were terrified and thought their families were going to be executed.”ĥ. There are some Japanese-Americans living in Hawaii who, of course, everyone thought were responsible. “It was touching to get a child’s perspective on what happened. “We ended up talking to a lot of civilian survivors who were living in Hawaii and were children at the time,” Nelson said. Japanese-Americans living in Hawaii feared for their lives after the attack. But from then on, that man cannot even walk by a beach because he had rescued bodies at Pearl Harbor and the experience stuck with him.” 4. They have a military dog that they adopted as a pet that rescues the child. ![]() “And the man jumps in the water to save him and can’t swim. “There’s one incredible story where, years later, a man is at the beach with his young son – he’s a Pearl Harbor survivor – and all of a sudden a wave comes up and grabs hold of the son and the little table that they are sitting at and pulls it out into the water,” Nelson said. Pearl Harbor had a paralyzing effect on some survivors. “So everyone is about 17 or 18 who’s story is told there.” 3. “The officers of the Navy all lived in houses and the junior people were the ones on the boats, so pretty much all of the people who died in the direct line of the attack were very junior people,” Nelson said. Photo credit Air Force photo by Staff Sergeant Christopher Hubenthal 7, 2015, at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii. military veterans attend the 74th National Pearl Harbor Remembrance Day Commemoration Dec. I asked Nelson to share some of what he learned white writing the book. Nelson’s exhaustive research includes behind-the-scenes accounts from Japan, 200 recent oral histories and memoirs from both the American and Japanese perspectives. Nelson, who has written about the moon landing, the Doolittle Raid, Thomas Paine and the Atomic Age in previous works, set out to paint a clearer picture of Pearl Harbor. His book, “Pearl Harbor: From Infamy to Greatness,” is based on five years of research and original interviews with remaining survivors. I asked historian and New York Times best-selling author Craig Nelson to share some lesser-known stories about the Pearl Harbor attack. But there were also internal Japanese disagreements about warning America, a mysterious board game and at least one unlikely friendship spawned 50 years after the bombs dropped. The Pearl Harbor attack is known for its overwhelming surprise, spectacular explosions and countless heroic acts.
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