ID | 085783 |
Title Proper | Catching the fox unaware |
Other Title Information | Japanese radio denial and deception and the attack on Pearl Harbor |
Language | ENG |
Author | Hanyok, Robert J |
Publication | 2008. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The attack on the U.S. Pacific Fleet by the aircraft of the Japanese Striking Force (Kido Butai) at Pearl Harbor on the morning of 7 December 1941 was a total surprise to the American commands in Hawaii and Washington. The completeness of the operational surprise-the Imperial Japanese Navy had gathered the force, trained it, concentrated it, and sent it to the launch point without discovery by American intelligence, especially its radio component- was due largely to the success of the Japanese cover plan of radio denial and deception in hiding the existence, makeup, purpose, and timing of the attack. The Japanese navy's denial and deception plan left American radio intelligence, known also as "communications intelligence," with only scraps of information about the Japanese fleet's movements during the weeks prior to the attack. |
`In' analytical Note | Naval War College Review Vol. 61, No.4; Autumn 2008: p99-124 |
Journal Source | Naval War College Review Vol. 61, No.4; Autumn 2008: p99-124 |
Key Words | Pearl Harbor ; Japanese Attach ; Radio Denial ; Deception |