I thought the theory was that "they" wanted the Battleships out of commision because "they" knew Carriers were the new powerhouse. Hence the Carriers being out that day. With that thought, the Pacific Fleet took no important damage as the Carriers were safely away.
Uh oh, Ultima1. Some people here actually know stuff about Pearl Harbor. What now?
Neither the IJN nor the USN considered the aircraft carrier the prime weapon of naval warfare in 1941, though certainly there were carrier proponents in each navy. If either, or both, navies considered the aircraft carrier the new prime weapon, then one must ask why the IJN committed huge resources to building the Yamato-class superbattleships (the Shinano was only converted to a carrier after the losses at Midway, and the unnamed fourth vessel was cancelled in 1942 when 30% complete), and the first two USN ships of the massive Montana class were originally scheduled to have been laid down on Jan. 25, 1941.I thought the theory was that "they" wanted the Battleships out of commision because "they" knew Carriers were the new powerhouse.
It was just luck that kept the Enterprise from being in port that day. It was to have returned to Pearl Harbor by Dec. 7th, but it ran into a storm which forced a refuelling of the escorting destroyers. This caused a delay sufficient to keep it from reaching port before the attack.Hence the Carriers being out that day. With that thought, the Pacific Fleet took no important damage as the Carriers were safely away.
The CTs, of course, will say it was deliberate. There's no such thing as coincidence in the CT world, is there?It was just luck that kept the Enterprise from being in port that day. It was to have returned to Pearl Harbor by Dec. 7th, but it ran into a storm which forced a refuelling of the escorting destroyers. This caused a delay sufficient to keep it from reaching port before the attack.
Actually, Pearl Harbor Conspiracy theories have been around a long time before Stinnett. "Day of Deceit" basically just recyled the Same Old S---,
a little bogus "new" evidence added.
How does one go about deliberately creating a storm anyway?The CTs, of course, will say it was deliberate.
Not just the USN, but the IJN too. Even Yamamoto himself often still thought of the battleship as the final decisive naval weapon in spite of his willingness to use carriers in operations.(FTR, I agree with the above posters: the USN viewed the battleships as the core of the fleet.
How does one go about deliberately creating a storm anyway?![]()
How does one go about deliberately creating a storm anyway?.
How does one go about deliberately creating a storm anyway?
The same way they created Katrina. Duh.
We could give him a reading list, starting with Gordon Prange's superb "At Dawn We Slept", but I doubt that would change his mind.
Isn't that what HAARP is for? Oh, that's right it didn't exist in 1941. Well, that just means they had a secret version somewhere.
At least some of the "fore-knowledge" idea could come from misinterpreting Billy Mitchell. He predicted in the late early-mid 30s (not sure on date) that Japan would attack Pearl Harbor. He even went so far as to say it would be on a Sunday morning,and he had the general direction of the attack down. Nothing psychic involved,just a keen tactical eye.
It would be ridiculous to think that Pearl Harbor was a false flag.
Did Roosevelt have some idea that an attack was coming? Maybe.
do i care? not really. the sooner we joined the war against Fascism..the better off the world would be.