56 MINUTES BEFORE PEARL HARBOR By Hugh Russell Fraser My task was to investigate the 56 minutes of warning we had of the Jap air attack on Perl Harbor, Dec. 7, 1941. What I learned amazed me. I reported every detail to the Assistant Chief Signal Officer--specifically, Maj. Gen. James A. Code. Now, nearly seventeen years later, I can tell that story. The facts, incredible as they are, became a part of my history of the U.S Signal Corps in World War II. To most Americans who know merely that we had some radar warning of the sneak Jap attack on the 'Day of Infamy," the history of those 56 minutes will come as a shock. Radar could, and did, detect the approach of the Jap air fleet. But not, of course, as it should have been detected, and not as it would have been detected if authorized radar equipment had been installed. Actually, the island of Oahu was to have been ringed with permanent radar-warning installations. It was not. As early as November of the year before, the Corps of Engineers was directed to install six permanent radar-warning sets to be operated round the clock beginning July 1, 1941. These sets were not installed by July 1, They were not installed by December, nor by December 7. Four mobile radar warning units, mounted in trucks were provided in their place. Regarded generally by the men assigned to them as toys to experiment with, they were in operation only from 4 A.M. to 7 A.M. Why were these hours chosen? Probably in was because those were the three hours out of the 24 when the enemy--any enemy--was most likely to attack. If this was the theory, then it came very close to being 100% right! The Opana mobile radar set, manned by Privates Joseph Lockard and George Elliott, was the one that detected the approach of the Jap air armada. Singularly enough, it was supposed to be shut down promptly at seven o'clock on the morning of December 7, but, by one of those fortunate accidents of history, the truck coming at that time to take the two men back to base camp and to breakfast was late. So Lockard and Elliott decided to leave the set on until it arrived. Thus, after 7 A.M., the Opana unit was the only radar unit on the island operating. The other mobile sets, also mounted in trucks had shut down promptly. One was located at Punaluu on Kahana Bay, 20 miles to the southeast; another on the extreme west side of the island near Makua, and the fourth near Waipahu7 on the south-west coast, 11 miles west of Perl Harbor itself. The Opana unit, which made history, was located about 22 miles due nort of Perl Harbor and about 28 miles northwest of the city of Honolulu. In other words, it was north of the mountains on the island of Oahu, which itself is about 43 miles long and 30 miles wide. As the seconds after seven o'clock ticked off. Lockard--who kept his eye idly on the machine, noted nothing unusual until, suddenly, at 7:02 A.M., there appeared what he later described as "huge blip of light--bigger than anything I had ever seen before on the set--moving slowly from the extreme left side of the scope to the right. It was, you call it, a pillar of light. It startled me, for the flight of one plane is represented by a mere dot, several planes a collection of white dots, but here was something different. The whole left side of the scope suddenly took on light! "My natural reaction," he continued, "was to infer the radar unit was out of order. So I asked the mechanic, Elliott, to check it. He did so in a couple of minutes and reported it was working all right. By then it was 7:04 A.M. Something unusual, I knew, was before my eyes. Elliott thought so, too, although neither of us could imagine what it might be. "Quickly we plotted it. The calculations were easily made, and it appeared to be definitely a large flight of planes approaching from due North, three points East and about 137 miles away. "We looked at each other, and Elliott was the first to reach for the phone. At first he couldn't get anybody at the Army Information Center at Fort Shafter. The line was dead. Then he tried another line. It was open, and soon Private Joseph McDonald at the switchboard answered. Tersely, Elliott told him what we were seeing on the scope. McDonald's answer was : 'Well, what do you expect me to do about it? There's nobody around here but me.' Elliott told him to find somebody and then hung up. "What happened, I learned later, was that there was an officer reading a book in the next room. McDonald had supposed he had gone. He was Lt. Kermit Tyler. McDonald told him what Elliott had reported. Lieutenant Tyler looked up from his book, thought awhile as if to take it all in, then said: 'It's all right, never mind.' "Joe McDonald then called back and I answered the phone. He told me what Tyler had said. I thereupon insisted on talking to the officer myself. I was a little excited and puzzled and didn't want to let the matter end with McDonald. Joe then asked the lieutenant if he would be good enough to talk to me. The officer then came on the phone and said, 'What is it?' "I made my reply as brief as possible. 'The scope,'' I said, 'indicates a large flight of planes approaching Oahu from due North, three points East, about 137 miles away at the last reckoning.' "There was a pause for a few seconds, then Tyler said, 'That is probably our B-17s coming in from San Francisco.' I knew there was such a flight coming in, but I knew also those planes would hardly be approaching us from due North. "At once I made this point clear, and he replied, 'Well, there is nothing to worry about. That is all.' The last words he said with some emphasis and I judged he didn't want to hear anything further about it. so I said: 'All right, sir,' and hung up. "Meanwhile somewhat startled by the whole business, although not alarmed, as now the matter was out of my hands, I continued to watch the set. The pillar of light, or 'blip,' as I call it, continued to move steadily from left to right and the truck still had not arrived. At 7:25 A.M. we made a quick computation and the flight of planes, whatever it consisted of was 62 miles out. At 7:39 A.M., just as we heard the truck arriving outside, I made my last computation and the flight was 22 miles away! "It was at 7:39 A.M that we closed down the radar unit and climbed into the truck for a long ride back to base. I was still turning over in my mind what we had seen on the scope as the truck bounced over the badly rutted road. I said nothing to the driver about it, nor did Elliott--not because we were alarmed but because I knew that what didn't make sense to us would hardly make sense to him. "After we had been driving about twenty minutess, the driver called our attention to a heavy black pall of smoke that lay on the Perl Harbor horizon to the South. 'Looks like oil smoke,' he commented. Soon we were hearing what sounded like explosions and even anti-air-craft fire. It was all very puzzling and somebody suggested it was a practice raid on Perl Harbor. "However, on we went over the rugged road. Actually, it was only twenty miles back to base camp, but because of the road it took almost forty minutes. As we hove into view of the camp and the truck slowed down, we saw a lot soldiers running towards us, shouting questions the words of which I couldn't quite at first make out. Finally, it was plain they were asking, 'What happened?' 'Did you report it?' and the like. I never saw a camp so collectively excited. "As we started to get out of the truck, a major came elbowing his way through the group of men surrounding us and said, sharply, to us: 'Shut up! Don't say a word! I'll talk to you.' "With that he took us off to his office and questioned us for fifteen minutes. It was not until then I realized the Japs were at that very moment attacking Perl Harbor, and that what we had seen on the screen was the Jap air fleet approaching. "Now, as I look back, the position of the flight, the vast number of planes, made sense. I learned later the enemy aircraft carriers had sailed far to the North so that when the planes took the air they would be coming in from an unexpected direction." Lockard at one point told me that except for the brief questioning by the major on the island of Oahyu on the morning of December 7, 1941, I was the first to interrogate him in detail as to those 56 minutes--namely from 7:04 A.M when Elliott reported the set was not out of of order, to the time the first bomb fell on Perl Harbor. The tracing of history of these 56 minutes, however, led me into a further investigation of why the permanent radar sets had not been installed on the island offf Oahu by July 1, Here I ran into a curious and amazing story which I tried in vain to have the Congressional Investigating Committee explore. My investigation disclosed that the colonel in the Corps of Engineers, who was charged with the duty of having these permanent radar sets installed and operated around the clock by July 1, 1941, had spent most of his time in the summer of 1941 drinking. His entire record demonstrates incredible negligence of duty. Not only did he fall down on the job but the toll in lives and ships that we had to pay for his failure was heartbreaking. I tried to bring my evidence before the committee. To that end I prepared a long memorandum, setting forth the facts as I saw them. I requested that this colonel be summoned and he be cross examined under oath. To my surprise, the Democratic members of the committee, whom I knew personally and regarded highly, handled my request--made in my capacity as a citizen--as if it was a "hot potato." They not ony refused to act on it in any way, or request that he be summoned, but they told me in essence "to forget it"! Amazed that members of my own party would take this view, I turned to the Republicans. I knew only one personally. He was Representative "Bud" Gearhart of California. Mr. Gearhart read my memorandum carefully and promised to do his best to get the colonel summoned. Later he reported back he had failed, but he had tried his best. "Why won't they go into this question of radar units?" I asked. "Surely, you know their importance!" "Yes," he said, "of course. My opinion is that somebody failed and failed terribly, but I ran up against a stone wall. The chairman flatly refused me, and when I asked one of my Democratic friends what was the real reason for what I thought, and still think, was an obvious run-around, he said, 'Look, Bud, you can do what you please and maybe you can get somewhere, but don't forget I'm a Democrat and a loyal one, and I take my orders from my Commander-in-Chief, and my Commander-in-Chief happens to be President of the United States.'" Originally published in American Mercury, August 1957, pp. 80-85