Attack on Pearl Harbor: Strategy, Combat, Myths, Deceptions

Attack on Pearl Harbor: Strategy, Combat, Myths, Deceptions

4.07 of 5 stars 4.07  ·  rating details  ·  14 ratings  ·  8 reviews

The December 7th, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor has been portrayed by historians as a dazzling success, "brilliantly conceived and meticulously planned." With most American historians concentrating on command errors and the story of participants' experiences, the Japanese attack operation has never been subjected to a comprehensive critical analysis of the military side of t

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Hardcover, 464 pages
Published May 6th 2011 by Casemate (first published May 2011)
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(showing 1-26 of 26)
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Mike Kershaw
This is a detailed examination using operations research methodology to the Japanese Attack on Pearl Harbor. It is not for the faint-hearted. Zimm spends a considerable amount of time debunking several 'myths' he believes skew our view of the raid -- the employment of the midget submarines, the 'brilliance' of the plan, the ability to the Japanese to mount a 'third' strike on the harbor installations in particular. In doing this, he paints and much more realistic picture of the attack and the sl...more
Urey Patrick
An excellent analysis of the attack on Pearl harbor from an operations research point of view. The author makes a compelling argument that the Japanese were more lucky than good - borne out by the subsequent developments of the ensuing war. Japanese planning, characteristic "bushido" mentality, and lack of joint operations and coordinated use of resources were huge flaws. The Pearl Harbor attack illustrates all of the weaknesses that became increasingly magnified over the course of the war. The...more
Billy Leon
This was a hard book to review. Basically it comes down to two columns. The first column would be content. I think Zimm raises some very interesting questions and blows away some previously held beliefs with argument that is on point, well supported, and critically thought out. The author raises several key points and explains why they are valid and why others are not quite convincingly. From this point I enjoyed the book very much, and now view characters such as Yamamoto, Nagumo, Fuchida and...more
Mike Hughes
Good analysis of the attack from a very different point of view instead of just repeating previous written accounts. I am not quite sure I agree with all of his assumptions but it does make you think about it. A lot of what he says makes sense.

Not for the average person though. Very technical in scope and descriptions. If you haven't read any of the other works mentioned it might not mean much to you. I would not recommend it for the very first book that someone would read about the attack. I th...more
Jeff
This is one of the best analytical history books I've read. I rank it right up there with Shattered Sword. In this book, Dr. Alan Zimm examines the purpose, planning, and execution the Pearl Harbor attack from the professional naval officer's viewpoint. His findings, which are based in part on statistical and mathematical analysis, are that the exceptional outcome of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor has completely obscured its serious flaws in strategy, operational planning, and execution. In...more
Larry Rogers
Zimm's analysis of the attack on Pearl Harbor is a towering achievement. It reveals the defects of both the Japanese attack plan and the process that produced it. Its section on what likely would have happened given a 40-minute warning is extremely well done. The book ranks with Jonathan Parshall and Anthony Tully's excellent analysis of Midway, "Shattered Sword."
Lee
Pearl Harbor, and its many what-ifs and mysteries, has been one of my historical favorite topics, that I will come back to again and again. This book will be one of my "go-to" references from now on.

Very interesting delve into the details of the Pearl Harbor attack. The planning decisions and execution both fell short of ideal, and Mr. Zimm takes them all to task. I got to attend his lecture on this at Origins War College this summer, and it was an eye-opener. Of course, I bought the book from...more
Michael
Through, analytical (much more quantitative than expected), thoughtful, comprehensive and includes helpful commentary about other historical reports and TV documentaries. Negatives: poor editing (repetitive in idea and words -- even a full paragraph is repeated verbatim when quoting prior historian's work; also several typos). Too detailed for the mass market; if you're just a casual reader, read the summary chapter and see if you want to go into ridiculous detail on each point.
Paul W
May 06, 2013 Paul W added it
Mike
Apr 03, 2013 Mike marked it as to-read
Fiona
Oct 21, 2012 Fiona marked it as the-book-club  ·  review of another edition
Greg
Oct 15, 2012 Greg added it
Shivani Gupta
Aug 13, 2012 Shivani Gupta marked it as to-read
Shelves: wars, non-fiction
Bill
Mar 04, 2012 Bill marked it as to-read
Steelman
Nov 12, 2011 Steelman marked it as to-read  ·  review of another edition
Charles
Jul 24, 2011 Charles marked it as to-read
Heather
Jun 30, 2011 Heather marked it as to-read
Jfr
Jun 02, 2011 Jfr marked it as to-read
Shelves: history, ww2
Rudy
May 12, 2011 Rudy marked it as to-read
Shelves: american-history
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May 09, 2011 Steve Strait marked it as to-read
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