EBOOK

Invisible Fleet

Thomas R. Keane
(0)
Year
2026
Language
English

About

Invisible Fleet: How Yamamoto's Silent Strategy Enabled Pearl Harbor
On the morning of December 7, 1941, the United States was not simply surprised-it was analytically defeated.
Silent Signals dismantles the long-held narrative of Pearl Harbor as a failure of American vigilance and instead reconstructs the event from the adversary's perspective: the deliberate, calculated, and highly disciplined intelligence denial strategy engineered by the Imperial Japanese Navy.
Drawing exclusively on verified Japanese archival material, declassified operational records, and publicly accessible primary sources tied to Operation Z, this book reveals how Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto and his staff orchestrated one of the most effective intelligence concealment operations in modern military history. Through strict radio silence doctrine, controlled communications deception, and compartmentalized planning structures, Japanese naval command systematically removed every detectable signal that American analysts depended upon.
This is not a story of missed clues. It is a story of clues that were never allowed to exist.
From Tokyo Naval General Staff planning rooms to the silent advance of the Kido Butai across the North Pacific, this work exposes the mechanics of invisibility-how absence became a weapon, how silence became strategy, and how intelligence itself was neutralized before a single bomb fell.
Built on a proprietary analytical framework designed for high-depth historical dissection, Silent Signals delivers a precise, evidence-driven reconstruction of how Japan blinded American intelligence-and why that blindness proved catastrophic.Editorial Reviews:
"A chilling reconstruction that forces you to rethink everything you thought you knew about Pearl Harbor. This isn't hindsight-it's forensic history." - Military History Review
"The most disciplined and analytically sharp breakdown of Japanese operational secrecy I've ever read. Relentless, precise, and deeply unsettling." - Major Gen. Bartholomew Wiggins, USA (Ret.), Strategic Studies Quarterly
"An extraordinary shift in perspective. It doesn't ask why the U.S. failed-it shows how Japan ensured that failure." - Naval Intelligence Journal

Related Subjects

Artists