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Japanese navy veteran remembers the Pearl Harbour attack 75 years on

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A model made for a Japanese propaganda film on the Pearl Harbour raid, showing ships located as they were during the December 7, 1941 attack. Photo: Reuters
Agence France-Presse

Navy aircraft mechanic Kuniyoshi Takimoto watched as Japanese planes roared off the aircraft carrier Hiryu to attack Pearl Harbour on December 7, 1941.

I wondered if such a poor country would be all right fighting such a big one
Veteran Kuniyoshi Takimoto

The shock assault 75 years ago on Wednesday in Hawaii sparked patriotic celebration in Japan but left Takimoto feeling uneasy.

“I wondered if such a poor country would be all right fighting such a big one,” the former real estate agent, now 95 and one of the few Japanese participants still alive, said at his home in Osaka.

This attack brought America into the second world war – though it was already well underway for Europe, and China.

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This year’s anniversary comes after President Barack Obama’s visit in May to Hiroshima, the Japanese city pulverised by a US atom bomb in the closing days of the conflict.

Japan’s Pearl Harbour blitz fired up resolve in the US, with president Franklin Roosevelt declaring the day would “live in infamy”.

“It was just a start... and more or less a deceptive attack,” Takimoto said, stressing that given its surprise nature some success was virtually guaranteed. He and other crew members were stunned when first informed of the mission after their flotilla departed towards Hawaii.

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