Takeshi Maeda, a Japanese Imperial Naval pilot, guided his bomber to Pearl Harbor and released a torpedo that helped sink the USS West Virginia. Years later, he became a leading figure in reconciliation efforts between Japan and the United States.
Thank you for posting this. I did, however, wish to correct the WWII Museum's article. Mr. Maeda was not a pilot; he was a rear-gunner/radioman in the 3rd seat of a 3-place torpedo bomber. Only the pilot in front, or his observer/bombardier in the 2nd seat immediately behind (who, frequently, was the plane commander) could release the torpedo. Further, Maeda's English skills were very limited, and I would guess that some sort of translation problem at the museum might have been at work here.
Maeda was a wonderful guy who--in my interviews and correspondence with him over the years--increased my knowlege of what happened that day beyond measure.