From Sonia Parnell’s
A Woman of No Importance
(Viking 2019)
America had no great spying tradition and a general national distaste for professional espionage, best summed up by War Secretary Henry Stimpson’s announcement that “gentlemen don’t read each other’s mail.” Hitherto, intelligence had consequently been gathered on an ad hoc basis — a fact some blamed for the devastating surprise attack on Pearl Harbour.