
The Sensuikan I-400-class submarine was among the most remarkable and ambitious naval projects undertaken by Japan during the Second World War, conceived at a time when Japanese strategists sought ways to strike at distant Allied targets with an element of surprise. The idea originated in 1942 after the attack on Pearl Harbor and the Doolittle Raid on Tokyo, when the Imperial Japanese Navy recognized the vulnerability of fixed bases and the need to project air power across the Pacific.