Nope, but despite repeated war warnings being issued by Washington to Pacific commanders, war sure came as a surprise to Adm Kimmel.
President Roosevelt, Admiral Stark, and the Unsent Warning to Pearl Harbor: A Research Note Burtness, Paul, S. (Northern Illinois University) and Ober, Warren U. (University of Waterloo, Ontario), Australian Journal of Politics and History, Volume 57, Number 4, 2011, pp. 580-588.
Or a bit later, also by Burtness and Ober:
Provocation and Angst: FDR, Japan, Pearl Harbor, and the Entry into War in the Pacific The Hawaiian Journal of History, Vol. 51, 2017, pp. 91-114.
Often confusion reigns - there were two (2) messages. The first is the so-called "Midnight" message, the second is the "Marshall" message.
The Marshall message is the one delivered by the RCA messenger some time after the Pearl Harbor attack had ended. The "Midnight" message (by these lights the extremely important message) has never been found.
From the Proceeding of the Roberts Commission (24PHA1755), in the section SUMMARY and RECOMMENDATIONS, paragraph (2) is found:
"(2) The Army and Naval Commands had received a general war warning on November 27th, but a special war warning sent out by the War Department at midnight December 7th to the Army was not received until some hours after the attack on that date. ..."
As perhaps another insight from Knox, on 24PHA1753 is found:
"Of course, the best means of defense against air attack consists of fighter planes. Lack of an adequate number of this type of aircraft available to the Army for defense of the Island is due to the diversion of this type before the outbreak of the war, to British, the Chinese, the Dutch and the Russians. ..."
Or ... Pearl is screaming for P-40s, PBYs, ... Washington (Stark, Marshall, Arnold, ... Knox and Stimson) all approved the diversions of these front-line types.
Seems others first ... America whenever.
And, lest we forget, that Undeclared War in the Atlantic started when?