JAPAN, PEARL HARBOR, AND WAR

JAPAN, PEARL HARBOR, AND WAR

JAPAN, PEARL HARBOR, AND WAR
JAPAN, PEARL HARBOR, AND WAR

While most Americans anxiously watched the course of the European war, tension mounted in Asia . Tak- ing advantage of an opportunity to improve its strategic position, Japan boldly announced a “new order” in which it would exercise hegemony over all of the Pacific . Battling for survival against Nazi Germany, Brit- ain was unable to resist, abandon- ing its concession in Shanghai and temporarily closing the Chinese sup- ply route from Burma . In the sum- mer of 1940, Japan won permission from the weak Vichy government in France to use airfields in north- ern Indochina (North Vietnam) . That September the Japanese for- mally joined the Rome-Berlin Axis . The United States countered with an embargo on the export of scrap iron to Japan .

In July 1941 the Japanese occu- pied southern Indochina (South Vietnam), signaling a probable move southward toward the oil, tin, and rubber of British Malaya and the Dutch East Indies . The United States, in response, froze Japanese assets and initiated an embargo on the one commodity Japan needed above all others — oil .

General Hideki Tojo became prime minister of Japan that Oc- tober . In mid-November, he sent a special envoy to the United States to meet with Secretary of State Cordell Hull . Among other things, Japan demanded that the United

States release Japanese assets and stop U .S . naval expansion in the Pacific . Hull countered with a pro- posal for Japanese withdrawal from all its conquests . The swift Japanese rejection on December 1 left the talks stalemated .

On the morning of December 7, Japanese carrier-based planes ex- ecuted a devastating surprise attack against the U .S . Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii .

Twenty-one ships were destroyed or temporarily disabled; 323 aircraft were destroyed or damaged; 2,388 soldiers, sailors, and civilians were killed . However, the U .S . aircraft carriers that would play such a criti- cal role in the ensuing naval war in the Pacific were at sea and not an- chored at Pearl Harbor .

American opinion, still divid- ed about the war in Europe, was unified overnight by what Presi- dent Roosevelt called “a day that will live in infamy .” On December 8, Congress declared a state of war with Japan; three days later Ger- many and Italy declared war on the United States .

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