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WW II - 1941: America Enters the War |
"I can run wild for six months . . . after that, I have no expectation of success." Japanese Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto To Japanese cabinet members prior to the attack on Pearl Harbor |
"Yesterday, December 7th, 1941 -- a date which will live in infamy --
the United States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces of the Empire of Japan." President Franklin D. Roosevelt To a joint session of Congress, December 8, 1941 Click here to hear a recording and view a transcript of the entire message. |
"One can search military history in vain for an operation more fatal to the aggressor." Samuel Eliot Morison (1878-1976) (on the Japanese decision to go to war with the United States) History of United States Naval Operations in World War II, Vol. III, The Rising Sun in the Pacific, 1931-April 1942 Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1948, p. 132. |
Lesson Objectives
Discuss and analyze the Japanese reasons for going to war with the United States in 1941. List the major events leading to the Japanese decision to go to war. Analyze the Japanese and American strategies for the war in the Pacific and Asia. Become familiar with the timeline of events in the Pacific war. |
Study Guides
Why did the Japanese decide to go to war with the United States? Compare the industrial strength of the U.S. and Japan prior to WW II. What was the Japanese strategy prior to the attack on Pearl Harbor? How was the attack on Pearl Harbor to have supported the Japanese strategy? What technical and tactical problems did the Japanese have to solve for the attack to succeed? What earlier event helped them to solve some of these problems? List and describe the significance of errors in execution of the attack on Pearl Harbor that, in retrospect, severely limited the strategic effect of the attack. |
Assignment
Readings: "Oil Logistics in the Pacific War" Patrick H. Donovan Air Force Journal of Logistics, Spring 2004
"Japan's Decision for War" Louis Morton Command Decisions, pp. 99-124 Kent Roberts Greenfield, ed Washington:Department of the Army, Center of Military History, 2000
"Victory At Sea" David M. Kennedy The Atlantic Monthly, March 1999 READ: pp. 51-55 (down to "The Philippines") Supplemental Resources: "Japan's Decision to Move South, 1941" William Miniscalco Warbird Forum: Japan At War: 1931-1945 United States Strategic Bombing Survey Summary Report (Pacific War) Washington, DC 1 July 1946
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