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Pearl Harbor: About

Pearl Harbor

Link to Pearl Harbor by Craig Nelson in the catalog
Link to Pearl Harbor: The Verdict of History by Gordon William Prange in the catalog
Link to Brothers Down by Walter R. Borneman in the catalog
Link to At Dawn We Slept by Gordon W. Prange in the catalog
Link to Tales From a Tin Can by Michael Keith Olson in the catalog
Link to Day of Deceit by Robert B. Stinnett in the catalog
Link to Judgment at Tokyo: World War II on Trial and the Making of Modern Asia by Gary Bass in the catalog
Link to Pearl Harbor by H.P. Willmott in the catalog

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Pearl Harbor

Pearl Harbor is a U.S. naval base near Honolulu, Hawaii, that was the scene of a devastating surprise attack by Japanese forces on December 7, 1941. Just before 8 a.m. on that Sunday morning, hundreds of Japanese fighter planes descended on the base, where they managed to destroy or damage nearly 20 American naval vessels, including eight battleships, and over 300 airplanes. More than 2,400 Americans died in the attack, including civilians, and another 1,000 people were wounded. The day after the assault, President Franklin D. Roosevelt asked Congress to declare war on Japan. 

The attack on Pearl Harbor was a surprise, but Japan and the United States had been edging toward war for decades. The United States was particularly unhappy with Japan’s increasingly belligerent attitude toward China. The Japanese government believed that the only way to solve its economic and demographic problems was to expand into its neighbor’s territory and take over its import market. To this end, Japan declared war on China in 1937, resulting in the Nanking Massacre and other atrocities. American officials responded to this aggression with a battery of economic sanctions and trade embargoes. Continue reading from History

Why Was Pearl Harbor Attacked?

The Japanese government decided to attack Pearl Harbor after the United States cut off US oil exports to Japan in the summer of 1941. Japan relied on the United States for eighty percent of its oil, and without US oil supplies its navy would be unable to function. In attacking Pearl Harbor the Japanese hoped to cripple or destroy the US Pacific fleet so that the Japanese navy would have free reign in the Pacific.
 
Japan was also motivated strategically by ideas of creating an Asian co-prosperity sphere—“Asia for Asians”—in which Japan would take over the Asian colonial holdings of Europe and the United States. With the British, French, and Dutch caught up in the war in Europe, the Japanese believed the European powers would be unable to defend their Asian colonial holdings. Indeed, in the eight hours following the Pearl Harbor attack, Japan also attacked British-held Singapore, Hong Kong, and Malaya, and the US territorial possessions of the Philippines, Guam, and Wake Island.
  Continue reading from Khan Academy

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"We are not makers of history.  We are made by history" - Martin Luther King, Jr.