President Obama Is Visiting Hiroshima. Why Not Pearl Harbor?
On the 75th anniversary of Pearl Harbor, what lessons does the U.S. need
to relearn?
This year marks the 75th anniversary of the December 7, 1941, Japanese
surprise attack on Pearl Harbor that killed more than 2,400 Americans.
President Obama is visiting Hiroshima this week, the site of the August
6, 1945, dropping of the atomic bomb that helped end World War II in the
Pacific Theater. But strangely, he has so far announced no plans to
visit Pearl Harbor on the anniversary of the attack. The president, who
spent much of his childhood in Hawaii, should do so — given that many
Americans have forgotten why the Japanese attacked the United States and
why they falsely assumed that they could defeat the world’s largest
economic power.
Imperial Japan was not, as often claimed, forced into a corner by a U.S.
oil embargo, which came only after years of horrific Japanese
atrocities in China and Southeast Asia.
Instead, an opportunistic and
aggressive fascist Japan gambled that the geostrategy of late 1941 had
made America uniquely vulnerable to a surprise attack.
By December 1, 1941, Nazi Germany, Japan’s Axis partner, had reached the
suburbs of Moscow. Japan believed that the German army would soon knock
the Soviet Union out of the war.
Japan had also hedged its bets by signing a nonaggression pact with the
Soviets. Japanese leaders assumed that even if communist Russia
survived, Japan could avoid a costly land war on its rear flank. The
U.S., not Japan, would likely have a two-front war.
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By 1941, the Netherlands, France, and Belgium had all been defeated and
occupied by the Third Reich. Only the British remained of the original
European anti-Axis allies, and London had been under constant aerial
assault by the German Luftwaffe during the Blitz. Japan figured that
Germany and Italy might soon win the war and wished to pile on before it
ended.
Japan had calculated that all of Europe’s resource-rich Pacific and
Asian colonies were now orphaned and up for grabs. By starting a Pacific
war and knocking out the U.S., Japan could get its hands on the
resources necessary to fuel its war machine.
British-held Singapore and the American bases in the Philippines were
isolated and poorly defended. And they would be completely cut off once
the U.S. Seventh Fleet and air arm were neutralized at Pearl Harbor.
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Starting a war in the Pacific meant the Japanese would have easy access
to huge supplies of oil, rubber, rice, and strategic metals for their
newfound mercantile empire, the Great East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere.
The U.S. also had lost military deterrence. The Japanese had watched
carefully as America did little to help its two closest allies: France
and Great Britain. The former was easily overrun by the Nazis, the
latter bombed unmercifully.
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While the United States had belatedly built up its fleet and started
rearming by 1941, its military was still woefully ill-equipped to fight a
two-front global war. Japan logically figured that Germany and Italy
would tie down the United States in Europe, while Japan systematically
finished off any American warships that had escaped the Pearl Harbor
wreckage.
In key categories such as fighter aircraft, torpedoes, night gunnery,
and destroyers, the Japanese were more formidable than the U.S. military
in 1941.
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Finally, a number of Japan’s most accomplished officers and diplomats
had visited or studied in the U.S. in the pre-Depression boom years —
among them Foreign Minister Yosuke Matsuoka, Admirals Isoroku Yamamoto
and Tamon Yamaguchi, and General Tadamichi Kuribayashi. While they all
had been impressed with U.S. industrial power, they nevertheless had
developed contempt for American popular culture, finding it frivolous
and fueled by Roaring Twenties affluence and leisure.
Many Japanese strategists had assumed that the U.S. never again would
wish to endure a world war, and would prefer to negotiate rather than
fight to the finish. Such assumptions proved false.
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Tell the Tale
After Pearl Harbor, the United States went into a rearmament frenzy the
likes of which had never been seen in history. America produced more
airplanes and ships than all World War II powers combined. The U.S.
military grew to 12 million soldiers.
American military leadership in the Pacific — led by Admirals William
Halsey Jr., Chester Nimitz, and Raymond Spruance, along with Generals
Curtis LeMay and Douglas MacArthur — proved far more skilled than their
Japanese counterparts. And the American soldier, sailor, airman, and
Marine, after a bruising learning experience in early 1942, proved every
bit as ferocious as veteran Japanese fighters.
The road to Hiroshima and the massive loss of life in the Pacific was
paved by unprovoked Japanese aggression at Pearl Harbor. Americans and
their president should remember the lessons of that surprise attack 75
years ago this year.
— Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover
Institution, Stanford University, and the author, most recently, of The
Savior Generals. You can reach him by e-mailing author@victorhanson.com.
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