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America's Execution Essay: The Bombing Of Pearl Harbor

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The Bombing of Pearl Harbor On the seventh of December, 1941, U.S. naval base Pearl Harbor suffered the damage of a surprise attack from 100s of Japanese planes. Being twice as far a distance from Japan as it was from the U.S. mainlands, the port near Honolulu, Hawaii was the target least expected by America. Rather than protecting Pearl Harbor, America was focusing on the areas that had been expecting an attack, such as the Dutch East Indies, Singapore, and Indochina, which were all European colonies in the South Pacific. Since Pearl Harbor was both full of important American warcraft and fairly unprotected, it was the perfect target for a Japanese attack. The reasoning behind the attack was simple. After a war broke out between Japan and China, sprouting from Japan’s attempt at growth, America refused to supply Japan with …show more content…

Japan couldn’t survive without trades, so they decided to force America to open trade again, Japan had an all but foolproof plan; destroy a bunch of America’s recourses with a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor, then spread to other areas once America was left defenseless if necessary. Though the attack didn’t do anything for Japan but encourage another enemy to join the war against them, they did manage to leave America damaged. With over 300 airplanes and around 20 ships damaged or destroyed, the American army was partial. However, given that aircrafts were the most sought after war craft at the time, America’s aircrafts not being in the area at the time, Japan didn’t do as much damage to America’s chances as they had first thought. After the Japan killing over 2,000 of their citizens and injuring at least 1,000 more, America was finally ready to join the war,

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