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Japan Strikes World Wars: World War II

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Page 1: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Japan Strikes

World Wars: World War II

Page 2: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not

hope to win, if their foes fought to the end.

Japan on the Move

Page 3: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Summer 1941—Japanese military has only enough fuel for a few months.Japan wanted the oil

fields of the Dutch East Indies.Problem…The

Philippines were in its path.

Japan on the Move

Page 4: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

FDR put 50 B-17 Flying Fortresses on the islands as a deterrent to the Japanese.Japan was going to attack these aircraft, but

planned to attack somewhere else first.

Japan on the Move

Page 5: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Japanese Imperial Navy—Commander, Isoroku YamamotoInsists on a surprise attack on the U.S. Pacific

Fleet at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii.If successful, he believed it would give Japan 2

years to build up defenses.

Japan Plans the Attack on Pearl Harbor

Page 6: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Late November 1941—Japanese carrier fleet was ready to set sail for Hawaii.The attack was scheduled for December 7,

1941—the surprise was complete.

Japan Plans the Attack on Pearl Harbor

Page 7: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Traveling under strict radio silence and screened from view by a large weather front, the Japanese battle fleet—six aircraft carriers, two battleships, two cruisers, and nine destroyers—remained undetected until it came within 200 miles of the Hawaiian Islands.

Japan Plans the Attack on Pearl Harbor

Page 8: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Japan launches its attack from carriers 200 miles from Pearl Harbor.353 dive bombers, fighter (Zeroes), and

torpedo planes attacked in two waves.It was early (8:00 a.m.) Sunday morning, and

nobody at Pearl expect a thing.

Attack on Pearl Harbor

Page 9: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

The Japanese struck boldly against moored battleships in the harbor and U.S. airfields.The Japanese pilots knew exactly where they

were going because spies on the islands had given them elaborate and detailed scale models of the base, including Battleship Row.

Attack on Pearl Harbor

Page 10: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Because it was Sunday morning, most of the U.S. naval personnel were ashore, and most of the antiaircraft defenses were unmanned. At 7:49 AM

local time, the attack began—and by 8:12, much of the fleet had been damaged or sunk.

Attack on Pearl Harbor

Page 11: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

A second wave of bombers arrived at nine o'clock to finish what the first wave had started. In a little more than an hour, the United States fleet was severely crippled.

Attack on Pearl Harbor

Page 12: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Battleships—West Virginia, Tennessee, Nevada, Oklahoma, Arizona…damaged or sunk.Battleforce Flagship California…damaged.

Attack on Pearl Harbor

Page 13: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Only 16 U.S. planes escaped the destruction.2,400 soldiers and sailors were killed….with

3,000 more seriously wounded.

Attack on Pearl Harbor

Page 14: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Japanese had achieved complete surprise in crippling the U.S. Pacific Fleet. Two days later, on December 9, the United

States declared war on Japan.

Attack on Pearl Harbor

Page 15: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

The U.S. Army's Hawaii Department was charged with coastal defenses on the islands in 1941."It was a matter of common

knowledge that the Japanese Consulate in Honolulu was the hotbed of espionage in Oahu." Gen. Charles Herron.

Japanese Espionage

Page 16: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

In large part, the attack on Pearl Harbor was so successful because Japanese spies, under cover of "diplomatic" posts, were able to blend easily with the large Japanese population on the islands and in the process gather valuable intelligence.

Japanese Espionage

Page 17: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

One such diplomat, for example, was Takeo Yoshikawa, who openly arrived in Hawaii by ship on March 27, 1941.Yoshikawa was a trained spy assigned to the

Japanese consulate on Oahu. He took a second-story room that gave him a view of Pearl Harbor and Hickam Field, where the American air fleet was based.

Japanese Espionage

Page 18: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

He made notes, took photos, chartered small boats and planes.He even mailed back home postcards with

aerial views of Pearl Harbor that helped planners construct mock-ups used to train bomber pilots for the raid.

Japanese Espionage

Page 19: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

He observed, for example, that there tended to be a large number of ships in port on Saturdays and Sundays, fewer on weekdays. He also observed

American air patrols, noticing that they tended rarely to fly to thenorth.

Japanese Espionage

Page 20: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

As early as January 27, 1941 Joseph Grew, the U.S. ambassador in Japan, reported to Secretary of State Hull that the embassy had learned from Japanese sources that a mass attack on Pearl Harbor was planned in case hostilities broke out.

U.S. Intelligence

Page 21: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

The United States had broken the Japanese diplomatic code (called Purple), so war planners from the FDR on down knew that spies had been reporting on the fleet deployment in Hawaii.

U.S. Intelligence

Page 22: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

In the weeks and days before the attack, encrypted diplomatic traffic became heavier, and increasingly ominous.On November 19, for example, American codebreakers intercepted a

message from Tokyo to diplomatic posts in Washington, D.C., and several West Coast cities.The message instructed these offices to destroy all codes, coding

machines, papers, and the like if they heard the words "East Wind Rain" (Higashi No Kazeame) in the daily weather forecast.

On Thursday, December 4, the United States intercepted the so-called "winds message." Even on the morning of December 7, Army Chief of Staff General George C. Marshall sent an urgent warning to commanders in the Pacific that intercepted Japanese diplomatic messages strongly suggested an attack was imminent.

U.S. Intelligence

Page 23: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Military signalmen, however, could not raise Pearl Harbor on military channels, so the message was sent by slower commercial cable. By the time it arrived, Japanese planes were in the air over Pearl Harbor.

U.S. Intelligence

Page 24: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Given this flood of intelligence, historians and military analysts question why the military failed to take steps to defend Pearl Harbor. One answer might lie in the flood of messages intercepted.

Few of the hundreds of intercepted diplomatic messages specifically mentioned Pearl Harbor.

Those that did—requests for information on fleet deployment at Pearl, for example—were part of general requests for similar information about numerous American bases in the Pacific.

U.S. Intelligence

Page 25: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

The Japanese didn’t follow up the attack with more air strikes.The Japanese didn’t try to invade Hawaii, when

they could have easily succeeded in December.

Japanese Mistakes

Page 26: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

The Japanese neglected to capture or destroy the oil storage depots. This would allow the U.S. to continue to fuel its carrier groups in the Pacific.

Japanese Mistakes

Page 27: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Most importantly—they missed all of the U.S. aircraft carriers which were out at sea on December 7, 1941.Enterprise, Hornet, and Yorktown—would all

come back to haunt the Japanese.

Japanese Mistakes

Page 28: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

December 8, 1941—FDR goes to Congress to ask for a Declaration of War.“Yesterday, December 7, 1941, a date which will

live in infamy…”Congress grants the Declaration of War December

9, 1941.

United States Reacts

Page 29: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

December 10, 1941—Hitler and Mussolini declare war on the United States.U.S. declares war on Germany and Italy in

response.Japanese sink

British battleships HMS Repulse and HMS Prince of Wales.

Germany Reacts

Page 30: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Defeat Germany first and fight defensively against Japanese.Once Germany was defeated, then turn full

attention toward crushing the Japanese military.

U.S. Priorities

Page 31: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

December 1941—Japanese attack and claim all areas in the western Pacific Ocean.Hours after Pearl Harbor—Philippine U.S.

bases are attacked….35 B-17’s are destroyed.

U.S. Priorities

Page 32: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Early January, 1942—U.S. forces retreat from Manila to the Bataan Peninsula and Corregidor Island.In fierce fighting, the Americans and Filipino

soldier are taking a beating.Commander General Douglas MacArthur is

ordered off the islands— “I shall return….”

The Philippines

Page 33: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

U.S. soldiers are forced to fight it out—many starving and disease ravaged.Americans are force to surrender—treated

horribly at the hands of the Japanese.

The Philippines

Page 34: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

April 9, 1942—78,000 Americans surrender to the Japanese on Bataan.Those captured are marched 65 miles—10,000

die, Bataan Death March By late May the defenders of Corregidor had

surrendered.

The Philippines

Page 35: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

The April 1942 air attack on Japan, launched from the aircraft carrier Hornet and led by Lieutenant Colonel James H. Doolittle, was the most daring operation yet undertaken by the United States in the young Pacific War.

The Doolittle Raid

Page 36: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Though conceived as a diversion that would also boost American and allied morale, the raid generated strategic benefits that far outweighed its limited goals.

The Doolittle Raid

Page 37: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

The raid had its roots in a chance observation that it was possible to launch Army twin-engined bombers from an aircraft carrier, making feasible an early air attack on Japan. The technically-astute Doolittle to organize and

lead a suitable air group.

The Doolittle Raid

Page 38: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

The modern, but relatively well-tested B-25B "Mitchell" medium bomber was selected as the delivery vehicle and tests showed that it could fly off a carrier with a useful bomb load and enough fuel to hit Japan and continue on to airfields in China.

The Doolittle Raid

Page 39: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Gathering volunteer air crews for an unspecified, but admittedly dangerous mission, Doolittle embarked on a vigorous program of special training for his men and modifications to their planes.The new carrier

Hornet was sent to the Pacific to undertake the Navy's part of the mission

The Doolittle Raid

Page 40: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

So secret was the operation that her Commanding Officer, Captain Marc A. Mitscher, had no idea of his ship's upcoming employment until shortly before sixteen B-25s were loaded on her flight deck.

The Doolittle Raid

Page 41: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Joined in mid-ocean on 13 April by Vice Admiral William F. Halsey's flagship Enterprise, which would provide air cover during the approach, Hornet steamed toward a planned 18 April afternoon launching point some 400 miles from Japan

The Doolittle Raid

Page 42: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Before dawn on 18 April, enemy picket boats were encountered much further east than expected. These were evaded or sunk, but got off radio warnings, forcing the planes to take off around 8 AM, while still more than 600 miles out.

The Doolittle Raid

Page 43: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Most of the sixteen B-25s, each with a five-man crew, attacked the Tokyo area, with a few hitting Nagoya.Damage to the intended military targets was

modest, and none of the planes reached the Chinese airfields (though all but a few of their crewmen survived).

The Doolittle Raid

Page 44: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

The Japanese high command was deeply embarrassed.Three of the eight American airmen they had

captured were executed.Combined Fleet commander Admiral Isoroku

Yamamoto, they also resolved to eliminate the risk of any more such raids by the early destruction of America's aircraft carriers, a decision that led them to disaster at the Battle of Midway a month and a half later.

The Doolittle Raid

Page 45: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

The Battle of the Coral Sea was fought between the Japanese and Allied navies from May 4 through May 8, 1942 in the Coral Sea, about 500 miles northeast of Australia.

The Battle of the Coral Sea

Page 46: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

In the spring of 1942, Japanese forces planned to invade southern New Guinea, a move designed to knock Australia and New Zealand out of the war.The Allies,

including the U.S., Australia, and Great Britain, gathered a large fleet to thwart the invasion.

The Battle of the Coral Sea

Page 47: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

After several days of searching and skirmishing, the Japanese and Allied fleets found each other on May 8 and each sent aircraft to attack the other. Both air attacks occurred at about the same

time approximately 200 miles apart with both sides suffering moderate losses. 

The Battle of the Coral Sea

Page 48: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

The most significant Allied loss during the battle was the sinking of the American carrier, USS Lexington. That evening, with the battle roughly a draw,

both sides retreated but would meet again a month later at the decisive Battle of Midway, 3,000 miles away in the Hawaiian Islands.

The Battle of the Coral Sea

Page 49: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

The Battle of the Coral Sea was important for several reasons.It was the first pure carrier-vs-carrier battle in

history as neither surface fleet sighted the other. 

Though a draw, it was an important turning point in the war in the Pacific because, for the first time, the Allies had stopped the Japanese advance.

Before the battle, the Japanese had enjoyed a continual string of victories while afterwards, it suffered an almost continual series of defeats, including at Midway, a major American victory.

The Battle of the Coral Sea

Page 50: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Shortly after the Battle of the Coral Sea, many called it one of the most important naval battles in world history and, at the time, it probably was.

The Battle of the Coral Sea

Page 51: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Sixty years later, the battle is still widely known throughout Australia with many Aussies referring to it as, "The battle that saved Australia."  For most Americans, however, the Battle of the

Coral Sea has faded into obscurity. 

The Battle of the Coral Sea

Page 52: Japan Strikes. Japanese military leaders were possibly the most irresponsible leaders of the War. They moved Japan into a war they could not hope to win,

Isoroku Yamamoto Pearl Harbor Zeroes Hickam Field Joseph Grew Japanese code PurpleHigashi No Kazeame Battleship RowEnterprise, Hornet, YorktownBataan Peninsula Corregidor IslandDouglas MacArthur Bataan Death MarchJames Doolittle B-25 “Mitchell” bombersCoral Sea U.S.S. Lexington

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