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Japan in the Pacific

Japan in the Pacific. During the Interwar Period, Japan faced overcrowding and shortages of raw materials Japanese military leaders began a program of empire building and foreign expansion. (1931) Japanese troops took over Manchuria (1937) and northern China

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Japan in the Pacific

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  1. Japan in the Pacific

  2. During the Interwar Period, Japan faced overcrowding and shortages of raw materials Japanese military leaders began a program of empire building and foreign expansion

  3. (1931) Japanese troops took over Manchuria (1937) and northern China United States govt. sent aid to China

  4. (1941) Japanese take over French Indochina (present-day Vietnam) Roosevelt cuts off oil shipments to Japan

  5. Hideki Tojo – Prime Minister of Japan from October, 1941 – July, 1944 Militaristic leader appointed by Emperor Hirohito He favored war with the United States

  6. Isoroku Yamamoto – Japanese admiral who commanded the navy Attended Harvard and trained in the U.S. Planned the attack on Pearl Harbor Did not want war, but… He argued that U.S. naval fleet in Hawaii was “a dagger pointed at our throat”

  7. (Dec 7, 1941) Japan launches surprise attack on Pearl Harbor

  8. More than 2,400 Americans killed • Over 1,000 wounded • 18 U.S. ships, nearly the entire fleet, destroyed • Aircraft carriers were at sea training

  9. President Franklin Roosevelt described December 7 as “a date which will live in infamy.” • The next day, Congress declared war on Japan

  10. After bombing Pearl Harbor, Japan seized Guam and other islands in the Pacific They attacked the American territory of the Philippines only 9 hours later Seized Hong Kong from the British By 1942, Japan had conquered over 1 million sq. miles of new land and over 150 million people

  11. (1942) U.S. wanted revenge for Pearl Harbor and sent 16 B25 bombers to Tokyo and other Japanese cities - All 16 planes lost, 11 crew killed or captures Did little damage, but proved Japan could be attacked at home.

  12. By 1942, Japan had a vast empire that was difficult to control. U.S. and Japanese naval forces clashed in many significant and novel battles (May, 1942) Battle of the Coral Sea • Airplanes did all the fighting • U.S. and Australian forces prevented Japanese invasion of Australia

  13. (June, 1942) Battle of Midway Island west of Hawaii, key American airfield Largest naval fleet ever assembled, including world’s largest battleship Japan hoped to seize Midway island and finish off U.S. Pacific fleet Outnumbered U.S. forces prevailed, symbolic turning point in Pacific War

  14. Midway Atoll

  15. Japanese Now on Defense, but War is Far From Over • Japanese troops dug in on hundreds of islands across Pacific • U.S. General Douglas MacArthur used strategy called “island-hopping” • U.S. seized islands that were not well defended and moved closer to Japan

  16. On the home front, Japanese Americans Imprisoned After Pearl Harbor, wave of prejudice spread across the U.S. against Japanese Americans (127,000) (Feb, 1941) Roosevelt set up a program to create internment camps for Japanese Military rounded up Japanese and sent them to camps (2/3 of them were native-born American citizens, Nisei)

  17. Intern, as a verb: • To confine or impound, especially during a war • In U.S. documents, camps are referred to as “relocation camps” • Some have likened camps to Nazi “concentration camps.” • What do you think?

  18. Internment Camp

  19. Japanese Internment Camps

  20. Between 1941 and 1946, over 31,000 Japanese Americans were rounded up and imprisoned

  21. Back in the Pacific, Japan was losing territory to the Allies • By June of 1945, the Allies conquered Okinawa Island, only 350 miles from Tokyo

  22. As Japanese defenses were weakened, they resorted to more desperate tactics, including the use of the Kamikaze. The Kamikaze were Japanese suicide pilots who would sink Allied ships by crash-diving into them in bomb-filled planes Most Kamikaze pilots were between the ages of 17 and 22

  23. USS Columbia, January 1945

  24. How did the Japanese military leaders plan to overcome shortages in raw materials? 2. After what event did Congress declare war on the Japanese? 3. What major battle was the symbolic turning point of the war in the Pacific against the Japanese?

  25. In April of 1945, President Roosevelt died Harry Truman was sworn in as president President Truman’s advisers had informed him that an invasion of Japan might cost the Allies half a million lives Truman did not know of the atom bomb’s existence until he be became president

  26. On July 26, 1945, the Potsdam Declaration was given to Japan ( by U.S., Britain, China) It outlined the terms of surrender for Japan • Militarism in Japan must end • Japanese army would be completely disarmed • Japan would be permitted to maintain a viable industrial economy • War criminals would be punished • Japan would be occupied following the war until these objectives were met

  27. The Potsdam Declaration stated that if Japan did not surrender, it would face "prompt and utter destruction Japan did not respond to the declaration…

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