I loaded this into my scheduler thingie back in August, and I really liked the different historical stuff on this post, I learned a lot with this one...Some of the things I already knew, but some of the stuff was new to me.
USS Arizona burning after the attack
A lot is known about the attack on Pearl Harbor, but how much is true
and what has become twisted over the years? The war that followed the
attack led to frenzy and panic, causing inaccurate information to spread
at a rapid pace.
This inaccurate information led to myths about the attack, but what
is the truth? Here are five of those myths and their realities.
A widely believed myth is that Pearl Harbor was the only target hit
by the Japanese on December 7, 1941. While Pearl Harbor has become the
best-known target, it was only one of 6 targets. The Japanese also
attacked Guam, Wake Island, Midway, Thailand, and Malaya that day.
The U.S. Navy heavy cruiser USS Northampton (CA-26) under attack off Wake by a Japanese seaplane.
Pearl Harbor was a single part of a larger campaign by the Japanese
to control the Pacific. This was a campaign which was successful
throughout the following year. Only Pearl Harbor and Midway would not
fall to the Japanese during the war.
The reason this has become a widely believed myth is the fact that
Pearl Harbor was the most crippling of the attacks. It also resulted in
the most American losses that day, which brought the war home to most
people.
Japanese planes attack Midway. This is another widely believed myth that states the country was
caught off guard by the attack and had no prior knowledge that one would
occur. While there was no way to know the date of an attack, the
government was aware that an attack by the Japanese was likely to
happen.
Photograph of Battleship Row taken from a Japanese plane at the beginning of the attack
The rising tension in the region and the increased aggression by the
Japanese made this hard to miss. Accordingly, the War Department had
already been analyzing intercepted cables between the Japanese Embassy
in Washington and Tokyo.
These cables led officials to believe that an attack would happen,
with the initial date plotted as November 30. A warning of a possible
attack on the islands was placed in a Hawaii newspaper.
Front
page of Hawaii Tribune-Herald about a possible Japanese strike
somewhere in Asia or the South Pacific, dated 30 November 1941. Fair use While these warnings can be seen as general and a routine part of
wartime, they do show that the government was aware that an attack could
take place. Of course, the fact that a Japanese armada was able to
travel between Japan and Hawaii undetected does lend some credibility to
this myth.
U.S. propaganda poster calling for revenge for the Pearl Harbor attack.
The internment of Japanese-Americans is well known and leads many to
believe that they were the only ones detained after Pearl Harbor. Within
48 hours of the attack, more than 1,000 people were detained by the FBI
as enemy aliens.
This included a large number of Japanese-Americans, but also included
people of Italian and German descent. Over the course of the war,
approximately 120,000 people would be placed in internment camps.
Heart Mountain Relocation Center, January 10, 1943
While the majority were Japanese-American, other descendants from
Axis powers were also affected. Approximately 11,000 German residents
were interned, and an estimated 600,000 people of Italian descent were
kept under restrictions.
This myth grew to its standing today because of the harsher treatment
the Japanese-Americans faced. The 110,000 Japanese-Americans living
along the West Coast were forced into internment camps, but most of the
descendants from other Axis powers were able to continue living in a
manner similar to their lives before the war.
The baggage of Japanese Americans from the west coast, at a makeshift reception center located at a racetrack. The idea that the US government and military responded to the
devastating attack quickly and decisively is a popular one, but it is a
myth. In the months after the attack, the US suffered multiple defeats
in the Pacific region.
This myth may have started when a rumor spread through the country on
December 8 that the Navy was in pursuit of the Japanese fleet. The
notion of pursuit was false, and General Douglas MacArthur was pleading
for more naval assistance.
The
U.S.S. Neosho, navy oil tanker, cautiously backs away from her berth
(right center) in a successful effort to escape the Japanese attack on
Pearl Harbor, Dec. 7, 1941.
In reality, a telegram was sent to President Roosevelt asking for
assistance and submarines to target Japanese vessels. This request was
unanswered and is believed to have led to the fall of the Philippines to
the Japanese.
The first major offensive by the US occurred in February 1942. This
was when the US Pacific fleet started attacks on the Marshall and
Gilbert islands. Before these attacks, the last successful engagement by
the US had occurred before Pearl Harbor.
An SBD Dauntless flies patrol over USS Washington and USS Lexington during the Gilbert and Marshall islands campaign. My sources identify the ships as the Washington and the Lexington, The battleship does look like a North Carolina class Battleship but the carrier don't match the profile of the Lexington. Looks more like a "Yorktown" class carrier to me The most common myth is that the attack on Pearl Harbor propelled the
US into WWII and turned the tide on the Axis powers. A closer look
shows that this is not quite true. Before Pearl Harbor, America was
largely isolationist and was unwilling to become embroiled in another
European war.
Archivists found that after the attack, a declaration of war was
drafted against Japan, Italy, and Germany. President Roosevelt was to
deliver this to Congress on December 8, but it was scrapped and replaced
with a declaration against Japan.
President Roosevelt, wearing a black armband, signs the Declaration of War on Japan on December 8, 1941. Thus the US was propelled only into the Pacific war as a result of Pearl Harbor–not WWII.
Americans only became involved in the European war on December 11.
This was the date when Italy and Germany declared war on the US, and
Roosevelt had to respond in kind.
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