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VDH: America Didn’t Provoke Japan - Here’s What Really Led to Pearl Harbor
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VDH: America Didn’t Provoke Japan - Here’s What Really Led to Pearl Harbor

In an era of World War II revisionism, it’s worth remembering what really led to Japan’s surprise attack on Pearl Harbor 84 years ago on Dec. 7, 1941.

Victor Davis Hanson breaks down the real context behind the attack, why Japan miscalculated so badly, the myths that still distort this history, and how Pearl Harbor became the beginning of Japan’s greatest strategic blunder on today’s episode of “Victor Davis Hanson: In a Few Words.

Why did they attack?

“They said that they did not want to attack.

“They were in the process of negotiating a peace settlement.

“They said that we had cut off their oil exports.

“And we had because we had no other mechanism to convince them to get out of China, it was not their territory, to get out of Korea, to get out of Southeast Asia, and to not absorb the Dutch East Indies.

“They had refused on all of those accounts and said, yet, we will find a peaceful solution, as they planned the attack.

“The attack happened at seven in the morning, deliberately, on a Sunday morning when people were either at church or still asleep from Saturday night partying.

“And they came out of the rising sun.

“Two waves.

“And they destroyed four battleships and injured, or just - I don’t wanna say injured, they were inanimate objects.

“But they disabled 4 that sunk to the shallow bottom of Pearl Harbor.”

Chapters

(0:00) Pearl Harbor and Revisionism
(0:14) Context Leading Up to Pearl Harbor
(3:53) The Attack on Pearl Harbor
(5:27) Aftermath and Misc

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