It was 74 years ago today, December 7,
that the Empire of Japan attacked
the United States Naval base at Pearl Harbor. For almost 2 hours
353 aircraft and a couple of mini-subs laid siege on the base. By the
time the assault was over 8 battle ships were either crippled or
sunk; 2,403 were killed; 1,178 were wounded; and an untold number of
airplanes at the nearby Army Air Corps' base Hickman Field were
destroyed.
While the attack was devastating to
the Pacific fleet it was not the major blow to the United States the
Japan was hoping to inflict. The primary targets were the two
aircraft carriers, the USS Lexington and the USS Enterprise, that
had been deploy to take aircraft to both Midway and Wake Island. Of
the eight battleships that were hit six of them, the USS California,
USS Tennessee, USS Nevada, USS West Virginia, USS Maryland, and USS
Pennsylvania were able to be repaired and placed back into service.
Even though we focus on Pearl Harbor it
was not the only United States base attacked on December 7, 1941. A
few hours after the Pearl Harbor, Japanese forces also attacked
United States' bases at Midway Island, Guam, and the Philippine
Islands. Even though the commanders at those bases had advanced
warning about possible attacks they were still caught off guard by
the invading forces.
The attacks on Pearl Harbor and other
sites were the culmination of tensions that had been building between
Japan and the United States since shortly after the end of World War
I. Those tensions grew when the United States backed China, in their
war with Japan, with military support. Then, when the United States
imposed a fuel embargo those tensions were at a breaking point.
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