As the Pacific War's Complicated, Here's a Brief Chronology
FROM PEARL HARBOR TO TOKYO BAY
DECEMBER 7, 1941:
Japanese attack Pearl Harbor. The strike force, called First Air Fleet, was formed eight months earlier. The operation's planner, Admiral Yamamoto believed secrecy was the key, and the Japanese pilots could succeed, as they did against Russia by besieging its fleet at Port Arthur in 1904. Yamamoto has been described as swift and sarcastic in argument, bold and ingenious in battle. In concert with the Pearl Harbor strike, the Japanese bomb Guam, Wake, and Midway. 353 aircraft attack warships and aircraft. Prior to the attack, General George C. Marshall receives a decrypted message from Tokyo instructing the Japanese Ambassador to break off diplomatic relations Aat 1:00 p.m. on the seventh, your time. Marshall sends message to army commands in the Philippines, Hawaii, Panama, and San Francisco. All are received except the one to Hawaii, where atmospheric conditions and heavy static temporarily block the wireless channel to Honolulu. A Western Union telegram is sent, and a messenger on a motorcycle delivers it to General Walter T. Short's headquarters at Fort Shafter, but he receives it sixteen hours after the attack. The Japanese pilots fly so low people below can see them hunched, faceless under their helmets and oxygen masks. Some shake their fists in triumph. The Arizona sinks; men are wedged together so tightly they can't reach their guns as they watch their friends burn to death. US fleet and aircraft are destroyed. Dazed survivors search for family members while oily fire on the water illuminates the bodies floating on the surface like kelp.
DECEMBER 8, 1941:
US declares war on Japan with a single dissenting vote in Congress, cast by Jeanette Rankin, who also voted against World War 1. FDR asks Congress to declare war, and Douglas MacArthur announces he expects a Japanese attack on the Philippines around January 1, 1942. Churchill says, "So we have won after all . . .the Japanese will be ground to powder. Emperor Hirohito declares, We . . enjoin upon you, our loyal and brave subjects: We hereby declare war on the United States and the British Empire.
DECEMBER 9, 1941:
Japanese bomb the Philippines, destroying aircraft on Clark Field. MacArthur's Philippine fiasco is ignored, prompting General Claire Chennault to later write, "If I had been caught with my planes on the ground, I could never have looked my fellow officers squarely in the eye." Claire Booth Luce later wrote, When MacArthur told Brereton to" stand by and wait," Brereton said he was closer to weeping from sheer rage than he had ever been in his life.
MacArthur requests more troops to fend off an invasion, but only 15% of available forces are assigned to the Pacific at this time. When Roosevelt hears that MacArthur ignored his air commander who said to disperse the planes or use them to counterattack, he says in despair, "On the ground! On the ground! The planes were on the ground!"
DECEMBER 10, 1941:
Japanese occupy Tarawa and mount air attacks on Luzon, the Philippines.
DECEMBER 12, 1941:
Japanese troops invade Luzon.
DECEMBER 15, 1941:
Admiral Chester Nimitz appointed Pacific navy chief. He is the man who established the navy ROTC at the University of California. The boys practiced maneuvers on a cow-studded hill; Nimitz called them Battles of Cow Flop Hill. MacArthur will head the Southwestern Pacific operations. Geography is our only problem, MacArthur says; most Americ
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