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Japan and the United States Japan develops a plan for attacks on European colonies and U.S. bases In 1941 President Franklin D. Roosevelt cuts off oil shipments to Japan. Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto plans attack on U.S. fleet in Hawaii

Japan and the United States

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Japan and the United States. Japan develops a plan for attacks on European colonies and U.S. bases In 1941 President Franklin D. Roosevelt cuts off oil shipments to Japan. Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto plans attack on U.S. fleet in Hawaii. Day of Infamy. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Japan and the United States

Japan and the United States Japan develops a plan

for attacks on European colonies and U.S. bases

In 1941 President Franklin D. Roosevelt cuts off oil shipments to Japan. Admiral Isoroku

Yamamoto plans attack on U.S. fleet in Hawaii

Page 2: Japan and the United States

Day of Infamy

Japan attacks Pearl Harbor—U.S. Naval base in Hawaii—on December 7, 1941

U.S. declares war on Japan December 8, 1941.

Japan also attacks Hong Kong, Thailand, and other islands

Page 3: Japan and the United States

Waves of the Attack First wave,

182 planes Second

wave, 171 planes

Page 4: Japan and the United States

USS Arizona Memorial

Page 5: Japan and the United States

Japanese Victories

Guam and Wake Island The Philippines

Japanese attack Philippine Islands defended by U.S., Filipino troops.

Philippine islands fall to Japanese in 1942.

Page 6: Japan and the United States

Bataan Death March The forcible transfer of

75,000 American and Filipino prisoners of war in the Philippines from the Bataan peninsula to prison camps

Beheadings, cut throats and casual shootings were the more common and merciful actions — compared to bayonet stabbings, rapes, disembowelments, numerous rifle butt beatings and a deliberate refusal to allow the prisoners food or water while keeping them continually marching for nearly a week in tropical heat.

Page 7: Japan and the United States

Pictures of the Bataan Death March

Page 8: Japan and the United States

Propaganda Poster in the U.S. after the Bataan Death March

Page 9: Japan and the United States

Bataan Death March Memorial“The Battling Bastards of Bataan”

Page 10: Japan and the United States

Gains in Many Places Japan captures British holdings,

including Hong Kong and Singapore. Japan conquers the Dutch East Indies

which is rich in minerals Japan captures Burma. This threatens

India, Britain’s main possession in Asia.

Japanese forces treat conquered peoples and prisoners of war brutally

Page 11: Japan and the United States

Doolittle Raid U.S. bombers attack

Tokyo and other Japanese cities in April 1942. (Here Lt. Col. James H.

Doolittle wires a Japanese medal to a bomb, for "return" to its originators in the first U.S. air raid on the Japanese Home Islands.)

Raid does little damage, but shows that Japan is vulnerable.

Page 12: Japan and the United States

Allies Turn the Tide

Battle of the Coral Sea—Americans stop Japanese advance, May 1942.

New kind of naval warfare—ships launch planes to fight each other (see next slide). *Aircraft Carriers vital to Pacific War.

Page 13: Japan and the United States

The Allies Strike Back

The Battle of Midway Japanese send powerful fleet to capture

Midway Island. Battle of Midway—U.S. destroy half of

Japan’s aircraft carriers causing Japan to retreat. *Turning point of war in Pacific.

Page 14: Japan and the United States

An Allied Offensive MacArthur’s Plan

Douglas MacArthur—American army commander in the Pacific.

He plans to “island-hop” past strongholds in order to attack weaker Japanese bases.

Page 15: Japan and the United States

Guadalcanal Battle of Guadalcanal—hellish battle that

ends in Allied victory.