Road to Pearl Harbor : : The Coming of the War Between the United States and Japan / / Herbert Feis.

This is a probing narrative of the history which came to its climax at Pearl harbor; an account of the attitudes and actions, of the purposes and persons which brought about the war between the United States and Japan.It is full and impartial. Though written as an independent and private study, reco...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter Princeton Legacy Lib. eBook Package 1931-1979
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Place / Publishing House:Princeton, NJ : : Princeton University Press, , [2015]
©1950
Year of Publication:2015
Language:English
Series:Princeton Legacy Library ; 1772
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Physical Description:1 online resource (370 p.)
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Table of Contents:
  • Frontmatter
  • Preface
  • Contents
  • Part One: Separation
  • 1. The Arc of Opposition
  • 2. The Last, Lost Good Chance: 1937
  • 3. 1937-39: Japan Goes Deeper into the Stubble
  • 4. The Dismay of the Japanese Strategists: August, 1939
  • 5. Separation but Still not Enmity: the Winter of 1939-40
  • Part Two. Hostility
  • 6. The First Waves of German Victory Reach the Southwest Pacific: April, 1940
  • 7. The Grave Dilemma before the United States: May, 1940
  • 8. Japan Starts on the Road South: June, 1940
  • 9. The American Government Forbears
  • 10. Japan Selects a New Government
  • 11. Japan Stencils Its Policy in Indelible Ink: July, 1940
  • 12. Our First Firm Counteraction
  • 13. Maneuver and Resistance
  • 14. We Stop the Shipment of Scrap Iron
  • 15. The Making of the Alliance with the Axis: September, 1940
  • 16. We Draw Closer to Britain
  • 17. After Our Elections: Steps towards a Concerted Program
  • 18. Matsuoka Pursues the Great Combination
  • 19. At the Same Time Japan Continues to Seek the Best Road South
  • 20. Diplomacy by Gesture and Signal: American Policy in the Winter of 1940-41
  • Part Three. Enmity
  • 21. We Reach a World-Wide Strategic Accord with Britain: March, 1941
  • 22. Hull and Nomura Begin the Search for Formulas of Peace
  • 23. Matsuoka Goes to Berlin and Moscow, and Returns with a Neutrality Pact
  • 24. The Two Faces of Japanese Diplomacy Glare at One Another: April, 1941
  • 25. Would Japan Stand Still While We Extended Ourselves in the Atlantic? The Spring of 1941
  • 26. Japan Chafes and Germany Invades the Soviet Union: May- June, 1941
  • 27. Japan Makes the Crucial Decision: July 2, 1941
  • 28. The Konoye Cabinet Resigns-to Get Rid of Matsuoka
  • 29. The United States and Britain Prepare to Impose Sanctions
  • 30. We Freeze Japan's Funds
  • 31. Was Japan to Have Any More Oil?
  • 32. The Choice before Japan Is Defined; and Konoye Seeks a Meeting with Roosevelt
  • 33. Roosevelt Meets Churchill; Argentia and After: August 1941
  • 34. The Japanese High Command Demands That the Issue with the United States Be Faced and Forced
  • 35. The Idea of a Roosevelt-Konoye Meeting Dies; the Deadlock Is Complete: October, 1941
  • 36. The Army Insists on a Decision for War; Konoye Quits; Tojo Takes Over
  • Part Four. War
  • 37. The Last Offers to the United States Are Formulated: November 5, 1941
  • 38. November: The American Government Stands Fast and Hurries Its Preparations
  • 39. Japan's Final Proposal for a Truce Is Weighed and Found Wanting
  • 40. As Stubborn as Ever: the American Answer, November 26, 1941
  • 41. The Last Arrangements and Formalities for War
  • 42. The Clasp of War Is Closed
  • Index