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duckfang | 4 years ago
No Choice but War: The United States Embargo Against Japan and the Eruption of War in the Pacific
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctvqmp3br Beyond Pearl Harbor: A Pacific History
And you'll find out that there was continual and worsening relations with Japan due to US imperialism. Hawai'i was only one such territory colonized and conquered.
And there were economic sanctions from 1931 to 1941 for various products.
But this is also out of the US playbook to surround an enemy or proposed enemy, pull out economic sanctions, and then pull out the single bad thing. For example, here's the AFB's around Iran https://qph.fs.quoracdn.net/main-qimg-4d67205db3b8a9d820ca77... , but we're supposed to only look at Natanz nuclear refining.
Now, I'm not saying that Japan was honorable in combat. They death-marched Chinese. The "comfort women" were rape and murder victims. But really, all nations have similar horrific stories. Japan, alike the US, was no different in that regard.
AnimalMuppet|4 years ago
From Japan's perspective, the US actions may have left them no choice but war. That doesn't make the US actions wrong; it makes the Japanese pre-WWII perspective incredibly skewed and incredibly morally flawed.
lostlogin|4 years ago
And the acts of Japan during that period stand out, even within a context of ‘everyone is bad.’
jabl|4 years ago
For that reason, Imperial Japan certainly ranks right up there together with Nazi Germany as the most evil regimes in recent history, and the US of that era does not (saying this as a non-US'ian who is generally pretty critical of the post-WWII foreign policy adventures the US has gotten itself involved in).
GuardianCaveman|4 years ago
whoooooo123|4 years ago
Tangential: if anyone is interested in learning more about this, I recommend the YouTube channel History Buffs' review of the film The Last Samurai