History, asked by lilxj2, 8 months ago

How did the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor change the public's opinion about the war?

Answers

Answered by avi86579
5

Answer:

The attack brought out a strong isolationist sentiment as people remembered World War I. The attack compelled people to call for the United States to join the League of Nations. ... The attack convinced Americans that force was necessary to stop Japan's aggression.

Answered by techquantifier099
3

Answer:

please brainliest my answer

Explanation:On December 7, 1941 – the day that will always be commemorated as the date which will live in infamy” by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt – the Japanese unexpectedly attacked the United States’ naval base at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii.

Seventy-five years, hundreds of Japanese bombers attacked the American naval base at Pearl Harbor America’s shock, and its grief for the more than 2,000 US military dead on this date of “infamy” led to overwhelming unity of purpose as we entered a world war. The attack on Pearl Harbor, we ask how did your life change for you and 5 Dec 2014 harbor changed everything ending the long, enfeebling debate thin but passed second time after gorging food water attack, us its foreign policy about world war II. Roosevelt addressed a joint Pearl Harbor changed the balance of power, similar to how Taranto did 8 Sep 2016 family stories about life after attack on. American life after Pearl Harbor how was America’s role in the world shaped by and 9 11 they changed society American irrevocably community news attack lives of Waikiki students.

General Marshall, testifying before the Congressional Committee, was asked: Did the President of the United States, in your opinion, have a right to assume that the commands in Hawaii were properly alerted on the morning of December 7?” The General replied: I think he had every right to assume that.” Washington was surprised by the Pearl Harbor attack, but not nearly so much as it was by what the enemy encountered there. The other time we as a country were united for a cause — one that actually lasted more than a few months — was immediately following the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor by the Empire of Japan on the morning of Dec. Image: Zenji Abe, a Japanese pilot who attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7 1941, pays respects at the memorial wall at the USS Arizona.

Only a few hours after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Japan formally declared war against the United States. The day after Rankin spoke on the House floor. President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 authorizing relocation. The order did not mention Japanese-Americans specifically, nor did it use the term “concentration camps.” It did, however, claim that the “successful prosecution of the war requires every possible protection against espionage and against sabotage.” The order permitted the government to exclude people from prescribed areas. Shortly before 8 a.m. on December 7, 1941, 353 Japanese aircraft supplemented by dozens of submarines, cruisers, destroyers, and battleships attacked America’s Pacific Fleet.

After Japan’s surprise attack and the declaration of war on the United States by Germany and the European Axis powers within a week, the Atlantic and Pacific wars became a truly world war. As a result, Japanese militarists gained the upper hand politically, and they embarked upon a policy of military expansion in the hope of forcibly capturing markets and building an empire as a permanent solution to Japans economic problems. With remarkable prescience, Keynes noted that economic prosperity was the key to a stable peace in Europe, and that such a goal could be obtained not through the ruin of Germany but through the promotion of general economic recovery, among friends and former foes alike, based on the cancellation of war debts and the creation of a European free-trade zone.

The European Union contains the former world powers United Kingdom, Germany and France as its leading members. The evolution of the European Union from regional economic agreement among six neighboring states in 1951 to today’s supranational organization of 27 countries across the European continent stands as a landmark event in the bi polar power division of the world. Countries like China, Russia, the European Union and Japan are also keeping the potential of Achieving superpower status.

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