Sunday, January 19, 2020
Pearl Harbor :: essays research papers
 Pearl Harbor           My report is about the attack on Pearl Harbor. In this report I will  explain what happened and why it happened. So you know, Pearl Harbor is located  on Oahu island, Hawaii.         Pearl Harbor was the operating base of the U.S. Pacific Fleet. The  Japanese pulled a surprise attack on the U.S. on December 7, 1941 at 7:50 A.M.  during the beginning of World War II. On November 26 a powerful Japanese task  force, under the command of vice Admiral Chuichi Nagumo, left the Kuril Islands;  on December 2 it received a coded message issuing the attack order. The  undetected Japanese force arrived off the Hawaiian Islands on the morning of  December 7. In two successive waves more than 350 Japanese bombers, torpedo  planes, and fighters struck. More than 75 U.S. warships(including battleships,  cruisers, destroyers, submarines, and auxiliaries) were based at this "Gibraltar  of the Pacific." All U.S. aircraft carriers were elsewhere. Observing radio  silence, it reached a launching point at 6 AM, December 7. At 7:50 AM, the  first wave of Japanese planes struck Pearl Harbor, bombarding airfields and  battleships moored at the concrete quays. The U.S. totally taken off guard had  to defend themselves in pajamas. They used anti-aircraft guns in an attempt to  stop the Japanese. A second wave followed. The surprise attack was over before  10 AM. The results were devastating; 18 U.S. ships were hit, and more than 200  aircraft destroyed or damaged. The battleship Arizona was a total wreck; the  West Virginia and California were sunk; and the Nevada was heavily damaged.  Approximately 2,400 Americans were killed, 1,300 wounded, and 1,000 missing.  Japanese losses were fewer than 100 casualties, 29 planes, and 5 midget  submarines. The Japanese totally destroyed the U.S. naval power in the Pacific.  The attack was, however, a colossal political and psychological blunder, for it  mobilized U.S. public opinion against the Japanese and served as the catalyst  that brought the United States into the war. "December 7, 1941," said President  Franklin D. Roosevelt, is "a date which will live in infamy." A monument has  been built across the hull of the sunken U.S.S. Arizona; it was dedicated as a  national memorial in 1962. The next day President Roosevelt told a joint  session of Congress that December 7 was "a date which will live in infamy."  Congress voted to declare war on Japan. A small boat rescued seamen from USS  West Virginia after the surprise Japanese air attack. There are different  reasons why the Japanese were able to pull a surprise attack on the United  States biggest military base. One is that when the U.  					    
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