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Ted H writes from Oundle, England, about Pearl Harbor, Monday, January 13, 2003 ![]() Did US foreign policy lead straight to Pearl Harbor?
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IT was really fun to speak to such a great audience. You ask about foreign policy as a key to Pearl Harbor. I hinted at this in my talk, and I am going to ask you to borrow a copy of the book I brought, “Churchill’s War”, vol. ii: “Triumph in Adversity”, and look under “Japan” and then “oil embargo as a key to sanctions” in the index: that will take you to roughly the right pages. You can also download the entire book free on my website unless your school has had a filter installed, which may prevent it! You will also want to highlight Churchill’s repeated comment that in the run-up to Pearl Harbor he had by agreement left it to the Americans to handle Far East foreign policy, and you might want to address that issue: was it a proper decision for Churchill to make in the circumstances? (Of course, Churchill never really expected the Japanese to attack, he thought they were bluffing and said so; a sentence that he later cut out of a letter to Anthony Eden, as published in his The Second World War!) Come back to me with further questions, and encourage your friends to do so to. I have briefly posted your letter on my website, without naming you, and you may get assistance from others too. Follow of course the normal rules of prudence when replying to strangers.
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