cthia wrote:Yes, Roosevelt knew it was coming. As Don stated so eloquently and humorously, anyone with an IQ greater than his shoe size should have known. Even if your enemy didn't tell you as much.
But it is interesting that Roosevelt almost chose to lie to the American people to add bite to his Call to Arms. As is evident in his drafting of his famous speech.
Wiki wrote:On draft No. 1, Roosevelt changed "a date which will live in world history" to "a date which will live in infamy," providing the speech its most famous phrase and giving birth to the term, "day of infamy," which December 7, 1941, is often called.
A few words later, he changed his report that the United States of America was "simultaneously and deliberately attacked" to "suddenly and deliberately attacked." At the end of the first sentence, he wrote the words, "without warning," but later crossed them out.
Thus that first historic sentence— the one that is usually quoted from the speech— was born: "Yesterday, December 7, 1941— a date which will live in infamy— the United States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by the naval and air forces of the Empire of Japan."
It was still a bit misleading, because it was not at all "suddenly." However, the whole truth and nothing but the truth was not as important as his Call to Arms.
Jonathan_S wrote:One could certainly argue that an attack during continuing diplomatic negotiations, and without a declaration of war, was "sudden" no matter how long a period of increasing tensions preceded it.
And Japan screwed up their own plans on that front. They'd famously intended to deliver the US notice that Japan was breaking off negotiations before the attack happened -- but because of decoding and typing delays it wasn't ready and delivered in time. (Though I tend to doubt that anybody would have given Japan much credit even if they had rule lawyered their way into giving notice with too little time for that news to make it back out to Hawaii before the attack landed)
I am glad you brought that up. That is the one area where I am undecided. Oh yes, Japan failed to give a formal notice of a declaration of war. But they certainly gave an informal notice in the form of a formal warning.
Japan said in no uncertain terms:
If A then B
A = US cuts off oil
B = We will go to war
I am sorry and they are sorry that the message got lost in the mail. Oh well. Shit happens. "Should we shoot our messenger?"
BTW, The Yawata Strike was a recreation of Pearl Harbor, without that same declaration of war. However, can you really blame a bunch of small fries who are about to attack a sleeping giant,
even if they rather not warn him first?
Stop crying, we warned you what your foreign policy would cause.