Preface While the impact of Allied air operations in the entire Pacific war bore directly upon the enemy\u27s military and economic capabilities for resisting, only by translating these military and economic effects into political events could our announced war aim of unconditional surrender be realized. Japan\u27s acceptance of defeat without invasion while still possessed of 2 1/2 million combat-equipped troops and 9,000 Kamikaze airplanes in the home islands, reveal how persuasively the consequences of our operations were translated into political results. The nature of Japanese politics and its vulnerability and responses to air assault constituted therefore a major and significant line of inquiry for the Survey.https://digicom.bpl.lib....
Memories of war elicit the most intense emotions in people as it is the nature of war and its circum...
Japan is at an inflection point. Depending on how particular peoples and nations view this enigmatic...
Shorter Works“I believe that, regrettable though it is, our defeat in war is imminent and inevitable...
The authors study the military potential of the Japanese Empire and its changes during the Pacific W...
Before World War II ended with the Japanese surrender to the Allied Nations on August 15, 1945, the ...
Japan's decision to attack the United States in 1941 is widely regarded as irrational to the point o...
Foreword The United States Strategic Bombing Survey was established by the Secretary of War on 3 Nov...
As early as mid-1943, the strategic political and military leadership on both sides began to see the...
Almost forgotten in the haze of events that followed Nagasaki and Hiroshima, the summer of 1945 witn...
In the last six months of WWII, the United States conducted a bombing campaign in Japan that would m...
This FYP focuses on the use of Allied propaganda leaflets in World War II as a lens to understand wh...
Tachibana Takashi analyzes the impact of World War II on Tokyo University and Tokyo University\u27s ...
Less than two hours after Japanese planes first flew over the American naval base of Pearl Harbor on...
In 1971 James Auer published The Post- war Rearmament of Japanese Maritime Forces, 1945–1971, “a boo...
The memory of the battle of Okinawa was shaped by politics. The memory of the battle for Okinawans e...
Memories of war elicit the most intense emotions in people as it is the nature of war and its circum...
Japan is at an inflection point. Depending on how particular peoples and nations view this enigmatic...
Shorter Works“I believe that, regrettable though it is, our defeat in war is imminent and inevitable...
The authors study the military potential of the Japanese Empire and its changes during the Pacific W...
Before World War II ended with the Japanese surrender to the Allied Nations on August 15, 1945, the ...
Japan's decision to attack the United States in 1941 is widely regarded as irrational to the point o...
Foreword The United States Strategic Bombing Survey was established by the Secretary of War on 3 Nov...
As early as mid-1943, the strategic political and military leadership on both sides began to see the...
Almost forgotten in the haze of events that followed Nagasaki and Hiroshima, the summer of 1945 witn...
In the last six months of WWII, the United States conducted a bombing campaign in Japan that would m...
This FYP focuses on the use of Allied propaganda leaflets in World War II as a lens to understand wh...
Tachibana Takashi analyzes the impact of World War II on Tokyo University and Tokyo University\u27s ...
Less than two hours after Japanese planes first flew over the American naval base of Pearl Harbor on...
In 1971 James Auer published The Post- war Rearmament of Japanese Maritime Forces, 1945–1971, “a boo...
The memory of the battle of Okinawa was shaped by politics. The memory of the battle for Okinawans e...
Memories of war elicit the most intense emotions in people as it is the nature of war and its circum...
Japan is at an inflection point. Depending on how particular peoples and nations view this enigmatic...
Shorter Works“I believe that, regrettable though it is, our defeat in war is imminent and inevitable...