Sunday, February 3, 2019
Pearl Harbor :: essays research papers
I am going to focuse on the relations between the United States and the Japanese after W.W.I and Pearl Harbor. in that respect were a few incidents out of this book that I felt were real interesting that helped contribute to the United States and Japanese mistrusts and miscalculations over the next twent or thirty years until the relations ended up in fight after the surprising terriblr=e terrorist bombing of Pearl Harbor. Thus, causing the conk out of World War II.The first incident that I wanted to handle out of this book took place in 1922. In 1922 the big supplys (which were alone European except the United States and Japan from a treaty at a Washington Conference.) In this conference the powers agree to form a multilateralist advance of existence with each other and the world. In this conference the powers agreed to form a sort of peaceful coexistence and disarmament between themselves and the world. What was interpret by the major powers was that they believed that p eace and disarmament was wanted by in all the members of the conference which was not the case what so ever. The powers believed that they would form a matter community that shared the same interest by all the majorly versatile nations. When itbecame known that the highly diverse countries did not have the same interst at that place was not a national law committee (like today NATO) to promote the laws that were made by the Washington Committee so the idea of this multilateralist state was dropped and animosity continued for years at a time until things became out of hand and hate ran rapid.The second incident that I want to contend is the Manchurian Incident of September 1931. The United States was deep in an scotch crisis and committed to staying isolated from the other countries in Europe because the US feared some other war could happen. Even if the United States would have not been isolated they lacked the power to influence other countries around the world. This confli ct happened because the Japanese faced a lot of problems on the world scene and domestic problems caused the Japanese to go from a multilateralist state of being (like they agreed to do after W.W.I) to seek an self-directed state of being in their foreign policy. In this autonomous state the Japanese wanted to form a stron military and political influence over Asia for themselves rather than the West.
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