They awoke a sleeping gaint and filled it with deadly resolve.This is what Admiral Yamamoto,CIC,OF THE Imperial Japanese fleet said to one of his junior staff officers aboard his flag ship-the battleship Yamato after the news was brought to him by another officer. The biggest mistake that the Japanese made was that the attack on Pearl Harbor began hours before the Japanese Ambassador and a special Envoy delivered a message to the U.S. Government.
Go get a life!! Go on google and search it!
This was one of the main events that pulled America into WWII. Without the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor, America may have maintained its neutrality. Some people thought that FDR had antagonized the attack by cutting off Japans oil supply. It was also a little questionable as to why the battleships were all in a line which made them easy to bomb.
There would be bodies of all those entombed people in arizona. They would have died max within a week due to lack of oxygen and other required things for life.
In the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor (December 7, 1941), 8 battleships were attacked. Although three battleships were badly damaged and sank, only two were stricken from the Naval Register. - USS Arizona (BB39) was immediately sunk and in 1962 became a permanent memorial. - USS Oklahoma (BB37) was sunk and declared a total loss (raised and scrapped). - USS West Virginia (BB48) was sunk, but refloated in May, 1942. * USS Utah (BB31) had been previously redesignated as a gunnery target ship (AG16) but had some anti-aircraft guns. Because it still looked like a battleship, it was attacked and sunk, and may be considered a third decommissioned battleship from the attack. Like the Arizona, some deceased crewmen remain within the sunken ship.
There were three major things that were no more than minorly damaged during the December 7th attack: (1) drydock and ship repair facilities of the Pearl Harbor Naval Base (2) Oil and fuel storage facilities around Pearl Harbor and the airbases (3) Army and Navy communication and cryptography centers in Honolulu. It turns out that any one of these three was far more important to the war effort than the total loss of life and ships suffered in the attack.
Duck and cover.
Go get a life!! Go on google and search it!
Of the 1,512 crew members aboard the USS Arizona during the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, approximately 334 survived. This means that roughly 22% of the crew survived the attack. The loss of life was significant, with the Arizona suffering the highest number of casualties among the battleships during the attack.
Just as a personal opionion, this question is appalling. There were 2,403 people left dead at Peal Harbor, 8 ships damageed or destroyed, and 188 destroyed planes. You cannot rank one persons life over another.
No, it is historical fiction. It is possible that a girl could've been in that position during that time, but it is a made-up diary to provide information about a fictional girl's life during Pearl Harbor.
The Japanese Empire bombed Pearl Harbor in the 1940's, and thus involved the United States in World War II. It was an aerial sneak attack which caught Americans unprepared, and this subsequently resulted in a great loss of life and a crippling blow to the American Navy.
This was one of the main events that pulled America into WWII. Without the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor, America may have maintained its neutrality. Some people thought that FDR had antagonized the attack by cutting off Japans oil supply. It was also a little questionable as to why the battleships were all in a line which made them easy to bomb.
The Father in Pearl Harbour Is Danny But Because He Died Saving Rafe's Life, Rafe Became the Step Father, and so they named the son Danny
There would be bodies of all those entombed people in arizona. They would have died max within a week due to lack of oxygen and other required things for life.
"Pearl Harbor" (2001) is similar to Life is Beautiful in the way its a historical romance.
The US was now at war; and had to live accordingly.
Newspaper articles reporting on the bombing of Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, would have covered the surprise attack on the US naval base by the Japanese, detailing the destruction of ships and loss of life. The articles likely emphasized the shock and outrage felt by Americans, as well as the subsequent declaration of war by the United States against Japan. They may have also discussed the events leading up to the attack and its implications for World War II.