A Day That Will Live in Infamy: How Pearl Harbor Was Important to United States History. and How It Changed the Course the United States Was on.

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A Day that will Live in Infamy: How Pearl Harbor was important to United States History. And how it changed the course the United States was on. December 7th 1941 “A Day that will live in Infamy” -Franklin Delano Roosevelt The picture above captures aftermath and the rescuing of sailors from the USS West Virginia, one of the ships attacked in the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii that occurred on December 7th 1941. This attack was a turning point in the way the United States views wars, prepares defenses, and the way the country responds to acts of war upon its people. It is important to United States History as it marks the first time war had been brought to the country’s shores. It ended the belief that the United States was untouchable because of its distance from other worldly powers and it propelled the country into the spotlight as a world power to be reckoned with. In the early morning hours of December 7th 1941 an intelligence report was obtained by United States government officials indicating that an attack on a United States port by the Japanese was imminent. But the information was not passed on to officials at Pearl Harbor until after the attack was already in progress. The attack came in two waves, the first of which consisted of 183 planes and the second of which consisted of 167 additional planes. This surprise attack had been building for some time, ever since the United States imposed sanctions and an embargo against Japan earlier in the year. This was done as an attempt to disrupt Japan’s military action against the rest of Asia, which Japan did not appreciate and so Admiral Yamamoto began planning an attack, which would bring the United States into World War 2 despite its multiple declinations to get involved militarily. “A day which will live in infamy,” a declaration from President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, made on

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