Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
December 1981 | Volume 33, Issue 1
Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
December 1981 | Volume 33, Issue 1
The Japanese planes that came screaming down on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, changed the whole course of history. The United States was plunged into a long, grueling war. But more than that, the lives of most Americans were to be altered radically not just for the duration of the war, but forever.
Looking back after forty years, Pearl Harbor stands out as a moment of high drama—a turning point in history for the United States and the world. Things were never to be the same again. History has become divided by a clear prewar and postwar line of cleavage. This had happened to Europe in World War I. Now it was happening to the United States and the rest of the world, with Pearl Harbor the moment of sharpest transition.
On that Sunday morning most Americans sensed that a great change was taking place, but they had little concept of what was really happening. There undoubtedly would be a terrible war, they knew, but beyond that most assumed that the eventual defeat of Japan and Germany would give birth to a new world order that would permit the United States to continue in its old semi-isolated calm. How many foresaw the collapse of all overseas empires, the cold war between the communist and noncommunist nations, and how these developments would split the world into at least three major segments? Who realized that America itself would have to serve for a while as the main support of world order, and that even after the other great nations had recovered, American military power would have to continue to play a major stabilizing role? Who foresaw that economic and technological advances would make even a rich continental nation like the United States economically dependent on the rest of the world and banish for good the dream of splendid isolation? Finally, who for a moment could have imagined that in this strange new world it would be America’s erstwhile enemies, Japan and Germany, who would prove to be its most stalwart supporters and allies?
Pearl Harbor marked a shift in the course of American and world history so sudden and sharp as to be almost unbelievable. But a long history led up to it that makes this abrupt change more comprehensible. One might compare this history to that of the Yellow River in North China. Over the centuries this mighty silt-laden torrent has built up its bed until it runs between man-made dikes high above the flat North China Plain. Then some sudden catastrophe breaches the dikes, and the vast flow rushes out onto the plain in a radically new direction, entering the sea hundreds of miles north or south of the old mouth and changing the geography of all North China in the process. Pearl Harbor did this for America and the world.
One layer of sediment was the growing economic interdependence of the whole industrialized world in its need for energy, raw materials, markets, and advanced technology.