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Hunter Kenneth E. The War against Japan

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Hunter Kenneth E. The War against Japan
Second Edition. — Washington: Center of Military History United States Army, 2001. — 473 p. — ISBN: 0-16-076546-3
Before 7 December 1941, while war was actively being waged in Europe and the Far East, the United States, still a neutral, was expanding its manufacturing facilities to meet the demands for additional war materials, both for the growing U.S. forces and those of the Allies. On 7 December the Japanese struck Pearl Harbor in an attempt to so cripple U.S. naval power that future Japanese conquest and occupation in the Pacific would meet with little or no opposition. This attack dealt a serious blow to Navy and Army Air Forces units stationed in the Hawaiian
Islands. On the same day two Japanese destroyers attacked the island of Midway, but were beaten off by the defending troops. On 8
December Wake was assaulted. The attacks on Wake were continued for two weeks and the small U.S. garrison was forced to surrender on
23 December. Another weak garrison on the island of Guam, unable to resist the enemy attacks, fell on 10 December. Early on the morning of 8 December the U.S. forces in the Philippines were notified that a state of war existed and a full war alert was ordered. On the same day the first Japanese aerial attack on the Philippines took place. This was followed by others and on 10 December enemy landings were made on Luzon. Expecting an early victory, the Japanese sent a large force, but it was not until 6 May 1942 that the Japanes e were able to conquer the American and Filipino defenders who fought a delaying action down the Bataan Peninsula and made a final stand on the island of Corregidor. All military resistance ended in the rest of the Philippine Islands by 17 May except for small bands of guerrillas who continued to fight the enemy until 1945 when the U.S. forces landed in the Philippines. In March 1942 the commander of the United States Army Forces in the Far East was ordered to move to Australia by the President of the United States.
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