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30. We Freeze Japan's Funds

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Road to Pearl Harbor
This chapter is in the book Road to Pearl Harbor

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Preface vi
  3. Contents xii
  4. Part One: Separation
  5. 1. The Arc of Opposition 3
  6. 2. The Last, Lost Good Chance: 1937 8
  7. 3. 1937-39: Japan Goes Deeper into the Stubble 17
  8. 4. The Dismay of the Japanese Strategists: August, 1939 25
  9. 5. Separation but Still not Enmity: the Winter of 1939-40 38
  10. Part Two. Hostility
  11. 6. The First Waves of German Victory Reach the Southwest Pacific: April, 1940 49
  12. 7. The Grave Dilemma before the United States: May, 1940 56
  13. 8. Japan Starts on the Road South: June, 1940 66
  14. 9. The American Government Forbears 72
  15. 10. Japan Selects a New Government 76
  16. 11. Japan Stencils Its Policy in Indelible Ink: July, 1940 84
  17. 12. Our First Firm Counteraction 88
  18. 13. Maneuver and Resistance 95
  19. 14. We Stop the Shipment of Scrap Iron 101
  20. 15. The Making of the Alliance with the Axis: September, 1940 110
  21. 16. We Draw Closer to Britain 122
  22. 17. After Our Elections: Steps towards a Concerted Program 133
  23. 18. Matsuoka Pursues the Great Combination 145
  24. 19. At the Same Time Japan Continues to Seek the Best Road South 150
  25. 20. Diplomacy by Gesture and Signal: American Policy in the Winter of 1940-41 153
  26. Part Three. Enmity
  27. 21. We Reach a World-Wide Strategic Accord with Britain: March, 1941 165
  28. 22. Hull and Nomura Begin the Search for Formulas of Peace 171
  29. 23. Matsuoka Goes to Berlin and Moscow, and Returns with a Neutrality Pact 180
  30. 24. The Two Faces of Japanese Diplomacy Glare at One Another: April, 1941 188
  31. 25. Would Japan Stand Still While We Extended Ourselves in the Atlantic? The Spring of 1941 196
  32. 26. Japan Chafes and Germany Invades the Soviet Union: May- June, 1941 202
  33. 27. Japan Makes the Crucial Decision: July 2, 1941 209
  34. 28. The Konoye Cabinet Resigns—to Get Rid of Matsuoka 219
  35. 29. The United States and Britain Prepare to Impose Sanctions 227
  36. 30. We Freeze Japan's Funds 236
  37. 31. Was Japan to Have Any More Oil? 242
  38. 32. The Choice before Japan Is Defined; and Konoye Seeks a Meeting with Roosevelt 251
  39. 33. Roosevelt Meets Churchill; Argentia and After: August 1941 255
  40. 34. The Japanese High Command Demands That the Issue with the United States Be Faced and Forced 261
  41. 35. The Idea of a Roosevelt-Konoye Meeting Dies; the Deadlock Is Complete: October, 1941 271
  42. 36. The Army Insists on a Decision for War; Konoye Quits; Tojo Takes Over 282
  43. Part Four. War
  44. 37. The Last Offers to the United States Are Formulated: November 5, 1941 291
  45. 38. November: The American Government Stands Fast and Hurries Its Preparations 298
  46. 39. Japan's Final Proposal for a Truce Is Weighed and Found Wanting 307
  47. 40. As Stubborn as Ever: the American Answer, November 26, 1941 320
  48. 41. The Last Arrangements and Formalities for War 326
  49. 42. The Clasp of War Is Closed 333
  50. Index 343
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