The Great Pacific War

The Great Pacific War

"The Great Pacific War" was a 1925 novel by Hector C. Bywater which discussed a hypothetical future war between Japan and the United States. The novel accurately predicts a number of details about the Pacific Campaign of World War II. Bywater was a naval correspondent for the "London Daily Telegraph".

In "The Great Pacific War", the war begins with a Japanese invasion of Manchuria, Formosa and Korea. Japan then stages a surprise attack which results in the nearly complete destruction of the U.S. Pacific Fleet. The novel features numerous other accurate predictions, such as:

*a large role in the conflict for aircraft carrier-based aircraft,
*suicidal tactics by Japanese aviators,
*an island hopping strategy as the U.S. retakes the Pacific.

"Infamy" by John Toland; Toland states that Isoroku Yamamoto was in the U.S. in 1925 and might have read the New York papers review on this book. Admiral Richardson warned Franklin Roosevelt about the danger of too many ships of the Pacific fleet in Pearl Harbor on 8 October,1940, one month before election, which the President disregarded and replaced him early next year.

Bywater died in August 1940, before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

uggested Reading

Honan, WH. 1991. "Visions of Infamy: The untold story of how journalist Hector C. Bywater devised the plans that led to Pearl Harbor". St. Martin's Press, New York. 365 pp. ISBN 0-312-08332-7


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Third Reich/Great Pacific War series — Avalanche Press s Third Reich/Great Pacific War series is a strategic level board wargame of World War II. The series consists of two boxed games ( Third Reich and The Great Pacific War ), one supplement ( Third Reich/Great Pacific War Player s… …   Wikipedia

  • Pacific War — For other uses, see Pacific War (disambiguation). War in the Pacific redirects here. For the video game, see War in the Pacific (video game). For the war between Chile, Bolivia, and Peru in 1879–84, see War of the Pacific. Pacific War Part of… …   Wikipedia

  • The Disasters of War — Plate 3: Lo mismo (The same). A man about to cut off the head of a soldier with an axe.[1] …   Wikipedia

  • The World at War — For other uses, see World at War (disambiguation). The World at War Format Documentary Created by Jeremy Isaacs …   Wikipedia

  • The Great Rapprochement — The Great Rapprochement, a term usually attributed to Bradford Perkins, is used to describe the convergence of social and political objectives, between the United States and the British Empire, in the two decades before World War I. Mixed… …   Wikipedia

  • The Second World War (Churchill) — The Second World War is a six volume history of the period from the end of the First World War to July 1945, written by Sir Winston Churchill.WritingWhen he resumed office in 1939, Churchill fully intended writing a history of the war then… …   Wikipedia

  • The Chaser's War on Everything — season two intertitle Genre Comedy, Satire Created by The Chaser …   Wikipedia

  • Pacific War (Harry Turtledove) — Infobox Military Conflict conflict=Pacific War (Harry Turtledove)|Pacific War caption= partof=Timeline 191 date=1932 1934 place=Pacific Ocean; British Columbia, Canada; Los Angeles, CA result= Stalemate ( status quo ante bellum ) combatant1=… …   Wikipedia

  • The Great Controversy (book) — Infobox Book name = The Great Controversy author = Ellen White language = English pages = 219 release date = 1858 publisher = James White country = USA subject = History of sin from beginning to end The Great Controversy is a book written by… …   Wikipedia

  • The Great Depression and the World Wars in Arizona — In 1912, women in Arizona gained the right to vote, and in 1917, World War I brought an economic boom to Arizona. It recovered from The Great Depression with the New Deal and another economic boom after World War II, leading the cotton, copper,… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”