The Grand Strategy of Japan, 1919-1941
Why, in December 1941, did
Japan go to war against the United States?
In examining Japan’s grand
strategy from 1919 to 1941, this video will focus on two problems: why did
Japan choose military solutions to solve its strategic problems? And why were
these solutions eventually directed at the US?
1. The Problem: Total War
Japan came out of WWI with
a very benign strategic environment in East Asia. By 1918, three regional
powers – China, Russia and Germany – had collapsed, with the surviving European
empires financially and politically exhausted. Into this vacuum stepped the
Japanese, who had not only increased their economic presence throughout the
region, but had also acquired strategic depth through the South Pacific Mandate
and the anti-Communist intervention in Eastern Siberia.
But behind the façade was
a concerning development. WWI had seemingly demonstrated that future wars would
be total in nature, with the economic dimension especially important. Without a
large and independent resource and industrial base, even a military titan like
Germany could be blockaded and bled into submission. And Japan, which was
nearly bankrupted after only 18 months of the Russo-Japanese War, lacked both.
Worse, Japan’s competitors
– the Soviet Union and the United States – did not lack either. At sea, the
1916 US Naval Program planned to add 16 capital ships, which was the size of
Japan’s existing fleet, by 1919. On land, with half the budget eaten up by a
mere 70,000 troops in Siberia and no financial will for further increases,
Japan had no choice but to withdraw in 1921 and hand the region back to the
Soviets. Both did not bode well for Japan’s future security.
In considering the problem
of total war, Japanese policymakers came up with three grand strategic
responses. First was the ‘internationalist’ response. Internationalists,
consisting of establishment civilian and naval moderates, accepted that future
wars would be total and Japan had no way of winning them alone. Military
expansion was therefore impossible.
Instead, internationalist
grand strategy would have Japan accept the political status quo, tying
its interests to a negotiated political order. Anybody that threatened Japanese
interests would therefore also threaten the order as a whole, creating a defensive
coalition that could overawe the enemy and, at worst, collectively sustain
total war.
Second was the
‘traditionalist’ response. Consisting of establishment army and navy leaders,
traditionalists did not accept that future wars would necessarily turn total.
They argued that Japan could still wage ‘Limited Wars’ without triggering escalation,
using the Russo-Japanese War as an example, where Japan opened by seizing and
fortifying strategic objectives, beat back Russian counter-attacks, and
eventually convinced the enemy that, while they would win a total war, the
additional cost in blood, treasure and morale simply made victory not worth it.
So traditionalist grand
strategy argued that Japan needed to be ready for opportunistic military
expansion through Limited War. It therefore demanded a large, quality military
capable of seizing strategic objectives and dealing decisive blows to the
enemy.
The third blueprint, still
new as of 1919, was the ‘totalist’ response. Totalists, consisting of anti-establishment
army and civilian hawks, accepted not only that future wars would be total, but
that Japan could also win such a war. Impressed by the results of Soviet and
later, Nazi economic and societal planning, totalists argued that similar
efforts could overcome Japan’s economic deficiencies.
Totalist grand strategy
focused on two areas. Firstly, Japan’s economic limits could be extended
through internal reform. Wasteful societal processes – like social inequality,
public debate and individual freedom – would be replaced by a technocratic
elite with control over everything. The state would then mobilize resources,
capital and labor for economic buildup, not just through industrial expansion
but also through research. Through totalitarian economic planning, Japan’s
small but intensively-utilized economy would sustain total war, with resources
it lacked being replaced by synthetic substitutes.
Secondly, while the
process of internal reform was ongoing, Japan’s economic limits could also be
extended by acquiring, peacefully or militarily, new territories and resources
to build and fuel industrial capacity.
Many totalist thinkers
such as Kita Ikki, believed that a future total war was inevitable. Influenced
by Marxist and fascist geopolitics, they divided the world into landowning
‘haves’ – meaning established Empires – and the proletarian ‘have-nots’ –
meaning latecomers like Germany or Japan, or for racialists, the non-whites.
Under the Social-Darwinian struggle between peoples, the ‘have-nots’ must
either resign themselves to exploitation, or grow strong enough to take land
and become ‘haves’ in their own right. Note that this last goal was not necessarily
limited to totalists – even moderates believed in Japan’s Manifest Destiny to
lead Asia against colonialism.
2. 1919-1931: The
Internationalist Washington Order
Generally speaking, Japan had
two core interests. First was keeping its superior regional position. Second
was maintaining Japan’s economic interests, largely concentrated in China and
northeast China in particular. One particular interest was the South Manchuria
Railway, a colonial asset seized from the Russians in 1905. In peace, the Rail
monopolized Manchuria’s transport economy; in war, it let the Army out-mobilize
the Soviets. To protect it, the Japanese set up the Kwantung Army as a guard
force, and also supported the semi-independence of the local warlord, Zhang
Zuolin.
Arrayed against these
interests were three threats. Both the US and the Soviet Union could leverage
their warmaking potential to overthrow Japan’s position or eject it from China.
There was also Chinese nationalism, which if properly channeled could overwhelm
Zhang Zuolin and deal mortal blows to Japan’s economy through non-cooperation,
boycotts or nationalization.
Throughout the long
post-WWI recession, civilian and naval moderates, such as Foreign Minister
Shidehara and Naval Minister Tomosaburo, wanted to maintain Japan’s interests
with as little spending as possible. They therefore adopted the
internationalist grand strategy and sought to place Japanese interests within a
negotiated political order. Key to this was engaging constructively with the
Washington Conference of 1921-22.
The first pillar of the
new order was the 1922 Naval Treaty, which set a 10:10:6 capital ship ratio
between the UK, US and Japan. This was less than the 10:10:7 minimum Navy
traditionalists wanted for Limited War, but in return the US had capped its
fleet far below its potential. The treaty also banned new naval base
development in the Pacific, which left only Japan with modernized bases between
Singapore and Hawaii, guaranteeing superiority in the Western Pacific. So by
conceding a theoretical disadvantage, the US threat was neutralized and Japan’s
regional position secured.
The other pillar was the
9-Power Treaty on China, signed by most relevant powers including China, but
excluding Germany and the USSR. In return for respecting Chinese territorial
integrity – something that Japan had tried to reduce in 1915 – all signatories
would enjoy equal economic access in the country. So again, in return for
accepting the political status quo in China, Japan’s economic interests
there would be protected by international law.
Now Japan had to uphold
the Washington order. As long as the internationalists were in charge, it
upheld the Naval Treaty – though like the others, began exploiting an oversight
by building cruisers instead of battleships. It also upheld the Chinese status
quo, avoiding railroad construction in the Soviet sphere of influence in
northern Manchuria, and unlike Britain, tolerating Soviet support for the Chinese
Revolutionaries in 1924. Even when it intervened, as when the Soviets launched
a proxy war against Zhang Zuolin in 1924, or when Zhang attempted to invade
north China in 1928, the Japanese kept to the original boundaries.
The internationalist grand
strategy was demonstrably successful throughout the mid-20s. Japan kept its
position while avoiding a naval arms race with the US, while the Soviets, who
had hoped to spread revolution in China, soon backed off for fear of triggering
a Japanese-European-American coalition: by 1925 they were exchanging
ambassadors with Japan and dealing with Zhang Zuolin. When the Chinese Revolutionaries
threatened to overturn the colonial ‘unequal’ treaties in 1927, the coalition
again forced them to back down, with the revolutionaries collapsing into the
Nationalist-Communist Civil War shortly thereafter. All this was achieved at a
low cost in blood, treasure or reputation.
Still, it’s worth asking
whether this grand strategy was long-term workable. There were already problems
at the micro-level: Zhang Zuolin’s growing independence, in particular, was
threatening Japanese interests. But at a macro-level, the Washington order was
established when both China and the USSR were at a low ebb, and their
recovering power would likely threaten it in time. A challenge during the
depths of the Great Depression or the European war might have seen the UK and
US cut their losses, leaving Japan, as the power most dependent on East Asia,
to defend its interests alone in a ruinous total war.
More fatally, the
internationalists did not convince either limited-war traditionalists or
total-war totalists. Army traditionalists complained that the order stopped
Japan from striking a weak China and, for totalists, monopolizing the country
as a resource bloc. Naval traditionalists protested that fleet inferiority –
especially the cruiser limits of the 1930 Naval Treaty – meant that Japan could
only protect interests that the US was OK with. All sides doubted that the West
would actually defend Japan in Asia, instead of finding someone to balance it
out.
These
non-internationalists also felt that they were under time pressure. The
Nationalists had nominally unified southern and central China by 1928, raising
the prospect of a stronger central government able to act against Japanese
economic interests. The same year, Stalin launched the first Five-Year Plan,
whose forced industrialization threatened to boost Soviet power beyond Japan’s
military abilities.
Fearing that the
internationalist grand strategy would soon make it too difficult to maintain
Japan’s interests, the Kwantung Army decided on unauthorized action. On June
1928, they assassinated Zhang Zuolin, expecting to replace him with a more
reliable puppet. It backfired: Zhang’s son unexpectedly succeeded him and united
with the Nationalist Chinese, who began acting against Japanese and Soviet influence
in Manchuria. This setback only increased the urgency to act, and by 1931 the
Army was ready to try again.
3. 1931-1937: The Totalist
‘National Defense State’
On September 1931, again
without authorization, Kwantung Army totalists under Ishiwara Kanji staged a
false flag attack on the South Manchurian Railway and used it as a pretext to
attack the Chinese. Within 6 months Japan had pushed out Chinese and Soviet
influence in Manchuria, reorganizing it into the state of Manchukuo.
This totalist move ended
the internationalist grand strategy. Civilian leaders, seeing public support
for the Army, refused to return to the 9-Power status quo, meaning that
Japan now became the threat to the order. The US threatened to terminate the
Naval Treaties, the Soviets rushed 4 divisions to the Far East, and China
skillfully used ‘weak-nation diplomacy’ to reinforce Japanese isolation. A
total-war coalition against Japan was seemingly forming.
It was in this environment
that Ishiwara Kanji, promoted in 1935 to Army Chief of Operations, unveiled his
totalist grand strategy of the ‘National Defense State’. To meet the impending
threat, Japan had to prepare for total war by extending its economic limits: it
had to become economically larger and more independent.
The National Defense State
demanded both external expansion and internal reform. With Manchukuo added to
existing Japanese economic assets in China, Ishiwara judged that Japan now had taken
enough external resources and territory. Manchuria pre-conquest produced 70% of
China’s iron and 33% of its trade; totalists now wanted to remake it into a complementary
economy to Japan.
This involved the standard
colonial relationship of Manchukuo exporting raw materials to and importing
finished goods from Japan, but at the same time, Manchukuo would also be the
site of heavy industry development that Japan’s limited space and resources
couldn’t allow. To fund this, totalists proposed temporarily downsizing the
military to free up budget, while maintaining stable relationships with Japan’s
key suppliers: China for raw materials, the US for machine tools.
Regarding internal reform,
guidelines issued in the 1936 ‘Five Year Plan’ called for revolutionary change:
eliminating the party and cabinet system in favor of a ‘National Affairs Board’
with totalitarian control over Japanese national life. More practically,
totalist bureaucrats wanted to set up capital, labor and export controls,
bureaucratic infrastructure like planning boards, and a harsher line against
Big Business and the pursuit of ‘unpatriotic’ profit.
Intense time pressure was
reflected in the National Defense State’s tight schedule. General rearmament by
the mid-1930s meant that total war was expected to break out by the early 40s: the
1936 Plan set 1941 as the year for war with the USSR. And in those five years,
the National Defense State had to deliver, among other things, a doubling of
iron and steel production, a 15-fold increase in normal and synthetic oil
production, and a 70% increase in the Army to 50 divisions.
Things were not helped by
Japan’s fragmented political structure. Under the Meiji Constitution, the Army
and Navy were each responsible solely to the Emperor, not civilians, which
meant that there was no real institution that could set strategy or coordinate
between Army, Navy, and Government. Opposing factions could therefore easily
disrupt strategic implementation.
The National Defense State
had a pretty clever solution for this. Manchukuo was not meant to be just a
complementary economy for Japan, but also a policy test lab where totalists
could gain experience, experiment with planning, and form a policymaking
network ready to export successful schemes back to Japan. Two members of that
network, Tojo Hideki and Kishi Nobosuke, would oversee Japan’s war economy as
Prime Minister and Minister for Commerce during 1941 to 1944.
But this was in the
medium-run. In the short-run, implementation of the National Defense State ran
into furious opposition from politicians and business on one hand, and on the
other, traditionalists who did not believe that Japan could prepare for total
war in so short a time. In 1933, even before the totalist strategy got going, traditionalists
changed it to an immediate army buildup for a 1936 Limited War against the
USSR, and it was only after they were purged in the wake of the failed coup of
February 1936 that the totalists reclaimed their strategy.
The Navy also set its own
obstacles. The Army and Navy had lacked a common strategy since 1907: the Army wanted
to focus on Russia, the Navy on the USA. As an Army man, Ishiwara Kanji
tailored the National Defense State against the USSR – the so-called ‘Northern
Advance’. The Navy, fearing that this would divert budget to the Army, replied
with its own ‘Southern Advance’, claiming that the economic independence of the
National Defense State also required taking the metal, rubber and oil resources
of Southeast Asia. The two sides tried negotiating a common strategy in 1937, but
could only agree that Japan should fight only one power at a time. In practice,
the National Defense State ignored the Navy’s demands.
Even setting aside these
things, the National Defense State was conceptually flawed. Ironically, the
strategy actually reduced Japanese economic independence. From 1929-32, Japan
imported an average of 500,000 tons of scrap metal for steel production; by
1937 it was importing 2.5 million, most of this coming from the US. Japan also
became more dependent on US machine tools, rare materials and oil. The totalist
belief in synthetic substitutes was completely misplaced: Manchukuo was meant
to produce half a million kiloliters of synthetic oil annually– still just 2
months of estimated Navy use – but in 1938 made 2% of that.
Still, by early 1937 the
totalists had reason to be optimistic. They had won the bureaucratic battle
with their strategy and personnel relatively intact. New Prime Minister Konoe Fumimaro
was a supporter of economic development and even limited internal reform. Western
powers were busy with events in Europe. All the totalists needed was a few
years of peace.
To guarantee this, Japan
attempted to reconstitute the old internationalist order by proposing an
Anti-Comintern Pact in late 1936 against the Soviet Union, with its Asian components
being Japan, Nationalist China, and Britain. However, due to Japan’s need to
ally with Nazi Germany to preempt a German-Chinese alliance, Britain was not
interested and the effort failed.
China proved to be the
fatal contradiction for the National Defense State. Japanese development
required complete access to northern China’s resources, which the Chinese
clearly would not give. So the resources could only come through constant
low-level aggression and attempts to set up autonomous regimes in the region
throughout 1933-36. Unsurprisingly, this only inflamed regional tensions and in
1936, the Chinese Nationalists and Communists ended their civil war to unite
against Japanese expansionism. The period of peace the totalists hoped for was
unlikely to last long.
4. 1937-1941: Desperation
and Synthesis
From 1937 to 1941, Japan
was mired in deep grand strategic uncertainty. Even as total war drew nearer,
crisis after crisis exposed flaws in Japan’s strategic assumptions. But gradually,
under the threat of impending economic and military catastrophe, Japanese
leaders synthesized the traditionalist and totalist strategies into a hybrid
strategy that, while vague, would serve as the general strategic framework for
the Pacific War.
We should note three decision-making
dynamics when considering the Japanese reaction to crisis. The first is
perceived time pressure, not just in terms of WWII, but also other powers’ rearmament
programs and estimates of the time Japan had before victory became unlikely. As
time went on, smaller and smaller factors contributed to pressure: from naval
programs and economic embargoes in 1937 to the stationing of bombers in the
Philippines in 1941.
The second is circular
reasoning. Traditionalist leaders argued for military buildup to preempt
threatening enemy action, triggering responses that would be used to justify
further buildups. And as Japan neared buildup limits, aggression was left as
the only way to even the odds.
Last was ‘crisis reform
mentality’. Totalists recognized that crises helped push radical internal
reforms. That doesn’t mean that totalists went around creating them, at least
not after Manchuria, but it does mean that they were more comfortable with
crisis escalation, strategic gambling, and playing up Japan’s odds in future
conflict.
July 1937: The 2nd
Sino-Japanese War
Actual implementation of the
totalist National Defense State barely lasted a year before the Marco Polo
Bridge Incident broke out with China on July 1937. Ishiwara Kanji saw that war
would suck resources away from development, and so was initially reluctant to
escalate. Still, Japan had the resources to pursue both buildup and a short Limited
War, so 3 divisions were sent on a 3-month operation to settle north China once
and for all. The survival of the totalist National Defense State depended on
Japan successfully executing the traditionalist strategy of winning a Limited
War before it escalated into total war.
Instead, the 2nd
Sino-Japanese War proved that the traditionalists could not stop escalation. As
per Limited War, the Army opened by occupying north China and waiting for
counter-attack. Instead, the Chinese escalated by opening a southern front at
Shanghai, successfully drawing in large Japanese forces and leading them into China’s
interior. Wary of overextension, the Japanese themselves switched to total war by
1938, seeking to encircle and destroy enemy forces in decisive battle. But since
Japanese industry was too weak to support Army logistics or mechanization, the
Chinese had time to retreat before they were surrounded. So, far from winning a
Limited War, Japan was now supplying 800,000 soldiers, deep in enemy territory,
in a total war.
And the Japanese military
was not prepared for total war. Its logistics broke down halfway into the 1938
campaign against Wuhan, and it struggled to find transports for simultaneous
operations against Guangzhou. The economy was no better: war imports doubled
Japan’s 1937 spending, and to conserve resources, civilian industries by 1938
were cutting steel and oil consumption by 30%. The foreign exchange that was
earmarked for production expansion was instead spent on armaments.
By mid-1938, the National
Defense State was dead, with 1939 production expansion targets cut by half to
fund the war. Still, totalists had established labor and resource controls,
along with the Cabinet Planning Board as an economic superagency. The
declaration of ‘A New Order in East Asia’ in November 1937 also recognized
totalist logic, arguing that a Japan-Manchukuo-China axis would be self-sufficient
in all resources except copper, rubber and oil.
But these victories meant
little when war left Japan’s economy lagging behind competitors. In 1934, the
US Navy was already adding 102 extra ships to get up to Naval Treaty Limits;
now in 1938, it would exceed these limits by 20%, pushing past the Japanese
Navy’s 10:7 ratio. The Soviets had tripled their Far Eastern forces to 24
divisions and 2000 planes, 3 and 10 times that of Japan’s Manchukuo forces. To
keep up, the Army demanded 20 new divisions and the Navy 64 warships, which
strained Japanese resources to the limit.
July-September 1939:
Nomonhan and War in Europe
The next crisis period
began in July 1939. In response to Japanese attempts to end the China War
through terror-bombing, the US terminated its Commercial Treaty with Japan,
opening the way for embargoes starting 1940. Still, the key limitation for
Japan at this point was lack of foreign currency, meaning that Japan could only
import as much as it could export. And exports – and production in general –
was now severely affected by rationing, with 1940 targets now being a 14%
decline. Totalists responded by setting price controls and profit caps.
More serious was the
border clash with Soviet-backed Mongolia at Nomonhan in August 1939, which saw
an entire Kwantung Army division destroyed by Soviet units backed up by tanks
and trucks. At a time when Japan produced about 30 tanks and 1000 automobiles a
month, Nomonhan fully demonstrated that the Army would not even win a Limited
War without an industrial base that could support mechanization. Even
traditionalists had to accept that some economic development was needed.
That meant stopping the China War, and
plans were drawn for a retreat back to north China and Shanghai. But apart from
the loss of face, Japanese drawdowns also increased Chinese attacks, whether in
the form of Nationalist conventional warfare or Communist guerrilla warfare.
In this environment, the
outbreak of European War in September 1939 presented both a threat and an opportunity.
With Southeast Asian colonies now rerouting resources to their homelands,
Japan’s chances of total war preparation looked even more remote. But with
European forces also leaving Asia, there was the chance that Japan could get
the resources it needed from these vulnerable colonies. Military leaders now
began to reconsider the ‘Southern Advance’, and the possibility of fighting
multiple powers at once.
June-October 1940: Fall of
Western Europe and the New National Defense State
Whatever doubts there were
about the European War being a golden opportunity vanished with the
unanticipated collapse of Western Europe to Nazi Germany by June 1940. There
now seemed to be nothing between Japan and the resources of Southeast Asia,
offering an alternative pathway to fuel economic development. Even the
surviving British yielded to Japanese pressure to close the Burma Road to China
in June 1940.
And not a moment too soon.
The US’ 2-Ocean Navy Program of July 1940 would add another 200 ships, creating
an unmatchable force 4 times that of the Japanese Navy, in the same month it ended
aircraft, chemicals and machine tools exports. Meanwhile, Japan was rationing
everything from oil to rice and production was still falling.
The solution was an updated
version of the totalist National Defense State, unveiled in September 1940. The
notorious ‘Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere’ was actually the external expansion
prong of this strategy: stretching from Siberia to the South Pacific, the
Sphere’s regions, collectively possessing all the resources needed for total
war, would be developed according to their economic advantages, all complementing
Japan’s position as the leadership and technological ‘inner core’.
Internal reform would come
in the form of a ‘New Economic Structure’ that would, once again, impose state
direction over all economic activity. And like the last time, strident
opposition caused this plan to die a quick death. Again, totalists won
something when all Japanese parties merged into the Imperial Rule Assistance
Association in October 1940, mimicking the Communist and fascist mass parties
to drive reform.
So how could Japan turn
the Sphere into reality? The best option, for all concerned, was to diplomatically
pressure Southeast Asia into supplying Japan. But if it came to war, both Army
and Navy had their own strategy. For the Army, British Singapore was the key
obstacle, so it proposed another Limited War where the opening strike would
take it out, opening the way for the Dutch East Indies. Attacking the US in the
Philippines would escalate this into total war and so was to be avoided.
Instead, the US would be deterred through the Axis alliance, which hopefully
after Britain’s downfall would dominate Eurasia.
The Navy predictably
opposed this plan, which would have relegated it to escort duty. Still, it
raised good points: the Army had failed to prevent escalation in China, and
leaving the Philippines alone would violate the purpose of the new National
Defense State, as US bombers and the Asiatic Fleet could still intercept
Southeast Asian convoys at will. Instead, the Navy insisted that a Southward
Advance would mean going to war against the US, so it must have time to prepare
– and also, the Navy should get a larger budget.
With no overarching
coordination, the two sides compromised. The Navy agreed to begin war
mobilization, while the Army limited its immediate moves to northern French
Indochina, representing the latest effort at cutting Chinese aid flows and
forcing surrender. But compromise meant that Japan got the worst of both
worlds: interpreting this as Japan intending to establish the Sphere by force,
the British reopened the Burma Road, the Dutch issued export restrictions, and
the US imposed bans on strategic materiel to Japan, key among them iron, steel
and scrap metal.
June-July 1941: USSR or
Southeast Asia?
The scrap ban sank the
Japanese economy even further. The question was now less whether Japan could
prepare for total war, and more whether it could fight at all. By August 1940,
the Navy estimated that it had enough oil for 1 year of war. The Army, in March
41, gave Japan 2 years before it ran out of resources and ammunition. Another
key deadline was mid-1942, when US naval construction would allow it to fight
on 2 oceans, sharply curtailing Japan’s freedom of action.
This meant that the time
to do something about Southeast Asia’s resources was shrinking even as the
stakes were rising. With them, the Navy extended Japan’s warfighting capability
by 2 years, and for the Army, indefinitely – precious time needed to build the
National Defense State. There was also hope that capturing Southeast Asia would
trigger a domino effect that would destroy Britain’s Empire, let Nazi Germany
dominate Europe, cause an isolated China to collapse and ultimately keep the US
out of Eurasia.
An unexpected alternative
presented itself with Germany’s invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941. The
Army now argued that a 16-25 division advance into Eastern Siberia would now
also solve Japan’s resource problems, while at the same time allowing it to
make common cause with Western anti-Communists.
This was highly unwelcome
news for the Navy, as an Army engaged in China and Siberia was bound to take
budget from itself. Fatefully, the Navy now argued that the time was right for
a more forceful approach in Southeast Asia, reasoning that without the region’s
resources, Japan really had no staying power or strategic options, Siberia or
otherwise. Again, both sides compromised and the Army occupied Southern
Indochina in July 1941, triggering the famous US asset freeze and oil embargo.
A Hybrid Strategy for the
Pacific War
Instead of opening up
Japan’s strategic horizons, the oil embargo brought on by the Southern
Indochina Occupation sealed the decision for a militaristic Southward Advance.
Without US oil, Japan’s forces were estimated to be inoperable by mid-1942, and
the country would have to submit to US terms.
Imminent disaster meant
that Army, Navy and civilians were finally united under a common grand
strategy. With no more time to prepare, the military would have to work with
what it had and thus launch a traditionalist Limited War against the US and the
European powers lasting 6-12 months, with phases to seize Southeast Asia,
establish a defensive perimeter and dig in. The best-case scenario was an
Allied domino collapse, or America, like Russia 40 years before, would refuse
to sacrifice for Asia. But even in the likely total-war scenario, a slow
attritional grind against Japanese defenses would buy time to establish the
totalist National Defense State, allowing the war to stalemate indefinitely.
Indeed, for totalists this latest crisis was a bit of a relief, since total war
with the US would certainly bring about the reforms they wanted.
There would be further
debate over timing but, with UK naval and US air assets coming to East Asia,
December 1941 was agreed as the launch date. As the success of the first phase
was all-important, Admiral Yamamoto Isoroku proposed to strike the Pacific
Fleet to prevent any chance of it intervening and drawing off Japanese naval
assets during this critical stage, perhaps explaining why the battleships, rather
than the carriers or the docking facilities, were so prioritized.
None of this means that
Japanese leaders disregarded the risks involved. British Singapore, US airpower
and Chinese disrupting attacks were seen as particular hazards, and estimates showed
that Japan might not have enough shipping to exploit Southeast Asia if
intensive operations dragged beyond 6 months. Prime Minister Tojo compared the
effort to jumping off the veranda of Kiyomizu Temple. But time was running out,
the window of opportunity was shrinking, and the rewards for succeeding were
great.
Conclusion
Japan’s decision to begin
the Pacific War was neither nihilism nor suicidal overconfidence, but instead
the culmination of a strategic process, albeit distorted by events and time pressure,
to prepare for future war. As the international situation deteriorated and the
time to turn Japan into a self-sustaining industrial and resource bloc ran out,
hope fell on military solutions to provide the decisive blow for victory. The
US became the target because it suited the totalist impulses of the Army and
the bureaucratic needs of the Navy, both of which were only reinforced by US embargoes
and rearmament.
Despite the major
institutional weaknesses in Japanese strategymaking, Japan did have a strategy
for the Pacific War and chose a good enough time to execute the Limited War
phase of it. Catching the deploying Americans and British unprepared, by
mid-June Japan had a resource zone from Burma to Timor to the Central Pacific.
The shock of war also finally caused Big Business to acknowledge totalist
economic direction.
But the same problems that
afflicted the old National Defense State now came to haunt this one. The scale
and speed of US mobilization was higher than expected, and Yamamoto’s attempt
to repeat Pearl Harbor ended in disaster at Midway. The Japanese military was
not geared for total war and thus did not invest in the relevant assets, most
notably civil engineering. Interservice rivalry and compromise continued to
result in substandard strategy. But most fatally, totalists overestimated the
results that could be achieved by planning alone, eventually leaving Japan
helpless before an economic behemoth.
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