The obvious answer to destroy the U.S pacific fleet due to the oil embargo. Japan took the gamble that destroying the fleet would give them time to consolidate their position until the US rebuilt. A gamble that would have looked very risky with US industrial power ten times that of Japan.
But what if Japan had gambled that US isolationism would prevail as it had done with Hitler, and ignored Pearl Harbor and the Philippines, concentrating its forces on the British and Dutch East Indies, India and Australia. They would have had a much larger combat force. With this force could Japan have invaded Australia, threatened British India?
Without Pearl Harbor would Hitler have prevailed in Europe or have been defeated by the Soviet Union? Or would Hitler have won with the Soviet Union being attacked in the Pacific by Japan. Leaving Britain alone to fight Germany.
Would the US have declared war on the Axis powers without the shock attack of Pearl Harbor? If so, when? What would be the trigger? And by that time would it have been too late? One cannot underestimate the America first isolationist policy in the American public. Americans overwhelmingly supported Roosevelt when he openly declared in a campaign speech on October 30,1940: "I have said this before, but I will say it again and again and again: Your boys are not going to be sent to any foreign wars."
But what if Japan had gambled that US isolationism would prevail as it had done with Hitler, and ignored Pearl Harbor and the Philippines, concentrating its forces on the British and Dutch East Indies, India and Australia. They would have had a much larger combat force. With this force could Japan have invaded Australia, threatened British India?
Without Pearl Harbor would Hitler have prevailed in Europe or have been defeated by the Soviet Union? Or would Hitler have won with the Soviet Union being attacked in the Pacific by Japan. Leaving Britain alone to fight Germany.
Would the US have declared war on the Axis powers without the shock attack of Pearl Harbor? If so, when? What would be the trigger? And by that time would it have been too late? One cannot underestimate the America first isolationist policy in the American public. Americans overwhelmingly supported Roosevelt when he openly declared in a campaign speech on October 30,1940: "I have said this before, but I will say it again and again and again: Your boys are not going to be sent to any foreign wars."