4.2 • 3.7K Ratings
🗓️ 28 January 2020
⏱️ 44 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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0:00.0 | Welcome to the History Unplugged Podcast. |
0:05.4 | The unscripted show that celebrates unsung heroes, Mythbust's historical lies, and rediscoveres |
0:11.9 | the forgotten stories that changed our world. |
0:15.5 | I'm your host, Scott Rank. |
0:20.9 | There are a lot of different takes on how Pearl Harbor happened. |
0:23.8 | One take is that it was a collision that was largely unavoidable due to the growth of |
0:28.8 | fascistic imperialistic Japan and American sanctions on it. |
0:33.4 | Others would say that it was masterminded and triggered, perhaps Franklin D. Roosevelt |
0:37.9 | wanted America to be attacked so they'd be more easy to enter into World War II. |
0:42.6 | Some even argue that there was a Soviet mole in FDR's White House that triggered it, |
0:47.0 | but could it have been avoided? |
0:50.0 | While the American diplomat in Japan was working toward that particular goal. |
0:55.2 | Because Ambassador to Japan in 1941, Joseph Groot thought it could be avoided, he saw |
1:00.0 | the writing on the wall. |
1:01.4 | Economic sanctions were crippling Japan, rice was rationed, consumer goods were limited, |
1:06.2 | and oil was scarce, as America's news tightened around Japan's neck. |
1:11.0 | Japan and the US were locked in a battle of wills, but Japan refused to yield to American |
1:15.1 | demands. |
1:16.6 | In today's episode I'm speaking with Lou Papyr, whose new book, in the Cauldron, Terror, |
1:21.7 | tension, and the American ambassador struggled to avoid Pearl Harbor, looks at how the |
1:26.1 | US and Japan were locked into a Cauldron of boiling tensions, and Groot's attempts to |
1:30.8 | prevent the Pearl Harbor attacks before they happened. |
... |
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