This post originally appeared on Today in Alternate History.
"Yesterday, December 7th, 1941 - a date which will live in infamy - the United States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces of the Empire of Japan". ~ FDR's OTL "Day of Infamy" Speech
December 7, 1941 - On this fateful day, the US naval base at Pearl Harbor in Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii, was destroyed by an atomic discharge.
This
terrifying weapon was developed by the Empire of Japan as a result of
technology espionage arising from a chance meeting six years earlier in
Nazi Germany. The founding father of modern physics research in Japan,
Dr Yoshio Noshina, had travelled to the Max Planck Institute in
Munich. It was there that he met a Jewish researcher called Lise
Meitner, an Austrian-Swedish physicist praised by Albert Einstein as the
"German Marie Curie". Needing to escape Nazi harassment, Noshina
convinced Meitner to return with him to Japan to continue her work.
Whether
Meitner later developed misgivings is unclear; however, in the
medium-term, her work convinced the Japanese leadership to throw national
resources at weaponizing the project. This huge programme included the
mining of uranium in eastern China as well as the close cooperation of
the Armed Services (not easy as much inter-service rivalry had plagued
Japan for many years). By the outbreak of war in Europe, Noshina's team
had overcome the major technical obstacles and were rapidly in the
process of developing the world's first atomic weapon.
The
expansion of the Co-Prosperity Sphere had been challenged by what the
Japanese saw as a series of unnecessary provocations from President
Roosevelt.
Although they fully understood that America was expanding and desired
greater influence, they believed that it was still possible to expel
Western interest from the entire region. Their leadership realized that
due to the industrial might of the United States, it was unrealistic to
expect that the Japan could ever prevail in a long drawn-out conflict.
What they needed then was a knock-out blow that would force the
Americans to withdraw from Asia Pacific before overwhelming resources
could be brought to bear.
But they had misunderstood the Western
mindset because FDR was even more aggressive as a result of the atomic
discharge. He was encouraged by British Prime Minister Winston
Churchill's words - "What kind of people do they think we are? Is it
possible they do not realize that we shall never cease to persevere
against them until they have been taught a lesson which they and the
world will never forget?" From their bellicose reaction to the surprise
attack on Pearl Harbor, it was abundantly clear that Britain and
America were more than willing to fight on no matter what, despite the
imbalance in technology. The next phase of the war was even more
frightening, with biological weapons being deployed by Japan in the
form of a deadly virus sent over the American West Coast in air balloons.
Despite their many victories and occasional high moments, the
Axis Powers never had the overwhelming capability to occupy the vastness
of North America. With American and exiled British forces subdued but
undefeated, the War dragged on for almost a decade. Finally, a
long-running stalemate on the Eastern front led to a Soviet-Nazi
armistice. This slowdown of military action triggered a general uneasy
peace settlement that left Western Europe in German hands, and the
Japanese preeminent in Asia Pacific. But the rivalry continued unabated
as the Great Powers continued to develop even more terrifying weapons
that would allow them to resume, and then win, a continuation war in the
near future.
Author's Note:
In reality, the
attack was a surprise military strike with conventional weapons by the
Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service. Disputes about the status of the
Japanese Atomic Bomb Development project remain unresolved to this day.
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