U.S. capitalists supplied Japanese Imperialists
U.S. capitalists supplied Japanese Imperialists
![](https://lemmygrad.ml/pictrs/image/be52ac78-8e7d-4714-b692-39ab81e35c56.jpeg?format=webp&thumbnail=128)
Writer, Anthony Potter; producers, Michael D. Ornstein, Anthony Potter; editor, Michael D. Ornstein; host narrator, Eric SevareidA documentary presentation on...
![Japan invades China [motion picture] : crisis in the Far East. : Alan Landsburg Productions : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive](https://lemmygrad.ml/pictrs/image/be52ac78-8e7d-4714-b692-39ab81e35c56.jpeg?format=webp)
Secondly, I think the question is one of the ability of Japan or Asia to become entirely independent of the West. When [the Imperial] Japanese talk[ed] about a New Order, they still continue[d] to trade with the United States, they enter[ed] into an alliance with Germany—in other words, so much of [Imperial] Japan’s action [wa]s Western‐oriented.
[…]
In September 1940 the United States imposed a complete embargo on exports to [Imperial] Japan of all grades of iron and scrap steel. Secretary of State, [Cordell] Hull, finally realized that his Asian policy had been a kind of appeasement. The United States also cut of shipments of aviation fuel to [Imperial] Japan.
The day after the American embargo, [Imperial] Japan joined forces with [the Third Reich] and [Fascist] Italy and signed the Tripartite Pact. [Imperial] Foreign Minister, [Yōsuke] Matsuoka, paraded triumphantly in Berlin, representing the most militant Japanese government to date.