Asked by D.<3
would the japanese instrument of surrender be the compromise to pearl harbor?
Answers
Answered by
Reed
No. There was no compromise. The Japanese were defeated in war and surrendered. That's no compromise. Do you know what the word compromise means?
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/compromise
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/compromise
Answered by
Damon
No!
Japan had no choice about surrender. Even if atomic bombs were not dropped on Nagasaki and Hiroshima by the US their Naval forces were defeated in the Pacific and they faced running out of food and oil. Japan is a limited resource island chain and depends on trade for vital supplies, food, fuel, steel .... No Navy, no life.
Japan had no choice about surrender. Even if atomic bombs were not dropped on Nagasaki and Hiroshima by the US their Naval forces were defeated in the Pacific and they faced running out of food and oil. Japan is a limited resource island chain and depends on trade for vital supplies, food, fuel, steel .... No Navy, no life.
Answered by
Reed
World War II did NOT end in compromise of any kind. The war was fought until the Axis powers (Germany, Italy, and Japan) were defeated. Terms of surrender were dictated by the Allies (USA, Soviet Union, Britain...), no compromises.
Answered by
Reed
D.<3, attempts at compromise were made BEFORE the war with Japan started. They failed. The result of that failure was the war with Japan, part of World War II. Once war was declared, there was, nor could there have been, a compromise. Read the material I posted for you earlier. Stop stabbing in the dark looking for something that isn't there.
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