Predicting Pearl Harbor: Billy Mitchell and the Path to War

The story of “a military aviation pioneer and patriot who tried—and failed—to warn [about] an attack on Pearl Harbor almost two decades before it occurred” (San Antonio Express-News).
 
Ever since Commodore Matthew Perry’s 1853 voyage into Japanese waters, the United States and Japan had been on a collision course. Gen. Billy Mitchell recognized the signs and foresaw the eventual showdown between the two nations—eighteen years before the tragedy of Pearl Harbor. When he traveled to Japan disguised as a tourist in 1924, what he found was a nation that had embraced a philosophy of isolationism. Japan had defeated China and Russia on the battlefield decades before, due in part to a veil of secrecy. China and Russia were nearly unable to carry out espionage missions against their enemy.
 
Yet Mitchell’s predictions were dismissed out of hand, and his attempts to have his theories taken seriously led to scorn and a subsequent court martialing. In this book, primary-source documents, memoirs, and firsthand testimonies deliver an exhaustive background to Mitchell’s prescient reports. Historian Ronald J. Drez presents an engaging account of the life and career of the man who not only foresaw the event that brought the United States into the Second World War, but also shaped the future of military air power—finally giving credence to the man called the “Cassandra General.”

1125487852
Predicting Pearl Harbor: Billy Mitchell and the Path to War

The story of “a military aviation pioneer and patriot who tried—and failed—to warn [about] an attack on Pearl Harbor almost two decades before it occurred” (San Antonio Express-News).
 
Ever since Commodore Matthew Perry’s 1853 voyage into Japanese waters, the United States and Japan had been on a collision course. Gen. Billy Mitchell recognized the signs and foresaw the eventual showdown between the two nations—eighteen years before the tragedy of Pearl Harbor. When he traveled to Japan disguised as a tourist in 1924, what he found was a nation that had embraced a philosophy of isolationism. Japan had defeated China and Russia on the battlefield decades before, due in part to a veil of secrecy. China and Russia were nearly unable to carry out espionage missions against their enemy.
 
Yet Mitchell’s predictions were dismissed out of hand, and his attempts to have his theories taken seriously led to scorn and a subsequent court martialing. In this book, primary-source documents, memoirs, and firsthand testimonies deliver an exhaustive background to Mitchell’s prescient reports. Historian Ronald J. Drez presents an engaging account of the life and career of the man who not only foresaw the event that brought the United States into the Second World War, but also shaped the future of military air power—finally giving credence to the man called the “Cassandra General.”

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Predicting Pearl Harbor: Billy Mitchell and the Path to War

Predicting Pearl Harbor: Billy Mitchell and the Path to War

by Ronald Drez
Predicting Pearl Harbor: Billy Mitchell and the Path to War

Predicting Pearl Harbor: Billy Mitchell and the Path to War

by Ronald Drez

eBook

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Overview

The story of “a military aviation pioneer and patriot who tried—and failed—to warn [about] an attack on Pearl Harbor almost two decades before it occurred” (San Antonio Express-News).
 
Ever since Commodore Matthew Perry’s 1853 voyage into Japanese waters, the United States and Japan had been on a collision course. Gen. Billy Mitchell recognized the signs and foresaw the eventual showdown between the two nations—eighteen years before the tragedy of Pearl Harbor. When he traveled to Japan disguised as a tourist in 1924, what he found was a nation that had embraced a philosophy of isolationism. Japan had defeated China and Russia on the battlefield decades before, due in part to a veil of secrecy. China and Russia were nearly unable to carry out espionage missions against their enemy.
 
Yet Mitchell’s predictions were dismissed out of hand, and his attempts to have his theories taken seriously led to scorn and a subsequent court martialing. In this book, primary-source documents, memoirs, and firsthand testimonies deliver an exhaustive background to Mitchell’s prescient reports. Historian Ronald J. Drez presents an engaging account of the life and career of the man who not only foresaw the event that brought the United States into the Second World War, but also shaped the future of military air power—finally giving credence to the man called the “Cassandra General.”


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781455623167
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing SC
Publication date: 12/02/2022
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 272
Sales rank: 388,405
File size: 13 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Ronald J. Drez was a research associate and friend of the late Dr. Stephen E. Ambrose. He served as assistant director of the Eisenhower Center for American Studies at the University of New Orleans and has lectured, researched, and written on World War II for years. This is his tenth published book.

Table of Contents

Preface 9

Introduction 13

Chapter 1 Unlocking Pandora's Box 21

Chapter 2 The First Cassandra: Gen. Homer Lea 37

Chapter 3 Mitchell 49

Chapter 4 "Make the Navy Eat Bombs" 67

Chapter 5 Crying in the Wilderness 85

Chapter 6 Niihan: The Forbidden Island 97

Chapter 7 The Plying Trash Pile 113

Chapter 8 Falling on His Sword 129

Chapter 9 Racing to the Abyss 145

Chapter 10 The Dog Robbers 163

Chapter 11 Distant Thunder 181

Chapter 12 Infamy and Treachery 203

Epilogue 225

Notes 239

Index 261

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