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The Pacific War and Contingent Victory - Why Japanese Defeat Was Not Inevitable (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,242
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The Pacific War and Contingent Victory - Why Japanese Defeat Was Not Inevitable (Hardcover)
Series: Modern War Studies
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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About the Allies' victory in the Pacific in WWII, it goes almost
without question that Japan's defeat was inevitable in the face of
overwhelming American military might and economic power. But the
outcome, Michael W. Myers contends, was actually anything but
inevitable. This book is Myers's thorough and deeply informed
explanation of how contingent the "foregone conclusion" of the war
in the Pacific really was. However disproportionate their
respective resources, both Japan and the Allied forces confronted
significant obstacles to ultimate victory. One the two sides
shared, Myers shows, was the lack of a single individual with the
knowledge, vision, and authority to formulate and implement
effective strategy. Both exercised leadership by committee, and
Myers cogently explains how this contributed to the contingent
nature of the conflict. A remarkable exercise in logical methods of
strategic thinking, his book analyzes decisive campaigns in the
Pacific War, examining the economic and strategic challenges that
both sides faced and had to overcome to achieve victory. Japan, for
instance, had two goals going into the war: to expand the
boundaries of what they termed the "Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity
Sphere" and to end their long and frustrating war in China. These
goals, as Myers shows us, had unforeseen and devastating logistical
and strategic consequences. But the United States faced similar
problems-as well as other hurdles specific to a nation not yet on
full war footing. Overturning conventional historiography, The
Pacific War and Contingent Victory clarifies the proper
relationship between freedom and determinism in historical
thinking. A compelling retelling of the Pacific war that might
easily have been, the book offers historical lessons in thinking
about contemporary American foreign policy and American
exceptionalism-most saliently about the dangers of the presumption
of American ascendancy.
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