bottom line, it is shocking what the japs accomplished with so few resources. and shocking how one sided production was after that.
Maybe their approach to war was more "modern" than ours was in the beginning; remember, we still had command staff in place that wanted battleships as opposed to carriers; that attitude changed real quick after Pearl Harbor. Plus, while we thought and knew in some cases that the possibility of an attack existed, we had no clue when and where. Japs were well organized and focused and frankly we weren't until 12.8.1941. They caught us totally off guard which really helped their success in the beginning. As for replacing armaments, etc since the US was supplying them a large chunk of raw product prior to the war the Japs attacked their main supply source which really hurt them going forward. Remember, the original thought process behind Pearl Harbor in the first place was to destroy our main fleet which the Japs thought would force the US to sue for peace if they had succeeded. The Japs screwed us up for 3-5 months but once we got going in the US there was no way the Japs could hold what they had gained. The big mistake for the Japs was the American carriers not being in Pearl Harbor on 12.07.1941. If you really want to look at it from that angle, the war started to turn within weeks after the attack: Japs sliced their own throat.
Maybe their approach to war was more "modern" than ours was in the beginning; remember, we still had command staff in place that wanted battleships as opposed to carriers; that attitude changed real quick after Pearl Harbor. Plus, while we thought and knew in some cases that the possibility of an attack existed, we had no clue when and where. Japs were well organized and focused and frankly we weren't until 12.8.1941. They caught us totally off guard which really helped their success in the beginning. As for replacing armaments, etc since the US was supplying them a large chunk of raw product prior to the war the Japs attacked their main supply source which really hurt them going forward. Remember, the original thought process behind Pearl Harbor in the first place was to destroy our main fleet which the Japs thought would force the US to sue for peace if they had succeeded. The Japs screwed us up for 3-5 months but once we got going in the US there was no way the Japs could hold what they had gained. The big mistake for the Japs was the American carriers not being in Pearl Harbor on 12.07.1941. If you really want to look at it from that angle, the war started to turn within weeks after the attack: Japs sliced their own throat.