If you would like to catch up on some recent posts, here is a place where you can easily access some posts you might have missed. I hope it helps… enjoy.
Continue readingPatris Corde
Today is the Solemnity of St. Joseph. Several years ago Pope Francis wrote the Apostolic Letter Patris Corde – With a Father’s Heart. It is a wonderful reflection of the attributes and characteristics of fatherhood – and also understands that St. Joseph serves as a model, not just for fathers, but for all who care for others. Click here to read the full text of Pope Francis’ Apostolic Letter.
The biblical record of St. Joseph is narrated by Matthew and Luke. Their accounts tell us very little, yet enough for us to appreciate what sort of father he was, and the mission entrusted to him by God’s providence. In so many of the scenes, Joseph is navigating his way through uncertainty, the unexpected, and events that seem to ask too much of him – and yet he is a just and righteous man seeking to do God’s will.
I think it notable that today’s celebration offers two gospel selections: (1) the account from Matthew wherein Joseph knows that Mary is already with child or (2) the child Jesus is lost in the Temple. In both accounts Joseph’s concern is for the other. In the first account, while he feels the need to end the betrothal to Mary he is concerned about Mary’s welfare, that she not be exposed to shame. In the second account, his is a natural concern for a missing child. I have often wondered what Joseph thought upon finding Jesus and the child says: “Why were you looking for me? Did you not know that I must be in my Father’s house?” The text tells us neither he or Mary understood. But I wonder if Jesus’ word cut Joseph “to the quick.” Did Joseph feel diminished or dismissed? Pope Francis comments on all this:
Often in life, things happen whose meaning we do not understand. Our first reaction is frequently one of disappointment and rebellion. Joseph set aside his own ideas in order to accept the course of events and, mysterious as they seemed, to embrace them, take responsibility for them and make them part of his own history. Unless we are reconciled with our own history, we will be unable to take a single step forward, for we will always remain hostage to our expectations and the disappointments that follow. The spiritual path that Joseph traces for us is not one that explains, but accepts. Only as a result of this acceptance, this reconciliation, can we begin to glimpse a broader history, a deeper meaning.”
In those moments in our life when disappointment arrives and we are asked to set aside our own ideas, with the help of St. Joseph, may we recognize the movement of the Spirit calling us into the mysterious unfolding of God’s plan.
Image credit: detail of St Joseph with the Infant Jesus | Guido Reni, 1620s | Hermitage Museum St Petersburg Russia | PD-US
Presumptions and Assumptions

In the previous posts we considered the strategic and tactical plans that began to take shape in 1940 into 1941 – the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) war planning and the Germany-first strategy by the United States. Underneath all that, both Japan and the United States approached the coming conflict with deeply rooted presumptions about culture, race, and military capability. These assumptions shaped strategy, diplomacy, and expectations about how the war would unfold. In many cases, they proved to be serious misjudgments on both sides.
Japanese leaders believed their society possessed a unique moral cohesion derived from loyalty to the emperor and a strong collective identity. The ethos of duty, sacrifice, and endurance often summarized in terms such as seishin (spiritual fighting spirit) was thought to provide a decisive advantage in war. This belief led many Japanese officers to assume that national willpower could compensate for material disadvantages. Military training emphasized discipline, courage, and willingness to die for the state, which were viewed as traits lacking in Western societies.
At the same time, Japanese observers also believed that American society was overly individualistic, comfort-oriented, and politically divided. Because Americans valued personal prosperity and safety, Japanese planners assumed the United States might lack the resolve to sustain a long and costly war far from home. These assumptions helped support the belief that a sudden shock, such as the attack on Pearl Harbor, might move the United States to negotiate rather than fight a prolonged war.
In Japan, modern nationalism incorporated ideas that the Japanese people were a uniquely pure and spiritually superior race. As Japan’s power expanded in Asia, this belief blended with the claim that Japan was the natural leader of the region. Many Japanese leaders saw Western colonial dominance in Asia as hypocritical and believed Japan had a mission to reshape the regional order.
American perceptions of Japan were shaped by a mixture of limited knowledge, racial stereotypes, and strategic complacency. Many Americans saw Japan as a small, resource-poor nation that could not match the industrial strength of the United States.
Culturally, Americans often viewed Japanese society as rigid, authoritarian, and overly obedient, assuming that soldiers trained in such a system would lack initiative or flexibility in combat. There was also a tendency to believe that Japan relied heavily on imitation of Western technology rather than genuine innovation. American planners expected Japanese forces to fight aggressively at the outset but believed that Japanese morale and capacity would eventually collapse under sustained pressure.
In the United States, racial attitudes toward Japan were shaped by decades of exclusion laws, immigration restrictions, and popular stereotypes. Japanese people were often portrayed as inscrutable, fanatical, or technologically inferior, while Western societies were assumed to possess inherent cultural and scientific advantages. These mutual racial assumptions deepened mistrust and contributed to a climate in which both sides underestimated the capabilities of the other.
While Japanese racism was evident in its views of their Asian neighbors, the United States, not without its own parochial and racial views of the Japanese, lacked understanding of Japan’s history and culture that was considered secondary to the assumption of a general superiority of peoples of European descent. Prior to December 1941, the assumed moral high ground was proven by the widespread accounts of Japanese atrocities in Nanking, Shanghai, and other events. Besides, according to some experts, the IJA had been bogged down in China for four years; the Soviets had made quick work of them at Nomonhan and the Japanese Navy had not been engaged in battle on the high seas since 1905. How accomplished could their military be? Even after the attack at Pearl Harbor, U.S. Secretary of War Stimson, asserted that Nazi Germany must have planned the attack, apparently thinking the blitzkrieg at Pearl Harbor was beyond Japan’s military planning capabilities. Stimson must have been unaware the “sneak attack” was actually a hallmark of the Japanese military as the Russians discovered in 1904. So embedded were such convictions, widespread within the Roosevelt administration, that key policymakers were blinded to the likely consequences of the decisions to impose what amounted to a complete trade embargo of Japan in the summer of 1941.
A Matter of Honor
By the beginning of 1941, Japan ruled over Korea and Manchuria, had conquered much of China north of the Great Wall and made inroads into central China, seized all of China’s major ports and islands in the South China Sea, and established a military presence in northern French Indochina. Japan was poised to invade resource-rich Southeast Asia, which Japanese propagandists had long and loudly proclaimed was rightfully within Japan’s sphere of influence, notwithstanding the fact that almost all of Southeast Asia lay under British, Dutch, French, and American colonial rule.
Japan had signed the Tripartite Act which the U.S. rightly understood as intended to deter the United States from going to war with Germany or Japan by raising the specter of a two-ocean war. Their signature transformed Japan from regional threat into a potential extension of Hitler’s agenda of aggression, especially with respect to the Soviet Union after the Nazi invasion of June 22, 1941. The hardliners in Washington DC correctly predicted that now Japan would turn towards Southeast Asia.
For the Japanese all things were a matter of honor and destiny. After the embargo it became a matter of necessity. Japan’s leaders were not certain that moving on Southeast Asia would cause a U.S. reaction but assumed that it would. The Roosevelt administration regarded a Japanese invasion of Southeast Asia, especially the oil-rich Dutch East Indies and tin and rubber-rich British Malaya, as strategically unacceptable. Control of Southeast Asia would weaken the British Empire and threaten India, Australia, and New Zealand allies in the war against Germany. Also, it would also afford Japan access to oil and other critical raw materials that would reduce its economic dependence on the United States, weakening the effect of other economic sanctions as controls on Japanese aggression.
While it might seem the U.S. reaction was simply an economic consideration. The more important consideration was keeping Britain in the war. It was a fundamental strategy of the United States and Britain that they could not afford to lose the raw material wealth and the sea lanes of Southeast Asia even if it meant war. Though the administration was never prepared to go to war over China, it regarded an extension of Japan’s empire into Southeast Asia as unacceptable. Thus Japan provoked a strong American response when Japanese forces occupied southern French Indochina in July 1941 as an obvious preliminary to further southward military moves. Operating out of southern French Indochina, the superior long-ranged Japanese naval bombers could provide air control of the seas around Singapore and support ground operations in Malay – both interim steps to the oil riches of Sumatra, Borneo and Java.
The United States was prepared to declare economic war on Japan as a means of deterring—or at least delaying—a Japanese advance into Southeast Asia, and that is exactly what the Roosevelt administration did in July 1941. The post The Financial Freeze details how those actions unfolded. In Going to War With Japan: 1937-1941, the author Jonathan Utley argues that the intent of the financial freeze was not to cut off all oil, but to ration it at a rate that let Japan know we control the spigot. Or as Roosevelt famously remarked it was to be like a noose around Japan’s neck which he would give it a jerk now and then to keep their attention. But by the end of August 1941, Roosevelt declined to reverse the decision. The reasons remain unclear. Perhaps he believed that a reversal would look like a retreat, or perhaps he had come to regard a Japanese advance into Southeast Asia as inevitable.
What was intended and what eventually happened is the nature of unintended consequences.
The consequence was that as a result of the de facto embargo and in conjunction with the seizure of Japanese assets by Great Britain and the Netherlands, there was a complete suspension of Japanese economic access to the United States and the destruction of between 50 and 75 percent of Japan’s foreign trade. No nation would meekly accept this situation – certainly the U.S. would not if such had been imposed on them. And neither did the Japanese.
Image credit: various photographs from Naval Aviation Museum, National World War II Museum, and US Navy Archive | Utley quote taken from Going to War with Japan 1937-1941
Martha, the Sister of Lazarus
The gospel reading for 5th Sunday in Lent is the account of the raising of Lazarus from the dead (John 11:1-45). In yesterday’s post we considered the debate among Jesus and the disciples about returning to Galilee to attend to the illness of Lazarus. In today’s post we arrive in Bethany and Jesus’ dialogues with the sisters of Lazarus begin. Continue reading
More than Remembering
The connection between the first reading and the Gospel becomes much deeper when we notice how the Servant imagery in Isaiah quietly anticipates the way Jesus speaks about Himself in John’s Gospel. I think the two connections are especially striking. Isaiah 49 belongs to the Second Servant Song (Isaiah 49:1–13). In this passage God appoints His Servant to restore Israel and bring salvation to the nations. God says: “I will keep you and give you as a covenant to the people…to say to the prisoners: Come out! to those in darkness: Show yourselves!” This Servant is presented as the one through whom God’s saving work reaches the world. Now listen to the language Jesus uses in John 5: “Just as the Father raises the dead and gives life, so also the Son gives life to whom He wills… the dead will hear the voice of the Son of God, and those who hear will live.” I am struck by the parallels:
| Isaiah 49 The Servant Who Restores Life | John 5 The Son Who Gives Life |
| God appoints a Servant to restore the people | The Father sends the Son |
| The Servant liberates prisoners | The Son calls the dead to life |
| The Servant brings people out of darkness | The Son’s voice awakens the spiritually dead |
What Isaiah describes poetically as release from captivity, Jesus interprets at a deeper level as the gift of divine life. In other words, Jesus is presenting Himself as the fulfillment of the Servant’s mission.
When these connections are noticed, the readings create a unified message. Isaiah presents God’s promise that He has not forgotten His people and will send a Servant to restore them. John reveals the fulfillment that His Father is still at work and that the Son carries out that work by giving life and bringing judgment.
The tenderness of Isaiah—“Can a mother forget her child?”—finds its concrete expression in Christ’s mission. God does more than merely remember His people. He comes among us in the person of the Son to restore our life. What Isaiah promised in poetry, Jesus accomplishes in person.
Image credit: detail of Jesus Falls the Second Time by Giovanni Domenico Tiepolo, c. 1745-49 | Church of San Polo (Venice) | PD – Wikimedia Commons
Germany First

From early 1941 onward, the Japanese were establishing and refining their war strategy which, as regards the U.S., which translated into a three part movement: attacking the Pacific Fleet in Pearl Harbor, establishing a defensive line across the Central Pacific, and attriting the U.S. fleet when they moved westward. Meanwhile, the United States did not want war with Japan and yet ended up in exactly the war Japan did not want: an extended war of attrition and logistics pitted against the manufacturing power of American industry and resources.
The historical record is quite clear that the Roosevelt administration was committed to a “Germany-first” strategy, stopping Hitler in Europe. Hitler’s facism was viewed as the modern plague that must be stopped lest it infect the whole world. In 1941 the U.S. was engaged in an undeclared shooting war with Nazi submarines in the North Atlantic that was a precursor to what awaited the U.S. in the event of a declared war. In the first half of 1942, almost 600 allied merchant ships were lost to German U-boats. The Roosevelt Administration needed to keep Britain in the war with supplies and a key to that was avoiding war with Germany. The last thing Roosevelt wanted was a war in the Pacific.
Jonathan Utley observes “No one during the fall of 1941 wanted war with Japan. The Navy preferred to concentrate on the Atlantic. The Army said it needed a few more months before it would be ready in the Philippines. Hull had made the search for peace his primary concern for months. Roosevelt could see nothing to be gained by a war with Japan. Hawks such as Acheson, Ickes, and Morgenthau argued that their strong policies would avoid war, not provoke one.”
The administration maintained military sales to China with the goal of keeping the Soviets in the fight, focused on Germany without having to worry about an eastern front attack by Japan. With military supplies delivered via the “Burma Road” the Chinese were able to continue to keep IJA troops engaged, bogged down, and thus Japan was unable to initiate any incursions into Siberia or Mongolia. This ensured that the Soviets did not have to wage a two-front war.
But there was a limit: the U.S. administration was not willing to go to war with Japan over China. With Japan controlling all significant Chinese ports, the only two available supply routes were the Burma Road and smuggling via Hong Kong. The U.S. goal was to provide enough arms to China so as to deter or inhibit a Japanese advance into Southeast Asia. This goal was advanced by relocating the Pacific Fleet to Pearl Harbor from their California ports, the imposition of economic sanctions, and beginning a slow build up on forces and long-range bombers in the Philippines. The administration was mistaken in their belief. The U.S. presumed realism and rationality on the part of the Japanese and failed to understand that severe sanction (i.e. the financial freeze and de facto oil embargo) would be tantamount to an act of war.
The Germany First Priority
The U.S. posture vis-a-vis Japan was complicated by a “Germany First” outlook that guided U.S. policy even before Pearl Harbor and shaped military planning and diplomacy. President Roosevelt and military planners believed that Nazi Germany posed the greatest global threat. In November 1940, Chief of Naval Operations Adm. Harold Stark recommended a defensive posture in the Pacific as regards Japan while prioritizing the defeat of Germany and Italy in Europe. He produced this recommendation in a memorandum that came to be known as “Plan Dog” which laid out U.S. options in the event of war against Germany, Japan, or both. He reviewed several possible scenarios and plans, lettering them from “A” through “D,” and ultimately recommended Plan “D.” At that time, the U.S. Navy’s phonetic alphabet for “D” was “dog”: hence the name.
U.S. leaders came to realize that the scenarios underlying the older “color-coded” war plans were based on the assumption that the United States would fight a war against a single enemy one-on-one. It was increasingly clear that these were no longer realistic assumptions. The United States was increasingly likely to face war against multiple enemies across the globe. In which case, the country would need allies, which meant Britain, Australia, New Zealand, and the Netherlands, all of whom had interests in the Southwest Pacific.
By November 1940, France had fallen, and Britain stood alone against Nazi Germany and its Italian allies. The German bombing campaign against Britain had begun. Recognizing the consequences of a British defeat, President Franklin Roosevelt had been gradually increasing U.S. support to the United Kingdom, first through the “cash and carry” policy in September 1939, and then through the “destroyers for bases” deal in September 1940 which became the December 1940 Lend-Lease program. In Asia, meanwhile, Japan’s invasion of China continued, and in September they occupied the northern part of French Indo-China.
Roosevelt was constrained by public opinion, which strongly opposed U.S. involvement in another major foreign war. Stark’s memorandum, therefore, came at a critical time—before the United States was formally at war, but as war was looking more and more likely. It was by no means clear what course the United States should or would follow. Admiral Stark laid out the essence of the grand strategic problem facing the United States, and he concisely crafted the best courses of action. Plan A was war with Japan only and no allies. Plan B was war with Japan only supported by British Allies. Plan C was war with the Axis allies and no allies of our own. Plan E was no stay out of the wars all together
Plan Dog was we’d be at war with Germany and Italy in support of Britain while Japan was not yet involved. Any involvement with Japan would be at the initiation of the United States.
“…our major national objectives in the immediate future might be stated as preservation of the territorial, economic, and ideological integrity of the United States, plus that of the remainder of the Western hemisphere; the prevention of the disruption of the British Empire… and the diminution of the offensive military power of Japan, with a view to the retention of our economic and political interest in the Far East. It is doubtful however that it would be in our interest to reduce Japan to the status of an inferior military and economic power. A balance of power in the Far East is as much to our interest as a balance of power in Europe.” (emphasis added)
Admiral Stark was not optimistic of Britain’s ability to remain in the war and as a result he recommended an immediate, intentional build up of U.S. Army and Navy capability. He wrote, “Until such time as the United States should decide to engage its full forces in war, I recommend that we pursue a course that will most rapidly increase the military strength of both the Army and the Navy, that is to say, adopt Alternative (A) without hostilities.”
President Roosevelt took Stark’s recommendations regarding the build up of the nation’s military capability, but President Roosevelt soon concluded that Nazi Germany posed the greatest global threat. The Plan Dog memorandum recommended that if the United States were forced into war against both Germany and Japan, it should fight defensively in the Pacific while concentrating resources on defeating Germany in Europe. As a result U.S. rearmament focused heavily on the Atlantic theater, increasing support was given to Britain through Lend-Lease, and the Navy was deeply engaged in convoy protection in the Atlantic and already clashing with German submarines.
Because Roosevelt wanted to prevent Japan from expanding while the U.S. focused on Europe, Washington set out to deter Japanese expansion through economic pressure rather than immediate war. Japanese diplomats and naval intelligence closely followed these developments. Tokyo concluded that the United States expected eventual war with Germany, were prioritizing European commitments and so the U.S. resources would be divided between two oceans. From the Japanese perspective, this created a temporary window of opportunity in the Pacific.
The “Germany First” strategy shaped Japanese thinking in two ways. First, it suggested that the United States might avoid a prolonged Pacific war if forced to fight Germany simultaneously. Second, Japanese planners believed that if the Pacific Fleet were crippled, the United States would be strategically compelled to concentrate on the European war. This assumption encouraged the idea that a surprise strike could secure time for Japan to seize Southeast Asian resources, establish a defensive perimeter in the Central Pacific, and force the United States to negotiate their exit from the Asia-Pacific conflict
The unintended consequence of all this was “Plan X” – not envisioned by Admiral Stark: war with the Axis allies, a two-ocean war, all initiated by Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor. Japan’s reasoning underestimated American political and military capacity. Instead of forcing strategic restraint, the attack on Pearl Harbor produced immediate ramp-up in U.S. mobilization and a long-term industrial expansion that Japan could never hope to match.
Image credit: various photographs from Naval Aviation Museum, National World War II Museum, and US Navy Archive | Plan Dog available online at the FDR Library at Marist College.
Should Jesus Go to Bethany?
The gospel reading for 5th Sunday in Lent is the account of the raising of Lazarus from the dead (John 11:1-45). In yesterday’s post we discussed the outline of the passage and the setting of the gospel story, introducing a theme previously given by John:“I have come that they might have life and have it to the full” (10:10). Today we consider the debate among Jesus and the disciples about returning to Galilee to attend to the illness of Lazarus. Continue reading
On Living Waters
Part of the baptismal ceremony for infants is the blessing of the waters of the sacrament. It is a wonderful blessing that tells the history of salvation through the story of the living waters. It is a panorama of events from Sacred Scripture: “At the very dawn of creation your Spirit breathed on the waters, making them the wellspring of all holiness. The waters of the great flood you made a sign of the waters of baptism, that make an end of sin and a new beginning of goodness. Through the waters of the Red Sea you led Israel out of slavery, to be an image of God’s holy people, set free from sin by baptism. In the waters of the Jordan your Son was baptized by John and anointed with the Spirit. Your Son willed that water and blood should flow from his side as he hung upon the cross.”
It is as Jesus tells Nicodemus, he must be born of water and Spirit – it is what we celebrate in the Sacrament of Baptism. One chapter later in John’s gospel Jesus meets the Samaritan woman at Jacob’s well and asks her if she wants “living water” (hydor zon), an expression that has two possible meanings. It can mean fresh, running water (spring water as opposed to water from a cistern), or it can mean living/life-giving water.
From the side of Jesus, water flowing as a means of living waters of baptism for the whole world.
It was an image foreshadowed in the first reading today from the Prophet Ezekiel: “I saw water flowing out from beneath the threshold of the temple toward the east.” It is water that“ flows…and empties into the sea, the salt waters, which it makes fresh. Wherever the river flows, every sort of living creature that can multiply shall live, and there shall be abundant fish, for wherever this water comes the sea shall be made fresh. Along both banks of the river, fruit trees of every kind shall grow; their leaves shall not fade, nor their fruit fail. Every month they shall bear fresh fruit, for they shall be watered by the flow from the sanctuary.” (Eze 47:9,12)
As the New Testament mentions in several places, Jesus is the new Temple, the one Ezekiel was describing. And as St. Paul reminds us, in our Baptism, born from above by water and the Holy Spirit, we too are temples of God.
The challenge is to live out our baptismal promises and be like Ezekiel’s Temple vision: a source of living water in which our faith and witness makes fresh and new the lives of others.
Image credit: Photo by Pixabay – macro-photography-of-water-waves-355288 | CC0
The Imperial Japanese Navy and War Planning

While the Imperial Japanese Army (IJA) lurched into escalation through a series of “incidents” in China and suffered defeat at Nomanhan at the hands of the Soviets, the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) followed a very different strategic logic. It was one that was more calculated and globally oriented, though ultimately no less expansionist.
Both Japan and the U.S. were adherents of the theories of Alfred Thayer Mahan (1890) who posited that national greatness is inextricably linked to sea power, defined as the ability to control vital maritime trade routes and project naval force. Mahan argued that a large, concentrated, offensive, steam-driven navy (as opposed to sail) supported by merchant shipping and overseas colonies, is essential for securing economic wealth and international influence.
By the early 1930s, the IJN had concluded that Japan’s survival depended on maritime access to resources. As such, it was clear that the decisive threat was the United States, not China or the Soviets (IJA’s concerns). IJN leaders, many of whom had served or studied in the United States, knew war, if it came, would be long, decided by naval forces, and dependent on control of the seas. This contrasted sharply with the Army’s fixation on continental expansion, border clashes and the ideological fixation against communism.
Decisive Battle Doctrine
The Navy’s planning revolved around kantai kessen (decisive fleet battle) which is described in a previous post: War Plan Orange. In short, the operational concept was to allow the U.S. Pacific Fleet to steam west 3,000 miles to the Western Pacific (Mahan’s theory was that for every 1,000 miles of ocean transit a fleet would lose 10% of its combatant strength). But along the way to attrit the U.S. Fleet with submarines and air attacks. The now weakened U.S. Fleet would be destroyed in a decisive surface battle in Japanese waters.
This doctrine was at the root of naval construction efforts: battleships, cruisers, destroyers, and aircraft carriers. The IJN was at the forefront of aviation, not only for deployment on carriers, but also for island-based airfields across Micronesia (Truk, Saipan, Palau and others). Such installations were sited on expected lines of advance of the US Fleet and served as “unsinkable aircraft carriers.” In this same vein, Japan emphasized long-range naval aviation, knowing that would be a key to success in the open waters of the Pacific. The Japanese also greatly expanded their submarine fleet.
The IJN and China
When the Army expanded the Sino-Japanese war after the Marco Polo Bridge Incident, the Navy viewed it as a dangerous distraction from the larger strategic threat. Nonetheless, the Navy took on the natural role of blockading the Chinese coast, seizing key ports (Shanghai, Canton), and protecting maritime supply lines for Army forces. At the same time, the IJN took the opportunity to develop experience in long-range bombing by extensive naval air bombing of Chinese cities. The Navy hoped the whole “China affair” would quickly move to a political settlement so that resources and attention would focus on the coming naval battles
Internal Navy Debate: Treaty Faction vs. Fleet Faction
The Washington Naval Treaties of 1922 divided the IJN for the next 20 years. The resulting factions still mattered right up to 1941. In short, the Treaty Faction favored naval arms limitation, feared war with the U.S. and preferred diplomacy and gradual expansion. The Fleet Faction rejected treaty limits as shameful and dishonorable, sSought parity through qualitative superiority, and held that war with the U.S. was inevitable. By the late 1930s, the Fleet Faction dominated, especially after Japan withdrew from naval treaties in 1934 and began to build new combatants exceeding the limitation of the treaty. A key concept of the Fleet Faction was parity with the United States. While they knew the U.S. could outbuild Japan, they also knew that the U.S. was required to be a two-ocean navy. The Fleet Faction did not have many officers who were familiar with the U.S. industrial capacity or resources. Their basic assumption of parity in the Pacific was seriously wrong, and in addition, the focus on combatants severely diminished the production of merchant shipping and especially fleet oil tankers. In 1939, despite having a large merchant marine, Japan still relied on foreign-flagged vessels for nearly 30% to 40% of its shipping needs to sustain its economy, particularly for raw materials and oil. This persisted even into 1941. Japan’s military and industrial goals meant that it had to import 94% of requirements for oil, aviation fuel, gasoline, lubricants, and general purpose oil-based products.
Japan’s reliance on pre-war, Allied-flagged tankers, which ceased upon war declaration, left them with a massive logistical gap. Japan did not possess enough specialized oil tankers to adequately transport oil from Southeast Asia (the “Southern Resource Area”) to Japan after Pearl Harbor. In 1941 Japan required 32 million barrels of oil annually. This equated to 5 million (dead-weight) tons of shipping. Japan’s tanker fleet was inadequate, with only 49 merchant tankers (approx. 587,000 tons) available at the start of the war – only 10 percent of their needs. The lack of tankers was a critical failure in planning, as Japan failed to prioritize building enough tankers to secure their oil lifeline. While they quickly conquered oil fields, allied submarines and aircraft sank tankers faster than they could be replaced, severely crippling the oil supply line.
IJN Operational Planning
The Army’s 1939 defeat by the Soviets at Nomonhan had an impactful, yet indirect effect on naval policy. The IJN concluded that continental expansion (China, Siberia, Mongolia, etc) was a strategic dead end. As such Japan must look south, not north. This reinforced the Navy’s preferred Southern Advance (Nanshin-ron) to Southeast Asia, the Dutch East Indies, and British Malaya
From the autumn of 1939 forward, naval war plans increasingly assumed U.S. embargoes and thus the need for preemptive action. Even then IJN leaders repeatedly warned the Diet and the Emperor about U.S. industrial superiority, repeatedly stressing that a long war with the United States could not be won. Oil reserves sufficient for roughly 18–24 months; after that, the fleet would be immobilized and any war fought later would be unwinnable.
No one expressed this more bluntly than Admiral Yamamoto, the architect of the Pearl Harbor attack, who warned that Japan could: “Run wild for six months… but I have no confidence after that.” It was sober professional judgment shared widely in naval circles.
The IJN lived with a deep internal contradiction. It understood with remarkable clarity that Japan could not win a long war against the United States, yet it simultaneously embraced plans that assumed a short, decisive victory would somehow occur. This was not simple irrationality. It was a coexistence of strategic realism and catastrophic optimism, reinforced by culture, doctrine, and institutional pressure.
Knowing a long war was unwinnable, it was clear that realism led not to peace, but to a compressed decision space. Diplomacy required abandoning China which was politically impossible. Waiting meant fuel exhaustion which was strategically fatal. Therefore, war now was preferable to war later. This logic did not say Japan could win a long war. It said Japan must force a short one.
The planning for the Attack on Pearl Harbor captures the paradox perfectly. The plan was realistic: neutralize the U.S. Pacific Fleet early. buy time to seize oil-rich territories, and establish a defensive perimeter too costly to break. The plan was catastrophically optimistic because it hoped the Americans would lose the will to fight, the U.S. would seek to negotiate after early setbacks, and so Japan could dictate terms before U.S. industrial power fully mobilized. Naval planners did not believe Japan could outbuild the U.S. They believed it could outshock it.
War Games
In the years before 1941, the IJN prided itself on war gaming as a mark of scientific modernity. They were conducted at the Naval War College; using detailed maps, counters, and probability tables; and overseen by highly trained staff officers. These war games were treated as tools for refining doctrine, proof of intellectual seriousness, and reinforcement of professional military identity. But they were not neutral experiments. They were embedded in the doctrine of decisive battle thinking.
Nearly all IJN war games began with non-negotiable assumptions: war would be decided by a single climactic encounter, the U.S. forces would advance methodically across the Pacific, and Japan would attrit the enemy and then strike decisively. Because these assumptions were never questioned, war games tested how to win the decisive battle not whether the strategy itself made sense. This meant strategic failure was excluded by design, including one of the most important assumptions: attrition.
To give you an idea, IJN war games consistently assumed elite pilots survived at implausible rates, ignored replacement shortfalls, underplayed maintenance and fatigue and treated fuel and logistics as abstract variables. Attrition was systematically minimized. Why? Because acknowledging attrition meant acknowledging time and time favored the United States. Thus, war games preserved optimism by compressing time out of the model.
The War Games always modeled the success of the decisive battle. It never modeled the war of attrition in which they were engaged.
The Fatal Flaw
What realism failed to penetrate was American political culture. While IJN leaders understood U.S. industry. They underestimated the U.S. public reaction of rage, the resulting unity, and capacity to “turn on a dime” to a war economy. Japan achieved the shock it sought but not the reaction. Instead of weakened resolve, Pearl Harbor produced total mobilization, political unity, and a war effort that erased Japan’s initial advantages within a year. By December 1942, a year after Pearl Harbor, the U.S. was on the offensive having achieved a decisive result at the Battle of Midway, was close to driving the IJA from Guadalcanal, and was turning back the Japanese in New Guinea. Meanwhile, the shipyards and factories were producing ships, planes and pilots at rates that would soon overwhelm the Japanese. At the same time the Japanese merchant fleet was being methodically reduced by unrestricted submarine warfare.
Image credit: various photographs from Naval Aviation Museum, National World War II Museum, and US Navy Archive.
Setting and Life
The gospel reading for 5th Sunday in Lent is the account of the raising of Lazarus from the dead (John 11:1-45). In yesterday’s post we placed this reading in the context of the flow of John’s gospel and consistent with John’s use of miracles/signs: they point to Jesus and are given that we might believe (Jn 20:26). In today’s post we discuss the setting of the gospel story and consider a previous statement:“I have come that they might have life and have it to the full” (10:10) Continue reading
On Remembering
The Prophet Isaiah lived in times there were indeed troubled: foreign armies at the walls of the city, kings that had led the people astray from Covenant faithfulness, relying on alliances, warriors and gold to fend off the invaders from nations far larger than Israel. Yet for Isaiah, the vision of God’s majesty was so overwhelming that military and political power faded into insignificance. He constantly called the people back to a reliance on God’s promises and away from vain attempts to find security in human plans and intrigues. Isaiah insisted on the ethical behavior that was required of human beings who wished to live in the presence of such a holy God. Inevitably the people failed and Isaiah then delivered the message of judgment upon the people… but always with a parallel message of hope. It was never too late to turn to God.
It is a pattern present in the opening chapters of Isaiah and some 60-odd chapters later it continues to be the message. In today’s first reading, I find great comfort in one of Isaiah’s messages of hope:
“Thus says the LORD: Lo, I am about to create new heavens and a new earth; The things of the past shall not be remembered or come to mind. Instead, there shall always be rejoicing and happiness in what I create” (Is 65:17-18)
The things of the past: things we’d love to forget, but whose regret lingers – what we’ve done and what we’ve failed to do. Things we have confessed and been forgiven – and yet we remember. Even for we who, however imperfectly have turned to God, Isaiah’s message is that there will come a day when the things of the past shall not be remembered or come to mind. Then in a new and deeper way he can join the Psalm refrain: “I will praise you, Lord, for you have rescued me.” (Ps 30:2) Rescued me from myself.
On that day we will truly be at peace.