But Hawai’i wasn’t the only U.S. territory that Japan targeted that day. What many Americans remember as the bombing of Pearl Harbor was actually part of a larger coordinated attack by the Japanese Empire on the Asian-Pacific territories of the U.S. and British empires. On the same day as the Pearl Harbor bombing, Japan attacked the U.S. territories of Guam and the Philippines, and the British territories of Hong Kong, Singapore and Malaya (part of present-day Malaysia). It also invaded the independent nation of Thailand.
These attacks were extremely significant to the course of the war. Japan did not at any point occupy the U.S. territory of Hawai’i (which was not yet a state), but did occupy Guam, the Philippines, Hong Kong, Singapore and Malaya, and it successfully pushed Thailand to enter the war on the Axis side. In the case of the Philippines, this occupation lasted for three years, and made the territory a central part of World War II's Pacific theater.
Expanding the Asia-Pacific Front
World War II was a multifaceted conflict involving empires that were competing for territory and resources. The war began in 1939 when Adolf Hitler invaded Poland in an attempt to build a German empire, which he intended to create through violent anti-Semitism. The Japanese Empire’s attacks on U.S. and British colonial territories in December 1941 were an attempt to assert dominance in the Asia-Pacific region, especially after U.S. sanctions drastically reduced Japan’s oil supply.
“Oil was crucial at that moment,” says Eri Kitada, a doctoral candidate in history at Rutgers University-New Brunswick, who has written about the significance of these attacks. Feeling “cornered” by the U.S. and Britain, she says Japan “panicked” and decided to attack their colonial territories.
On the same day as the Pearl Harbor attack, Japanese planes bombed several U.S. bases in the Philippines, including Clark Field (due to time zone differences, these attacks occurred on December 8 local time). The bombing destroying almost all of a new fleet of P-40 fighters and B-17 bombers, as well as many other military planes. The attack was the beginning of a five-month campaign that killed and wounded thousands, including those killed in the Bataan Death March of April 1942.
Although FDR did not highlight this attack in his public statements about the Pearl Harbor bombing, the United States took immediate action in the Philippines. In early December, U.S. officials began imprisoning Japanese people living in the Philippines without cause (this was three months before FDR signed an executive order establishing Japanese internment camps). By the end of the month, Japanese military forces freed these civilians.
Fighting between Japanese and U.S. military forces continued until May 1942, when Japan officially began its occupation of the Philippines. By then, Japan had also established occupation of Hong Kong, Malaya, Singapore, Guam and the Dutch East Indies (present-day Indonesia). Southeast Asia and the Pacific were now a major front in the war.
Aftermath and Legacy