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When the U.S. Could Have Conquered the World—And Didn’t

One of the more head-scratching facts about World War II is this: The United States responded to the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor by sending more than 5 million troops to Europe. It is counterintuitive, at least, that the U.S. would send half its military to the opposite side of the globe from the enemy who attacked it. 

Even after Nazi Germany declared war on the United States—on December 11, 1941, days after Pearl Harbor—the U.S. could have prioritized Japan and left Europe to Britain and the Soviet Union. Many Americans, including Adm. Ernest King, the commander in chief of the United States Fleet, argued for a “Japan First” strategy. The U.S. did the opposite. Why?

The answer reveals something important about the role the United States chose to play on the world stage. American power was supposed to be different from the great powers of the Old World. It would not be cynical, narrow, used exclusively for its own preservation to the detriment of others. American power would be linked to American ideals. 

It would be tough-minded, yes, and prudently self-interested. But American statesmen took a longer view and understood that a truly self-interested strategy was not the short-term, cynically transactional, calculating self-interest in dollars and cents, but relational and ideological, measured in the growth of American ideals and the networks among like-minded nations. 

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