Airman's Roll
Call:
America remembers Pearl Harbor
Week of Dec. 3 - Dec.
9, 2008
Sixty-seven years ago, the United States
endured an attack on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, that for the next 60
years until Sept. 11, 2001stood as the most devastating enemy attack
on U.S. soil.
Like the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, the Japanese raid on Pearl
Harbor has been called a defining moment in U.S. history. It caught
the country by surprise, rallied its people against their attackers
and thrust the nation into a long, difficult war against tyranny.
Following are facts about Pearl Harbor for you to think about as we
observe this historic anniversary:
- Within hours of the surprise attack in the early-morning hours of
Dec. 7, 1941, more than 2,400 Americans were dead. Five of the eight
battleships at the U.S. Fleet’s Pearl Harbor base were sunk or
sinking, and the other battleships, as well as ships and
Hawaii-based combat planes, were heavily damaged.
- By crippling the U.S. Pacific Fleet, Japan hoped to eliminate it
as a threat to the Japanese Empire’s expansion south.
- President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared Dec. 7, 1941, "a day
which will live in infamy" and signed the Declaration of War against
Japan the following day.
- Nazi Germany, which already controlled a vast empire, declared war
on the United States four days after the Pearl Harbor attack.
- In the four years after the attack, all but three of the sunken
ships were repaired, refitted and returned to active duty.
- The USS Arizona Memorial marks the place where 1,102 of the 1,177
sailors killed during the attack remain. The memorial was dedicated
in 1962 and is visited by millions annually. Oil from the ship
continues to seep out of it, and
is sometimes referred to as the tears of the Arizona or black tears.
(Archives)
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