This fascinating history, recounted from both the American and Japanese
perspectives, follows the course of the Empire of the Sun's ultimately
unequal struggle against the great allied powers. Drawing on archive
material, this new history provides the reader with piercing strategic
and political insights which debunk many of the enduring myths which
encompass Japan's apocalyptic drive for hegemony in Southeast Asia. Why
did Japan invade China? Was war with America and the British Empire
inevitable? Why was the Japanese mobile fleet defeated so decisively at
Midway? Why did the Japanese continue fighting when defeat was
inevitable? Was Emperor Hirohito merely a puppet of the militarists? Why
did the Japanese people acquiesce in the occupation of their homeland?
Whilst unsparing in its treatment of Japan's ultimate culpability for
unleashing the Second World War, 'Japan at War 1931-1945' is an
objective appraisal of the tragedy that engulfed much of the territories
under Japanese control, and eventually Japan itself.