I urge you to read the entire Tojo document. Japan had "decided" on war in the summer - when the embargo was imposed - if they could not get the U.S. to reverse the embargo. They began moving troops from Northern Indo-China south. They began other maneuvers. They launched their fleet toward Pearl, as you said.
At the same time, they continued to negotiate. The private communiques to their ambassador in the U.S. gave him 'til the 25th to get a deal.
There are two ways to interpret these events. One is that the negotiations were a ploy. The other is that they were genuine. But, even if they were a ploy, nothing changed on Nov. 20 to "deteriorate" the situation from what it had been in the summer. The U.S. had not changed its position, nor made any concessions, nor increased its demands. The oil supply situation did not suddenly deteriorate. Nothing of substance changed from the summer - save for one thing. The disaster before Moscow.
At the same time, they continued to negotiate. The private communiques to their ambassador in the U.S. gave him 'til the 25th to get a deal.
There are two ways to interpret these events. One is that the negotiations were a ploy. The other is that they were genuine. But, even if they were a ploy, nothing changed on Nov. 20 to "deteriorate" the situation from what it had been in the summer. The U.S. had not changed its position, nor made any concessions, nor increased its demands. The oil supply situation did not suddenly deteriorate. Nothing of substance changed from the summer - save for one thing. The disaster before Moscow.
The US probably would have gone to war if Japan attacked British or Dutch possessions, and so the US fleet had to be eliminated as well as (more importantly) the US position in the Philippines.
Finally, you are assuming much more German-Japanese cooperation than actually existed. If Japan wanted to help Germany, they would have gotten aggressive in Manchuria, reinforcing the Kwangtung army fortifications, in order to pin the Far East Military District's forces in place.
Sikander,
DF's assertion that the Allied landings in North Africa (Torch) stripped critical reserves from Manstein which in his opinion kept him from relieving Stalingrad are IMO fanciful. As difficult as it was for the Axis to deploy those troops to Tunisia, it would have been just as difficult to deliver and supply them deep in Southern Russia over a patched together rail network that was often only one track wide.
Doesn't guarantee success, just gives the Germans a fighting chance.
David has it almost right when he states that the Germans needed more time rather than more force. What they actually needed more than time (which IMO was working in favor of the Soviets) was supply.
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