Cover of Edward S. Miller: Bankrupting the Enemy

Edward S. Miller Bankrupting the Enemy

The U.S. Financial Siege of Japan Before Pearl Harbor

Price for Eshop: 740 Kč (€ 29.6)

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New

English

Expected delivery time 14-30 days

Book information

Naval Inst Press

USA

2007

Hardcover

323

Heavy

254948

978-1-59114-520-2

1-59114-520-1

Economic sanctions, American; Japan; History; 20th century.

Annotation

Award-winning author Edward S. Miller contends in this new work that the United States forced Japan into international bankruptcy to deter its aggression. While researching newly declassified records of the Treasury and Federal Reserve, Miller, a retired chief financial executive of a Fortune 500 resources corporation, uncovered just how much money mattered. Washington experts confidently predicted that the war in China would bankrupt Japan, not knowing that the Japanese government had a huge cache of dollars fraudulently hidden in New York. Once discovered, Japan scrambled to extract the money. But, Miller explains, in July 1941 President Roosevelt invoked a long-forgotten clause of the Trading with the Enemy Act of 1917 to freeze Japan s dollars and forbade it to sell its hoard of gold to the U.S. Treasury, the only open gold market after 1939. Roosevelt s temporary gambit to bring Japan to its senses, not its knees, was thwarted, however, by opportunistic bureaucrats. Dean Acheson, his handpicked administrator, slyly maneuvered to deny Japan the dollars needed to buy oil and other resources for war and for economic survival.

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