McAvoy wrote: ↑Wed Aug 03, 2022 2:17 am
Japan only really became a major concern for the US in WW1. During that time they were allies with the British and the Washington Treaty, the US made it one of their points to break it. That and get a naval reduction why also provided a warship ratio between the British, the US and Japan. The US at the time was not capable of taking on both the British and Japan at the same time.
Do you not think having a strong Japanese Navy who are allies with the US during the Cold War would have suited the US? Yes it would have.
But there were so many factors with the US and Japan post-war. There was still an element of racism when it came to the Japanese. There was still a level of distrust with them and some level of anger from Pearl Harbor to a smaller extent.
They could trust Germany, a white European nation which many Americans could trace their families to. They could trust Germany would form a democratic nation of some kind like their neighbors.
It made sense for the US to play war games against Japan even if they were peaceful to each other. War games were always against the most likely opponent. Whether that was Germany or even the British at one point.
Yes, Japan became their main rival in that period and the two nations national interests began to conflict (Britain and America's increasingly ceased to, if ever). The US wanted to supplant Britain as the global hegemon, but did not want to do so in a bellicous manner which is why the end of WWI was such an opportune moment for Wilson and his "Peace Without Victors" BS. War with Britain by the turn of the century was out of people's minds beyond the idea of military games and hypothetical planning, not a serious consideration as it was with other nations.
Splitting the Anglo-Japanese Alliance was a means to that end, but it was more one to protect US interests in the Western Pacific, an area where that had no conflicting interests with Britain but did with Japan (China was a major market for the US and Japan's ambitions there caused problems, which eventually led to the embargo against Japan). Both the US and Japan wanted to be regional hegemon of that area, Britain had already relinquished that control with their treaty with Japan to focus elsewhere and was now happy to have a solid, but not overwhelming, force in the area.
The naval reduction had more to do with
everyone looking back at the Anglo-German Naval Race and wincing at repeating it. Even Japan didn't despite very much wanting more warships and was already spending waaaaay too much on their navy as it was to an unsustainable degree. Britain wanted to save after WWI, Japan was going to break itself trying to keep up and Congress had always hated the Navy and the reins had always been tight on its neck. The USN wanted 16in gunned battleships as early as the New Mexico Class, but the cretin Josephus Daniels and Congress forced them to keep 14in guns for both them and the succeeding Tennessees, only relinquishing when the USN discovered the trick of demanding too much to make what they really wanted the more appealing offer and got 16iners for the Colorados.
They didn't trust the Germans. The Americans, and especially Roosevelt, were sick of "Prussianism" which they blamed as the primary cause of the world wars. German HAD to have a "Prussianectomy" to keep it from starting another world war and that meant bringing the nation to its feet and rebuilding it as they saw fit. It was only in the mid-50s that they realized the issues in Europe and that NATO needed all the help they could get. It was then that the Bundewehr was founded and they were remilitarized under strict US control. Japan, though, had no land connections at all. a Japanese military COULD be helpful, but it could also be used against the US in the way the Germany military couldn't be. It would be best it they simply remained a forward operating base and they be restricted to self-defence.
The suspicion was cultural, not racial. Had it been the latter other Oriental nations wouldn't have been armed and actively expected to fight side by side with the US like South Korea was. The issue was the Japanese seemed capable of acting very odd (which wartime experience, like sailors trying to kill themselves rather than be saved, confirmed) and it would be best they kept relatively more harmless given that the same rebuilding as in Germany was being done, but less stringently given the different dynamic going on there (MacArthur, the Emperor, the Japanese knack of learning lessons but absolutely refusing to change their minds about thing at the same time) etc.
It made sense for the US to play war games against Japan even if they were peaceful to each other. War games were always against the most likely opponent. Whether that was Germany or even the British at one point.
Japan was the only nation the US expected to have a war with in the future, and events wound up proving them right. Both nations interests couldn't prevent it and the Japanese and their mentality ensured the rivalry would go hot.
Even that's debatable as Stalin wasn't really interested in another war in Europe.
Nuclear weapons gave the Soviets pause, but the primary post-war problem was how exhausted the USSR was due to WWII and the desire to rebuild and realign before trying something. The navy especially needed rebuilding, and Stalin insisted on a surface heavy naval force.