World War II: Pearl Harbor - The Atlantic An American seaman looks at the charred corpse of a Japanese flier brought up from the bottom of Pearl Harbor, where he crashed with his burning plane during the Japanese attack on December 7, 1941 in Hawaii. AP Photo An American Seaman looks at the charred corpse of a Japanese Pilot brought up from the bottom of Pearl Harbor, where he crashed with is burning plane during the attack in 1941. On December 7, 1941, the Imperial Japanese Navy launched a surprise attack on the United States, bombing warships and military targets in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. More than 350 Japanese aircraft attacked the naval base in two waves, strafing targets, dropping armor-piercing bombs, and launching torpedoes toward U.S. battleships and cruisers. The U.S. forces were unprepared, waking to the sounds of explosions and scrambling to defend themselves. The entire preemptive attack lasted only 90 minutes, and in that time, the Japanese sunk four battleships and two des...
Vwegba Blogging World is a daily publication on crime, history, facts, serial killers, and murder case