OTReepNeep said:SNIP
The attack on Pearl Harbor was a precision strike on military targets with the aim of crippling the US Pacific Fleet to the point that the US would be unable to bring serious challenge in the Pacific.
There were two things that went wrong with it from their perspective;
1: They didn't sink any of our carriers. This is especially important because battleships were nearly worthless by comparison.
2: They underestimated just how stubborn we can be about these things.
SNIP
What we did to Japanese cities near the end of the war was several orders of magnitude beyond anything the Japanese did to us. We basically leveled every major city in Japan, civilian targets or not. We used primarily firebombs specifically because they would start the mass fires that Japanese architecture was particularly vulnerable to. The goal of American air raids was to burn the city to the ground, civilians and all. Add the gratuitous nuking of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and we subjected them to far worse than they ever even had planned for us.
You also seem to talk about 9/11 as if it was the beginning of the 'explosive' relationship we have with that part of the world rather than the perhaps inevitable result of decades of antagonism from both sides, but I don't feel like getting into that one.
Go read a history book. *EDIT* Hell, even wikipedia would be a good start for you.
Three things - they failed to realize how resourceful we could be. Several of those ships were repaired in weeks; some were even re-floated and repaired after being sunk. Ironically, prior to Pearl Harbor we shared the naval strategy of the United Kingdom, the then-acknowledged master of the seas, that carriers were nice but battleships were still king of the naval battle. Sinking so many of our battleships forced to us concentrate our operational strategy on carrier warfare. This led to their catastrophic defeat at Midway, which essentially sealed the war in the Pacific for the Japanese. This is really ironic because whilst our naval gunnery was not up to Japan's even with more and better radar, our air combat skills were quite good.
I disagree about Hiroshima and Nagasaki, though. Those bombings and the widespread conventional bombings that preceded them were, in my opinion, extremely tuitous. I utterly reject the concept that civilians manufacturing war materials are sacrosanct or that military lives are somehow worth less than civilian lives, and should be sacrificed to avoid killing the enemy's civilians. I wouldn't intentionally target civilians or condone terror attacks, but if that's needed to stop the flow of war materials I have no problem with leveling cities. Remember that most American soldiers and sailors were conscripts or civilian draftees just minding their own business before Japan attacked. Nations make war, and nations should suffer the consequences. I think this desire to sterilize war and limit its casualties to a military caste is very dangerous.