the Arctic 1941: Attack on Pearl Harbor
7 December 1941
7 Dec 1941
World War II in the Arctic
1620–1818 Fur-Trading Empires
1818–1875 Partitioning the North Pacific
1875–1939 Claiming the Far North
1939–1945 World War II in the Arctic
1945–pres The Arctic Transformed
Attack on Pearl Harbor
10 Sep 1939 Outbreak of World War II
10 Apr 1940 Invasion of Denmark and Norway
10 May 1940 Invasion of Iceland
9 Apr 1941 Greenland Protectorate
3 Sep 1941 Operation Silver Fox
7 Dec 1941 Attack on Pearl Harbor
7 Jun 1942 Aleutian Islands Campaign
31 Dec 1942 Arctic Convoys
22 Oct 1943 North Atlantic Weather War
25 Jun 1944 Removing the German Surface Threat
4 Oct 1944 Lapland War
7 May 1945 German Surrender
15 Aug 1945 End of World War II
By late 1941, the still neutral United States was firmly behind the Allied war effort and even allowing US destroyers to escort British ships and hunt German submarines in the hugely extended Pan-American Security Zone. Meanwhile, in the Pacific, US relations with Japan were being strained by the ongoing Japanese war in China. On December 7, frustrated by a US embargo, the Japanese launched a surprise attack on the US Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbor, bringing America suddenly into the War.