The head of a government education panel said Sunday one of the remote causes for the outbreak of the 1941-1945 war in the Pacific theater was a U.S. decision to stop oil exports to Japan, stressing that Japanese were the victims of the war.
"At that time, 80% of Japan's oil imports were from the United States...Japan headed for Vietnam and Indonesia because there was no alternative, and the U.S. couldn't forgive it and had no choice but to wage war," Central Education Council Chairman Yasuhiko Torii said at an education reform forum in Niigata.
Dissembling again, are we? He's got the order wrong: The United States cut off oil to Japan because of the invasion of Indochina, not before. The American policy before the invasion of Indochina was not to sell Japan materials that could be used for war (such as scrap iron).