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The anti-Roosevelt Republicans drag this out on a regular basis. No, I am not accusing you, I think you are merely repeating what you heard from them.
1. Aircraft Carriers: The American carriers were not in harbor on missions in the area. USS Enterprise missed the attack by a matter of hours, and in fact lost some aircraft to Japanese fighters and US anti aircraft guns when they showed up during the second wave. Why would anyone risk the all-important battleline to save the not important aircraft carriers? And I say that because that was the conventional thinking of the day! Aircraft carriers in 1941 were thought of as auxilaries, supporting the battleline, not as the primary units. IF any ships were going to be away from port to keep them safe, it would be the battleships, leaving the carriers to take the attack... As for the carriers being 'modern', well the idea of carriers was new, and the Washington/London Naval Treaties prevented construction of new battleships, but not aircraft carriers. So the battleline was built during and just after WW1, while the carriers were built after that. Nobody knew at the time (although many claimed it) that carriers were the wave of the future and that battleships were obsolete. The carriers became the front line ships not because they were more modern, but because the battleships were unavailable, sitting at the bottom of Pearl Harbor!
If Roosevelt had known, he would have alerted the local commanders, and set up a ambush: every battleship at battle stations, every anti aircraft battery manned and ready, every fighter in the air, and let the Japanese stick thier head in a beehive. AND he would have had the carriers (assuming, which I don't, that he thought they were the important ships) set up north east of Oahu to ambush them, as they would 6 months later at Midway. THIS is what Roosevelt would have done IF he had known and wanted a excuse to go to war with Japan.
Could he have stopped it? Certainly, with very little effort. A proper reconnasaince around the islands, spotting the Japanese trail runs that fall (done by cargo ships following the excact route the Japanese First Air Fleet would follow) would have caused the Japanese to abort.
Roosevelt, from his own writings and recollections of conversations by his staff members, did NOT want war with Japan, he felt the major danger was from Germany and wanted no distractions from that.
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