Eighty Years Ago: Asia Pacific, Sep 11 – 17, 1941
- By Peter Harmsen
- 17 September, 2021
- No Comments
Sep 11, 1941: Aviation hero Charles Lindbergh, the most prominent proponent of US non-intervention in the widening global conflict, says, ‘We are on the verge of war, but it is not yet too late to stay out’
Sep 12, 1941: Britain strengthens defense of Burma’s eastern border in response to Japanese occupation of Indochina
Sep 13, 1941: China’s leader Chiang Kai-shek says his wife, Song Meiling, who often acts as his spokesperson in the war against Japan, is ‘worth 20 divisions’
Sep 14, 1941: Experienced Japanese diplomat Kaname Wakasugi leaves for Washington in indication of continued willingness to seek negotiated settlement of issues with the United States
Sep 15, 1941: Richard Sorge, German-Soviet spy based in Tokyo, informs Stalin not to expect Japanese attack
Sep 16, 1941: Puppet troops in central Chinese Henan province said to rebel against Japanese Army
Sep 17, 1941: At the conclusion of Anglo-Soviet invasion, Mohammad Reza is inaugurated as Shah of Iran
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