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  1. Joseph Clark Grew (27 de maio de 1880 – 25 de maio de 1965) foi um escritor, político e diplomata norte-americano. Era ele o embaixador no Japão quando ocorreu o ataque a Pearl Harbor . Carreira diplomática [ editar | editar código-fonte ]

  2. 12 de jan. de 2024 · Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary (Japan) Appointed: February 19, 1932. Presentation of Credentials: June 14, 1932. Termination of Mission: Japan declared war on the United States on (local time) December 8, 1941. Grew, having been interned, left Japan on June 25, 1942. Under Secretary of State. Appointed: December 20, 1944.

  3. Joseph Clark Grew served as the American ambassador in Japan throughout the ten years preceding the attack on Pearl Harbor. On January 27, 1941, Grew sent a telegram to Washington warning, “There is a lot of talk around town to the effect that the Japanese, in case of a break with the United States, are planning to go all out in a surprise ...

  4. A More Forceful Response to Japan is Needed (1937), Joseph Grew. The American ambassador to Japan during the 1930s was a penetrating thinker and veteran Asian specialist named Joseph Grew. His analysis of the situation in East Asia increasingly differed from that animating the policies of Secretary of State Stimson and his successor, Cordell Hull.

  5. Books. Turbulent Era: A Diplomatic Record of Forty Years, 1904-1945, Volume 1. Joseph Clark Grew. Houghton Mifflin, 1952 - Diplomats - 1560 pages.

  6. there seemed special reason to set out my recollections of what I. observed and participated in as private secretary to our Ambassador to Japan, Joseph C. Grew, in Tokyo and Washington from mid-1941. to mid-1942. The story of those negotiations, referred to on the U.S. side as "the Washington talks,"1 is available in Mr. Grew's Ten Years in ...

  7. "The Japanese Monarchy, 1931-1991", which created a sensation when first published in Japanese, clarifies US policies toward Japan's symbol emperor system before, during and after World War II. As American ambassador to Japan from 1932 to 1945, Joseph Clark Grew had contacts with groups close to the emperor as well as leading "moderates".