Yes, a country (Japan) with few natural resources (oil,iron, rubber, etc.) and a never ending war in China needed the embargoed resources to continue prosecuting the IJA's agenda in China and Mongolia.
The USA used its political trump card of embargo to enforce its demand forJapan to leave China. The Nazi victories in Europe embolden the Japanese towards further gains and thus the takeover of French Indo China, to further isolate China by closing one of the last land routes of supply into the Celestial Kingdom. Of course this resulted in further embargos.
With strengthened embargos by the USA, the concept of the "Greater AsianCo-Prosperity Sphere" gained traction and the planning for the takeover ofthe Dutch East Indies in the "Southern Resource Area" went ahead. With the continued success of the Nazis in Europe, Japan felt the time was ripe for their own conquests. Given the Bushido culture in Japan at the time, there was no turning back to peace as that would have been a loss of face to the ruling elite in Japan.
Once the Dutch East Indies, Siam, Burma and the Philippines had been taken and the US Pacific fleet attacked at Pearl Harbor, it was necessary to develop a defensive perimeter around the new gains and to interrupt allied support of Australia. To do this, the taking of New Guinea, and the Solomon Islands was put in hand with further plans to also take Fiji, Midway and other islands. At the high water mark of Japanese conquest, they controlled one of the largestconquered areas in history and enslaved millions people. All of this was apparently done because the USA started the war with an embargo as claimed by article in the link.
So, given the premise of the article (that the USA started the war) let me ask the following:
Who invaded China in the early 30s and slaughtered unarmed peasants in their tens of thousands?
Who tried to take Mongolia from Russia?
Who took over French Indo China after France and the Netherlands fell to Germany?
Who invaded Siam, Burma, Malaya, Singapore and the Dutch East Indies following the strike on Pearl Harbor?
Who invaded the north coast of New Guinea and then tried to take Port Moresby on the south coast?
Who bombed Darwin, Australia in 1942
Who sailed into the Indian Ocean and attacked British installations as far west as India?
Who invaded the Solomon Islands in early 1942 in order to flank Australia?
Who was allied to Italy and Nazi Germany in the Tripartite Treaty?
So what did the USA do to promulgate a war in the Pacific up to December seventh?
Primarily, the political tactic (still used today. i.e. Iran) of embargo to gain a political objective.
Militarily the US Navy moved the Pacific Fleet from California to Pearl Harbor in Hawaii.
Conversly, the US Navy was continually weakening it's Pacific Fleet by transfering ships to the Atlantic Fleet given America's perception of Nazi Germany as the main threat. It is my opinion, that if Japan had not attacked Pearl Harbor, America would have not done much if anything militarilly for at least six months and would have allowed Japan to perhaps negotiate a peace with the USA after gaining their objectives in the "Southern Resource Area."
Well, that's my two cents worth.