Remember WHAT About Pearl Harbor?
by
Jack Kenny
The
New American
Previously
by Jack Kenny: McCain
Drops in
Most shifts
in history do not come with easy-to-remember dates associated with
them. I could not tell you exactly when the U.S. war with Mexico
began, though that war gave flesh and blood and considerable real
estate to the U.S. claim that our "Manifest Destiny" was
to push on through our western frontier from sea to shining
sea and eventually become a power in the Pacific, where we
would come into conflict with imperial Japan at a place called Pearl
Harbor on December 7, 1941.
Pearl Harbor
was a Pacific outpost where our naval vessels and men were left
in harm's way to provide Japan with the target it was looking for,
to make an attack President Roosevelt was waiting for. The attack,
on the date that will live in infamy, would provide
the United States with overwhelming justification for entering World
War II against the Axis powers.
I also know
we are supposed to Remember the Maine, the incident
of alleged sabotage that sparked the Spanish-American War that left
the United States in possession of Puerto Rico and the Philippines
and a permanent naval base in Cuba. But I don't remember the exact
date of that incident that occurred in 1898.
Neither do
I remember the date of a 2002 conversation I had with a friend who
seemed determined to support the policy of George W. Bush to create
a war with Iraq. Our nation was already at war in Afghanistan as
a result of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, and the
Bush administration seemed to be saying that war with Iraq was the
logical next step. Many had assumed, therefore, that Iraq and that
old villain from Central Casting, Saddam Hussein, had something
to do with masterminding the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center,
the Pentagon, and the aborted planned attack on the White House.
There was no evidence to bear that out, but it was hard to hear
the facts over the beating of the neocon war drums.
So at some
point in that summer of 2002, I asked my good Republican friend
why he believed we needed to go to war with Iraq. His answer startled
me.
Because
I believe my government.
Here was an
educated man born in 1957. He was, I calculate, not quite in second
grade when the Gulf of Tonkin incident took place, so he probably
had no more clue as to what really happened in the Tonkin Gulf on
that August 1964 night than members of Congress had when they promptly
backed President Lyndon Johnson's bombing raid against Hanoi with
the Vietnam Resolution, authorizing the President to take whatever
measures necessary to protect American military personnel in South
Vietnam, where they were officially functioning as advisors to the
South Vietnamese military. The floor leader in the Senate for the
nearly unanimous passage of that resolution was J. William Fulbright
of Arkansas, Chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee and later
a bitter critic of the U.S. war in Southeast Asia. Only two Senators,
both Democrats, voted against the resolution that later was held
up as a functional declaration of war. They were (drum
roll, please) Wayne Morse of Oregon and Ernest Gruening of Alaska.
They claimed, and history bore them out, that the administration
had not provided evidence of an unprovoked attack on U.S. vessels
by the North Vietnamese.
In fact, it
would become clear that even President Johnson and Secretary of
Defense Robert McNamara did not know what happened as they planned
and authorized the retaliatory attack. A taped recording of telephone
conversations between the two men made plain they were unclear about
what actually took place that evening and that their main concern
was that the bombing raid be launched in time for the 11 p.m. (Eastern
Daylight Time) newscasts.
All of this
occurred, as I said, when my friend who trusts his government was
somewhere between first and second grade, or possibly between kindergarten
and first grade. He had, however, read some history and I specifically
recall his telling me that he had read Pulitzer Prize winning journalist
David Halberstam's bestselling book about the Vietnam War, called
The
Best and the Brightest. Halberstam told the whole story
in that book of the bogus attack on the U.S. ships, which were accompanying
South Vietnamese vessels making raids on the North Vietnam coast
when (or if) they were fired upon. So the North Vietnamese were
apparently acting in self-defense, rather than seeking a war with
the United States. Yet the fat was in the fire, so to speak. The
United States had another Remember the Maine moment.
And my friend
was in high school when the Watergate scandal and its even more
scandalous coverup came to light. And revelations about the whitewash
by an official government commission of President Kennedy's assassination.
And he might have come across the history of the U.S. spy plane
shot down over Soviet territory in 1960. The reconnaissance plane,
piloted by Gary Powers, was said to be a weather plane blown off
course by the government, the government in which my friend believes,
almost religiously. When Secretary Khrushchev was apprised of what
was aboard the plane, he expressed mock surprise that CIA Director
Allen Dulles had such a deep professional interest in the weather.
All of which
suggests that perhaps our government is not all that believable,
despite my friend's abiding trust. And it makes me wonder what has
happened to the spirit of American conservatism that self-consciously
conservative/libertarian movement I joined in the Goldwater days
of my youth. For my friend is of that Republican conservative persuasion.
My mind went back over the decades to the Goldwater Victory Rally
in New York's Madison Square Garden in late October 1964. To be
sure, Sen. Barry M. Goldwater, running for President against Democrat
Lyndon Johnson, was a hawk on Vietnam and had swallowed the Gulf
of Tonkin story as a babe would drink his mother's milk. But on
most matters, it was clear the Goldwater crowd did not think Johnson's
government was to be trusted. We did not believe our government.
Goldwater himself,
when we finally stopped cheering long enough to let him speak, voiced
his contempt for Johnson's banalities. So did the legendary Clare
Boothe Luce, who spurned the pro-Johnson slant of husband Henry
Luce's Time-Life publications, to support Goldwater. The
feisty Mrs. Luce was not one to mince words. She had once called
the far Left former Secretary of Agriculture and Vice President
of the United States Henry Wallace Stalin's Mortimer Snerd,
after ventriloquist Edgar Bergen's famous puppet of that name. She
had also famously said of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt that
he lied us into a war into which, she believed, he ought
to have honestly and courageously led us.
That Roosevelt,
having done his best to provoke an attack by Germany, succeeded
in maneuvering Japan into firing the necessary first shot at Pearl
Harbor has been abundantly documented. James Perloff, for example,
in a
2008 article for The New American, showed conclusively
that the December 7 attack that we remember at this time each year
was a surprise to our commanders at Pearl Harbor, but not to Roosevelt
and his minions in Washington, D.C. (See also Day
of Deceit by Robert B. Stinnett, 2008, and Back
Door to War by Charles Callan Tansill, 1952.) The verdict
has been accepted by historians, including Roosevelt apologists,
many of whom contend that such deception was necessary to lead a
reluctant nation into a necessary war what some have called
the Good War. But lie and deceive Roosevelt did, as
he plotted to bring us into the war while promising to do his best
to keep the nation at peace.
A lot has changed
in the intervening 70 years. The United States under President George
W. Bush did not attempt to maneuver the government of Saddam Hussein
into initiating the attack that would start the Iraq War. Bush could
start that war on his own initiative and the American people, like
my friend and most members of Congress, supported him in that. Bush,
in effect, became the Tojo of the 21st century by striking the first
blow, though the war with Iraq was surely no surprise attack, as
it had been advertised for roughly a year before the beginning of
Operation Iraqi Freedom and the shock and awe campaign
that launched it. But it was either a war of aggression by the United
States or that phrase no longer has any meaning.
Much ink has
been spilled and paper consumed on America's loss of innocence
over Pearl Harbor, 9/11, the Kennedy assassination, or some other
cataclysmic event. America, the exceptional nation,
lost her innocence in the Garden of Eden, like the rest of sinful
humanity. But we have lost much in the way of candor in the last
70 years. For one thing the United States used to call the Department
of War by its proper name. Now we call it Defense. Does
anyone really believe that what we have been doing in Iraq is or
was a defense of the United States? We now fight wars, as the late
columnist Joseph Sobran observed, in the subjunctive, attacking
and invading nations for what they might do with weapons they may
or may not have. And if Senate Republicans and some Democrats have
their way, our government will soon be locking up American citizens
on the mere suspicion that they may have been aiding and abetting
terrorists, as terrorism is defined by the government
of the United States.
The United
States in 1940 and 1941 repeatedly spurned overtures by Japan to
reach an agreement on spheres of influence in the Pacific and to
negotiate a withdrawal of Japan from most of China and other Asian
lands in which she had found herself bogged down in the kind of
quagmire that has since become familiar to generations of Americans.
The obvious alternative to diplomacy was war. Despite the secrecy
of the diplomatic maneuvers aimed at ensuring, rather than preventing,
the bringing of war to the United States, government officials left
a paper trail. Secretary of War Henry Stimson noted
in his diary on November 25, 1941 the consensus of Roosevelt's war
council: The question was how we should maneuver them into
firing the first shot without allowing too much danger to
ourselves. It would appear Washington's covert planners of
war underestimated the damage that would be done on the date
of infamy by the naval and aerial forces of Japan, as much
of our Pacific fleet was destroyed and more than 2,400 Americans
lay dead amidst the flames and wreckage. And like the White House
conspirators who managed to bring us into a second war with Iraq
in just 12 years, Roosevelt's war council seriously underestimated
the length and cost of the cake walk over our foes in
the East.
We can
wipe the Japanese off the map in three months, wrote Navy
Secretary Frank Knox. As Patrick J. Buchanan observes, four years
of the most savage and intense fighting in the history of human
warfare produced scores of thousands of U.S. dead, Hiroshima,
Nagasaki, the fall of China to Mao Zedong, U.S. wars in Korea and
Vietnam, and the rise of a new arrogant China that shows little
respect for the great superpower of yesterday.
Former U.S.
Senator Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania, now a Republican presidential
candidate, told me in a recent campaign appearance in New Hampshire
that we need to keep our troops in Germany and Japan 66 years after
the end of World War II and 20 years after the breakup of the Soviet
Union because Germany and Japan have militaristic cultures and would
be dangerous if armed again. I asked what, then, had happened to
American culture that necessitated Germany warning us of the dangers
of militarism on the eve of our Iraq War. Santorum shrugged.
Must
be a bunch of damn pacifists over there now, I suggested.
Well,
some of them are, he agreed.
The German
and Japanese people no doubt believed their respective governments
when they said war was forced upon them. The American people did
the same when the George W. Bush regime beat the drums for war with
Iraq.
On this day,
December 7, a week after only two Republican members of the U.S.
Senate (Rand Paul of Kentucky and Mark Kirk of Illinois) voted against
provisions of a Defense Authorization Act that would declare the
homeland part of the worldwide battlefield
and give the President power to lock up terror suspects, both foreign
and American citizens, indefinitely
and without charge or trial, perhaps it is time Republican conservatives
realized that the greatest threat to American life and liberty comes
not from Baghdad, Seoul, or Tehran, nor even from the frenzied minds
of al-Qaeda terrorists. It comes from our own government in Washington,
D.C. As Barry Goldwater said during the height of the Cold War,
Sometimes I fear centralized power in Washington, D.C. more
than I fear Moscow.
Sometimes it
appears the old Stalinist regime is operating again under new management,
with headquarters in Washington, D.C. National Review and
The Weekly Standard fit in quite nicely as the new Pravda
and Izvestia respectively.
Reprinted from The New
American with permission of the author.
December
10, 2011
Manchester,
NH, resident Jack Kenny [send
him mail] is a freelance writer.
Copyright
© 2011 The New American
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