World War II: The Last Constitutionally Declared War… (Well, Not Exactly…)
by Jonathan Goodwin
Bionic Mosquito
Freedom
Betrayed, by Herbert Hoover
It is often
cited by defenders of the Constitution that the last properly declared
U.S. war was the Second World War. There are a couple of facts that
are pretty solid for those who take this viewpoint. On December
8, 1941, President Roosevelt asked Congress for a declaration of
war with Japan; on December 11 he asked for a declaration against
Germany and Italy. Congress approved these and thus was war declared.
So why question
these irrefutable facts? Where is the not exactly in
these events? I guess it depends on what the definition of war
is.
Roosevelt took
many actions against Germany prior to December 11, 1941. Hoover
outlines and documents many of these, even stating that these actions
were taken for the purpose of bringing about an attack against the
U.S. such that Congressional and popular support would swing toward
direct U.S. involvement in the war. Looking backwards from todays
perspective, some of these actions seem trivial when compared to
the gross abuses of Presidential power regarding military action.
However, in 1941, there were many (including Hoover) who felt the
President had gone far beyond his constitutional authority.
With the
American people and the Congress greatly opposed to entering the
war, our participation appeared unlikely unless some overt act
against us was made either by Germany or Japan which would reverse
this tide. Certain elements in the Washington Administration seemed
to hold this view and undertook measures to bring about such an
attack.
A series of
activities in the Atlantic were sure to be observed by the Germans.
The President
on July 7, 1941, informed Congress of the landing of American
troops in Iceland, Trinidad, and British Guiana, saying:
forces
of the United States Navy have today arrived in Iceland in order
to supplement, and eventually to replace, the British forces
.
Roosevelt justified
this deployment by stating that such positions in the Atlantic must
be denied the Germans in order to prevent a German attack against
the Western Hemisphere (an attack Germany did not have the capability
or intent to carry out). This deployment was opposed by some. Senator
Robert Taft protested the occupation, saying I think the President
has grossly exceeded his constitutional authority.
on
July 11, Nelson A. Rockefeller, then a member of Mr. Roosevelts
administration, announced the black-listing of about 2,000 Latin-American
firms and individuals having connections with the Axis. We were
not yet at war.
Indeed. If
the U.S. was not yet at war, why black-list anyone? Or why not black-list
firms associated with the Soviets? Or why not black-list associates
of all warring factions? To say nothing of the lack of due process
in this action (but that is a topic for another day).
On August
5, I [Hoover] joined a declaration against the current warlike
actions
.The statement read as follows [portions excerpted]:
Exceeding
its express purpose, the lend-lease bill has been followed by
naval action, by military occupation of bases outside the Western
Hemisphere, by promise of unauthorized aid to Russia, and by
other belligerent moves.
Recent
events raise doubts that this war is a clear-cut issue of liberty
and democracy. It is not purely a world conflict between tyranny
and freedom. The Anglo-Russian alliance has dissipated that
notion.
American
participation is far more likely to destroy democracy in this
country and thus in the Western Hemisphere than to establish
in Europe. The hope of civilization now rests on the preservation
of freedom and democracy in the United States.
On August 9,
President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill met off the coast
of Newfoundland. On August 14, they issued what is known as The
Atlantic Charter. This charter was discussed in the Senate
Senator Patrick
McCarran called it tantamount to a declaration of war by
this country. Senator David I. Walsh said that it goes
far beyond the Constitutional powers of the President.
Others joined
in the criticism. Certainly, if members of the U.S. Senate viewed
the agreement this way (rightly or wrongly), it should not be a
surprise if the Germans and Hitler felt the same.
Yet others
provided support:
Senator Claude
Pepper declared the statement magnificent and the
nearest thing to a declaration of world independence I have ever
heard.
It strikes
me that a declaration of world independence is somewhat
outside of the bounds of Constitutional authority. This doesnt
faze the good Senator. Such a document as this Charter might also
be viewed as a belligerent act by those who hold a different view
regarding world independence.
What were some
of the clauses of this announcement of the Atlantic Charter that
cause those who viewed it as an act of war to such an interpretation?
Following are some excerpts:
The whole
problem of the supply of munitions of war, as provided by the
Lend-Lease Act, for the armed forces of the United States and
for those countries actively engaged in resisting aggression has
been further examined.
Lord Beaverbrook,
the Minister of Supply of the British Government, has joined in
these conferences. He is going to proceed to Washington to discuss
further details with appropriate officials of the United States
Government. These conferences will also cover the supply problems
of the Soviet Union.
Discussions
regarding providing military supplies to both the British and the
Soviets (both engaged in war with the Germans). This certainly seems
like a war-like clause.
They [Roosevelt
and Churchill] have had several conferences. They have considered
the dangers to world civilization arising from
the Hitlerite
government of Germany and other governments associated therewith
.
Following are
some of the common principles that underlie this declaration:
THIRD, they
respect the right of all peoples to choose the form of government
under which they will live; and they wish to see sovereign rights
and self-government restored to those who have been forcibly deprived
of them;
Note this does
not apply to territories conquered by the Soviet Union, only to
territories conquered by Germany as made clear above.
SIXTH, after
a final destruction of the Nazi tyranny
.
I dont
think Roosevelt was thinking of a winner-take-all soccer match
.
In reading
these words, it is not difficult to see why some Senators felt that
war had been declared by the President, and that he did so without
Constitutional authority.
Prime Minister
Churchill added to the war rhetoric
on
August 24, in a broadcast, proclaim[ing] that President Roosevelt
had agreed to join the war, saying:
the
President of the United States and the British representative
in
the Atlantic Charter have jointly pledged their countries
to the final destruction of the Nazi tyranny.
Of course,
it can be said that much of this is words. Braggadocio is part and
parcel of being a great political leader. Hoover sees much more,
and continues:
In an address
to workers in a Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, steel plant
Rear
Admiral Clark H. Woodward, U.S.N. (retired), naval representative
on the Federal Board of Civilian Defense, expressed his belief
that the United States will be actively engaged in the war
in a short time.
The New
York Herald tribune reported the admiral as saying:
As a matter
of fact, we are already at war, so there is no use trying to
fool ourselves about it.
But why take
the word or a retired Admiral?
On September
1, Mr. Churchill asked Mr. Roosevelt to assign American ships
to transport two Commonwealth divisions to the Middle East. This
was done, and the 40,000 men duly landed.
This is getting
a little closer to home. Providing military escort to troops headed
for battle. Sounds war-like. But there is more:
On September
4, the Navy announced that the U.S. destroyer Greer, en
route to Iceland with the mail, had been attacked by torpedoes
from a submarine, and that the Greer had counterattacked
with depth charges. At a press conference the next day the President
described it as an attack.
Carrying mail,
for goodness sakes. What could be more benign than this?
It turns out
the President might have been technically correct in his description,
but not quite truthful:
It developed
that a British plane had advised the Greer of the location
of a German submarine. The Greer had searched for the submarine,
located it, and trailed it for three and one-half hours until
it turned and fired a torpedo. Having thus been attacked,
the Greer used depth charges until it lost contact.
Even this much
of the truth was provided grudgingly. The Senate demanded to see
the log of the Greer, but instead received the above description
in a statement from Admiral Stark.
There is more.
Roosevelt commented on another American ship, the Robin Moor:
A few months
ago an American flag merchant ship, the Robin Moor, was
sunk by a Nazi submarine in the middle of the South Atlantic,
under circumstances violating long-established international law
and violating every principle of humanity
.
The ship had
been carrying contraband, and the passengers and crew were allowed
to leave the ship.
Hoover goes
on to list other similar claims by Roosevelt, each a version of
we were minding our own business when, for no justifiable
reason and completely unprovoked, our ships were attacked.
In each case, as in the examples above, Hoover explains why the
Presidents statements are not truthful; in fact the U.S. was
taking actions consistent with a nation at war.
On September
16, Hoover once again addressed the nation in a broadcast:
No one will
deny that if we keep up this step-by-step policy it will lead
inevitably to sending our sons into this war
.It is the ultimate
end of this road that must be looked at.
In this address,
Hoover goes on to outline many of the points previously discussed:
let the two tyrants knock each other out; Hitler cannot cross the
English Channel let alone the Atlantic, etc. He continues, regarding
the de facto war being fought by Roosevelt:
the
Presidents policy of edging our warships into danger zones,
of sending American merchant ships with contraband raises the
most critical of all questions. These steps to war are unapproved
and undeclared by the Congress
.
Hoover then
outlines an October 17 incident with the U.S. destroyer Kearny.
The destroyer was convoying ships carrying munitions to England
(against the provisions of Lend-Lease). She attacked a German submarine,
and the submarine counterattacked, killing eleven men on board.
On October
22, General Robert E. Wood of the America First Committee issued
a challenge to the President to go before Congress and ask for
a positive vote on peace and war. The President did not make the
test.
This Committee
has been tainted as anti-Semitic, or a Nazi front organization.
I do not intend to discuss these aspects; however it is worth pointing
out some background and views of this organization. From Wikipedia:
The America
First Committee (AFC) was the foremost non-interventionist pressure
group against the American entry into World War II. Peaking at
800,000 paid members in 650 chapters, it was one of the largest
anti-war organizations in American history. Started in 1940, it
shut down after the attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941.
The AFC gained
much of its early strength by merging with the more left-wing
Keep America Out of War Committee, whose leaders had included
such mainstays of America First as Norman Thomas and John T. Flynn.
AFC was established
September 4, 1940, by Yale Law School student R. Douglas Stuart,
Jr., along with other students, including future President Gerald
Ford, future Peace Corps director Sargent Shriver, and future
U.S. Supreme Court justice Potter Stewart. At its peak, America
First claimed 800,000 dues-paying members in 650 chapters, located
mostly in a 300-mile radius of Chicago.
The America
First Committee launched a petition aimed at enforcing the 1939
Neutrality Act and forcing President Franklin D. Roosevelt to
keep his pledge to keep America out of the war. They strongly
distrusted Roosevelt, arguing that he was lying to the American
people.
On the day
after Roosevelt's lend-lease bill was submitted to the United
States Congress, Wood promised AFC opposition "with all the
vigor it can exert." America First staunchly opposed the
convoying of ships, the Atlantic Charter, and the placing of economic
pressure on Japan. In order to achieve the defeat of lend-lease
and the perpetuation of American neutrality, the AFC advocated
four basic principles:
The United
States must build an impregnable defense for America.
No foreign
power, nor group of powers, can successfully attack a prepared
America.
American
democracy can be preserved only by keeping out of the European
war.
"Aid
short of war" [a Roosevelt policy at this time] weakens
national defense at home and threatens to involve America in
war abroad.
These statements
and positions seem quite consistent with the statements of Hoover
throughout this book.
As against
Roosevelts regular claims of overt German acts against the
United States, on November 5, Arthur Krock of the Washington Bureau
of the New York Times said:
in
my opinion, Hitler can throw at us both the dictionary and the
facts when he says we attacked him. Why should the
American Government ever have attempted to obscure it?...
Yet our government
did attempt to obscure it, as the record shows
.
On November
7, 1941, Admiral Stark wrote to admiral Hart:
The
Navy is already in the war of the Atlantic, but the country doesnt
seem to realize it
.Whether the country knows it or not,
we are at war.
When asked
by Representative Gearhart if it was because of the actions directed
by the President at that time against the Germans that Stark said
the U.S. was already at war, Admiral Stark replied:
That is correct.
Technically
we
were not at war
because war had not been declared, but actually,
so far as the forces operating under Admiral King in certain areas,
it was war against any German craft that came inside that area.
Admiral Stark
sees it this way. The U.S. was not at war because Congress had not
declared war. But actually, the U.S. was at war before Congress
declared war. On this point, Admiral Stark should be sufficient
authority.
I will end
where I began. Technically, Congress authorized U.S. entry into
World War II. In reality, Roosevelt was already fighting the war
long before this declaration. It was Roosevelts desire to
get Germany to take the first significantly overt action, in the
hope that this would move the American people and Congress to back
his desire for war.
This did not
work with the Germans. Hitler, it seems, wanted to avoid providing
reason to bring the U.S. into this war. Hoover next turns to Roosevelts
actions against Japan. Of course, Roosevelt was successful in getting
the Japanese to take the bait. This is Hoovers subject, for
next time.
Reprinted
with permission from the Bionic
Mosquito.
April
20, 2012
Copyright
© 2012 Bionic
Mosquito
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