The Ultimatum that Gave
Us Pearl Harbor
During
the nearly quarter of a century since 1944, and despite a series of official
investigations, the defenders of Roosevelt among historians, journalists and
politicians have been able to keep the vital information about the
responsibility for war with Japan and the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor from
the American people.
- Harry Elmer Barnes
It
doesn't matter how many times you prove it. Wait five years and you have to
prove it all over again. Take Pearl Harbor. The fact that FDR knew the Japanese
were going to attack is something that should by now be as solidly established
in American historiography as William Randolph Hearst's famous order to his
photographer, "You furnish the pictures, I'll furnish the war," (the
conflict under discussion being the Spanish American war). – Alexander Cockburn
From all
that we have now learned about what happened on that fateful day of December 7,
1941, there might still be some small room for debate as to how precise was our
leadersÕ knowledge of the impending Japanese attack in the hours just before it
took place. Beyond debate is the fact that Franklin Roosevelt very badly
wanted the attack to occur so that he would have an excuse to involve the
United States militarily in the war in Europe, that he had taken precisely the
steps needed to make sure that an attack was imminent, and that he kept the
news that he had taken those steps away from the people who most needed to know
it. Foremost among that latter group were our military leaders in the
Pacific, most specifically, General Walter Short and Admiral Husband Kimmel in Hawaii. What no Americans were told,
outside a tiny handful of people, was that we had effectively ended
negotiations to temper or end our crippling economic embargo on Japan, and we
had ended them with what amounted to a slap in the proud Japanese face.
Furthermore, the key commanders in the Pacific were not informed that the
inevitable Japanese military response, which we had learned from intercepted
messages, was forthcoming in short order.
Roosevelt
might have miscalculated with respect to the degree of damage that the attack
on Pearl Harbor would inflict. His failure to share with the commanders
in Pearl Harbor the information they needed to prepare for the attack, though,
was not a miscalculation or a matter of inadvertence. He knew that the
Japanese had a very good spying apparatus, and the last thing that Roosevelt
wanted was for them to see that we were so ready for the attack that it would be
called off. There is a lot more evidence, but all one really has to do is
to read FDRÕs speech of December 9, 1941, the day after the Òdate
that will live in infamyÓ speech, to see just how badly Roosevelt wanted us
into the European war.
Among the
Americans kept in the dark were all the members of the U.S. Congress. As
the quote above from historian Harry Elmer Barnes suggests, most of the
American people remain in the dark to this day. With his 1976 book, one
of the previously deceived congressmen made an effort to rectify that situation
for the public. Unfortunately, but perhaps predictably, illustrious
though the author might have been, the book failed to find a ÒreputableÓ
publisher and it consequently continues to be obscure. The man was Rep. Hamilton Fish who represented RooseveltÕs home district in
New York and the book is FDR, the Other Side of the Coin: How We Were Tricked
into World War II.
The following is from his introduction:
This book is
an agonizing reappraisal written by the author, the Honorable Hamilton Fish, a
member of Congress for twenty-five years, ranking Republican member of the
Foreign Affairs Committee 1933-43, and ranking member of the Rules Committee
1940-45.
The author
is one of the very few former members alive who participated actively in the
Congressional foreign policy debates between 1937 and 1945. I made the
first speech advocating war with Japan on December 8, 1941 (the first speech
ever made in Congress over the radio). The speech was
heard by over 20 million Americans and it upheld President RooseveltÕs
theme of the ÒDay of Infamy.Ó I now publicly disavow that speech as a
result of subsequent historical evidence. I believe that not only the
American people but everyone interested in the truths of history is entitled to
know the naked truth: that Roosevelt incited and provoked Japan into war by the
issuance of an all-out secret war ultimatum in defiance of the Congress, the
American people, and the Constitution of the United States, ten days before
Pearl Harbor. (emphasis in original)
Even now,
every Pearl Harbor Day, December 7, American newspapers editorially denounce
Japan for provoking and causing the war in the midst of peace
negotiations. This is entirely contrary to the historical facts.
The Honorable Clare Boothe Luce was right when she
said that President Roosevelt lied us into war by the
back door in order to get into war with Germany. Sir Oliver Lyttleton, British Minister of Productions in ChurchillÕs
cabinet, speaking before the American Chamber of Commerce in London in 1944,
let the cat out of the bag: ÒJapan was provoked into attacking the Americans at
Pearl HarborÉ. It is a travesty on history to ever say America was forced
into the war.Ó
Emperor Hirohito
has been falsely attacked for being responsible for the war. In fact, he
consistently urged peace by diplomacy and offered unprecedented concessions,
including withdrawal of Japanese troops from China and Vietnam. (pp. xi-xii)
We pick up
the story in the middle of chapter 15, ÒHow the United States Became Involved
in World War II.Ó
American
public opinion in 1940-41 was bitterly opposed to involvement in another world
war. In a democracy, where free speech prevails, the voice of the people
creates public opinion. The percentage was reduced from 97 percent to
approximately 85 percent when Hitler invaded Poland* due to massive consistent
administration propaganda, remaining at that level until the attack on Pearl
Harbor.
The question
is often raised, what would have happened if we had not entered the war, that
is, if there had been no Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor? The question
deserves a detailed answer. I am convinced that we could have easily made
a peace treaty with Japan in which she would have agreed to a mutually friendly
withdrawal from China and Indochina in return for the right to trade with all
nations in the Far East including the Philippines and the Dutch East
Indies.
The
extensive memoirs of Secretary of State Cordell Hull are a treasure-house of
historical information, although naturally highly slanted in covering up his
responsibility and that of FDR for the war ultimatum that caused not only the
war with Japan, but also with Germany and Italy. In referring to the war
ultimatum it seems appropriate to have it preceded by the word Òinfamous,Ó
derived from RooseveltÕs designation of the attack on Pearl Harbor as a date to
live in infamy.
This epithet
was acclaimed by all of us at the time and was repeated all over the
world. The full story of the infamous ultimatum will be related in detail
in this chapter. There never was, in the history of America, such
trickery, deception and double-crossing of the American people.
The all-out
war ultimatum, approved by FDR and presented to the Japanese ambassador [Kichisaburō] Nomuro [sic] on
November 26, 1941, demanded that Japan withdraw all of its armed
forces—army, navy, air force and even police—from China (Manchuria)
and Indochina immediately. Like cornered rats, the Japanese had no
alternative than to fight. If they hadnÕt, their leaders would have had
to commit suicide or be killed by their own people. (emphasis
in original)
HullÕs
memoirs do not even mention the crucial November 25 meeting at the White
House. According to [Secretary of War Henry] StimsonÕs diary, the only
question considered at this meeting was how to maneuver, incite and provoke
Japan to fire the first shot. The next day Secretary Hull scrapped the modus vivendi, or truce for ninety days
(which had been acceptable to Japan), and handed Ambassador Nomuro
the infamous war ultimatum. It was not released until after Pearl Harbor,
when it went unnoticed. Very few of the American people ever even heard
of the war ultimatum. FDR, Secretary Hull, and Secretary Stimson were the
main instigators but Secretary [of the Navy Frank] Knox, [Chief of Staff]
General [George C.] Marshall and [Chief of Naval Operations] Admiral [Harold]
Stark were lesser collaborators. They all knew it would force the
Japanese to attack immediately without warning.
It is only
fair to the leading officers of the American armed forces to emphasize that
even as late as November 26 they still counseled and cautioned against
war. On the morning of November 26 there was a meeting of the Army-Navy
Joint Board at which Admiral [Royal] Ingersoll presented a series of arguments
against precipitating a war.
Evidently
the protest of the Army-Navy Joint Board had little effect on President
Roosevelt and Secretary Hull. So on that afternoon, Hull, representing
the president, abandoned all thought of a truce with Japan and rejected any
idea of compromise or conciliation. With the full approval of FDR, he
presented to Numuro the demand that the government of
Japan withdraw all military, naval, air and police forces from China and
Indochina.
Admiral
Nomuro was accompanied by Saburo
Kurusu, who had served as a consul in New York and had recently been the
Japanese ambassador to Berlin. He was married to an American girl,
which gave him an added interest in maintaining friendly relations between
Japan and the United States. After he had read HullÕs proposals, Kurusu
asked if this were the American answer to the Japanese request for a modus
vivendi or truce. Secretary Hull gave an evasive and virtually
negative answer. Kurusu replied that the secretaryÕs statement was
Òtantamount to meaning the end.Ó It was obvious to Nomuro
and Kurusu that this was a war ultimatum and that the next step would be war.
The undisputed
fact is that even those Japanese militarists who had no love for the United
States realized the tremendous potential strength of our country and wanted to
avoid such a ruinous war if a peace with honor could be found. They were
willing to make unprecedented concessions and to accept virtually all our terms
in the proposed modus vivendi, which included a ninety-day truce.
Secretary Hull for eight months had been stringing Ambassador Nomuro along, stalling for time to permit our army and navy
to strengthen their defenses in the Philippines and in our other Far Eastern
possessions. Hull in his memoirs made it very clear that he was playing
for time at the request of both the army and the navy. His dilatory
tactics finally became apparent to the Japanese cabinet, which set November 29
as the final day for ending negotiations. Hull knew definitely that the
showdown on peace or war had been reached through the intercepted Japanese
messages to Nomuro, as we had broken the Japanese
code.
Hull had
been working on a modus vivendi which would not only have postponed the war, but
might have averted an unwanted, unnecessary, costly and bloody war with Japan
completely. President Roosevelt received protests from Churchill and
Chiang Kai-shek. FDRÕs administrative secretary, Lauchlin
Currie, friendly to the Communists,** received an
urgent cable from Owen Lattimore, another apologist for
communism. Lattimore had been appointed by Roosevelt as an adviser to Chiang Kai-shek.
Naturally Soviet Russia was opposed to any peace terms and favored war between
the United States and Japan.
Churchill
realized, as did Roosevelt, that if we became involved in war with Japan it
would automatically bring us into war with Germany. Consequently, the modus
vivendi was scrapped.
Roosevelt
used his tremendous presidential powers to deceive the American public and
succeeded in keeping the existence of the war ultimatum a secret from everyone,
including all members of Congress, until after Pearl Harbor. It was a
conspiracy of silence. Later the administration refused to institute a
nonpartisan, impartial court-martial of Admiral Kimmel and General Short, at
their own request, to ascertain the true responsibility for the Pearl
Harbor disaster. It was denied by the Roosevelt administration because it
would have exposed FDRÕs ultimatum and likewise his responsibility for
provoking the war secretly. (emphasis in original)
Although the
Congress was totally ignored, and only a handful of Americans in the cabinet
knew of the existence of the war ultimatum, Winston Churchill and the British
high command were kept informed of every move.
FDR secretly
maneuvered us into war. The responsibility for the deadly blow to the
U.S. navy was his, as well as the deaths of 3,000 American sailors at Pearl
Harbor—AmericaÕs greatest naval defeat and disaster.
The tragic
fact is that few Americans know about FDRÕs ultimatum to Japan. It is
still AmericaÕs greatest and best-kept secret, part and parcel of the
perpetuation of the Roosevelt myth, and the greatest cover-up in American
history. (pp. 135-139)
As the old
sports clichŽ goes, records are made to be broken. If Israel and our
neocon-controlled leaders can maneuver us into World War III, then certainly the 9-11 cover-up can claim the new record as greatest in
American history. No one can deny that the United States plunged into the
Middle East militarily because of that Òsecond Pearl HarborÓ that the people at
the Project for a New American Century longed for so badly.
Hamilton FishÕs Publisher
As we saw
from his introduction, Hamilton Fish was an important American
politician. He was also a very learned man who wrote well. From the
publisherÕs blurb on the back, we learn that Fish was of a distinguished
lineage:
Hamilton
Fish was born in Garrison, New York, on 7 December 1888, the son of a
Congressman, the grandson of a former governor of New York, U.S. senator, and
secretary of state; and the great-grandson of a colonel in WashingtonÕs army,
who was an intimate friend of Lafayette and Alexander Hamilton. He
attended Saint MarkÕs School, and was graduated from Harvard t the age of 20
with a degree cum laude in government and history. he was also offered an appointment as an instructor of
history at Harvard.
Mr. Fish was
elected three times on the Progressive (ÒBull MooseÓ) ticket to the New York
Assembly, served as an officer in the 369th Negro infantry from New
York in World War I in France, where he was decorated with the Silver Star and
the French croix de guerre, and served in Congress
from 1920 to 1945 as a Republican.
Ordinarily publishers
would be clamoring for such a manÕs writings. But the subject of his book
is not a popular one. He had to settle for an equally unpopular
publisher, the Institute for Historical Review (IHR). Although
there would seem to be a considerable mismatch in public repute between author
and publisher, very much in favor of the former, it is the latter that sees fit
to issue a disclaimer in the publisherÕs blurb on the back:
The
Institute for Historical Review is a non-profit, educational foundation
dedicated to bringing history into accord with the facts. We present this
book as a valuable, first-hand account of corruption in high places, even
though the author appears to support the now discredited notion of the
ÒHolocaustÓ and was even involved in some of the
initial U.S. moves to support the Israeli conquest and colonization of
Palestine. We publish this book in the interests of historical
objectivity, in the knowledge that Revisionist scholars are able to distinguish
first-hand experience from sentimentality.
At this
point, reflecting upon our own experience with the IHR and upon the central
point of our previous article, ÒThe Pearl Harbor Betrayal and James ForrestalÕs Death,Ó we must offer a
quibble with FishÕs conclusion. Pearl Harbor might still be our greatest
secret, but it is not our best-kept one. The Pearl Harbor subterfuge has
been written about extensively, as noted by the Cockburn quote at the top of
this article, but even IHR director, Mark Weber, has participated in keeping
the truth about James ForrestalÕs death away from the public. When we
emailed him the first installment of ÒWho Killed James Forrestal?Ó he responded curtly that
he believed that Forrestal committed suicide, and that was that.
Undeterred, I later sent him Part 2,
which incorporated the findings of the long-secret official investigation of
ForrestalÕs death. He responded that he would look into the matter, but I
have heard nothing from him, and, to my knowledge, he has written nothing on
the subject.
Not only
does the experience tell us a lot about best-kept secrets, it also, to my mind,
tells us a lot about the IHR and its director. Could it be that they are
intentionally feckless, along the lines of the John Birch Society?
_________________________________________________________________________________
*The Soviet
Union, our future ally in World War II, invaded Poland as well, only 16 days
after Germany did.
**Currie was
not just friendly to the Communists, but he spied for them,
as Roosevelt had been told two years before by Whittaker
Chambers through FDRÕs aide, Adolf Berle.
David
Martin
October
17, 2012
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