Amelia Earhart Truth
Versus the Establishment
A Review
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article go to Earhart Truth.
H.L. Mencken opens ÒThe Champion,Ó one of his
most memorable and entertaining essays with this question: ÒOf the forty-eight sovereign States of
this imperial Federation, which is the worst?Ó With his next sentence he clarifies his
question: ÒIn what one of them is a civilized man most uncomfortable?Ó The answer, as one who knows Mencken
might expect, turns out to be that most thoroughly American of all the states,
California.
Mencken was a journalist—albeit a truly
great one—so he didnÕt define ÒworstÓ like a person of higher values
might have. As I was reading the
new and improved second edition of Mike CampbellÕs Amelia Earhart: The Truth at Last, a superior way of
clarifying the question, as it applies to the countries on this globe, came to
my mind. ÒIn what one of them is a
virtuous, truth-telling man most unwelcome?Ó
Now anyone who knows anything about the human
race and its history knows that such people tend not to be welcome anywhere,
particularly among those who have a close hold on power over the fellow members
of their group. If, as is often the
case, their power is built upon a foundation of lies—sometimes known as
myths—their hostility is likely to be particularly great. Ladies and gentlemen, I give you Mike
Campbell with his rock-solid story of pioneer aviator Amelia EarhartÕs capture
by the Japanese in 1937, and the 21st century ruling establishment
of the United States of America.
An Important Myth
As we all know, the prevailing myth about the
popular aviatorÕs disappearance in the South Pacific as she failed to reach
tiny Howland Island is that it remains a big mystery that likely will never be
solved. The really interesting
thing is that our press increasingly feels the need, more than three quarters
of a century after the fact, to reinforce the myth with tales of efforts to
locate traces of the lost airplane and its two occupants, Earhart and her
navigator, Fred Noonan. We detailed
some of these myth-reinforcing efforts in our review of the first edition of
CampbellÕs book, ÒHillary
Clinton and the Amelia Earhart Cover-up,Ó published in 2012. It can be found in the concluding
section entitled ÒContinued Media Misdirection.Ó We note in that section that right in the
forefront of the myth reinforcement was no less an establishment figure than
the Secretary of State at the time, Hillary Rodham Clinton.
The essential outlines of the truth—as
opposed to the myth—concerning what happened to Earhart, Noonan, and
their twin-engine Lockheed Electra are by now well established through the
testimony of a large number of witnesses.
The airplane went down on an island in the Japanese-controlled Marshall
Islands to the north of Howland Island.
Earhart and Noonan were taken prisoner by the Japanese and treated as
spies. From there they were
transferred to the Japanese headquarters for the region, the island of Saipan,
for incarceration and interrogation, with a likely intermediate stop at
Kwajalein Atoll.
There are a number of questions that remain open
at this point, but most of them are minor.
After CampbellÕs latest effort, itÕs probably correct to say that itÕs
no longer an open question that Earhart intentionally missed Howland
Island. Uncle Sam was paying the
piper and the tune he called was for her to Òget lostÓ and to stumble into
Japanese territory. The botched
radio transmissions from EarhartÕs airplane could not have been those of a
person running out of fuel, desperate to save her life before going down in the
vast Pacific, whose only lifeline was the radio. President Franklin Roosevelt, a schemer
of the highest order, we may safely speculate, was certain that the Japanese
would treat the international celebrity Earhart well and would welcome the good
publicity they would receive by rescuing her and then letting her go on her
way. It was a very tragic
miscalculation insofar as the fate of Earhart and Noonan was concerned. FDR had greatly underestimated the
degree of suspicion and the level of barbarity of the Japanese militarists.
Our government certainly knew that Earhart and Noonan
were in Japanese hands, but we couldnÕt let them know that we knew without
giving away the game, a large part of it being that we were listening to
Japanese radio communications, having broken their codes. Comparing what our decodes said with
what we likely knew of EarhartÕs route would have been a good way to further
nail down the code breaking.
We might have gained some valuable intelligence,
intelligence that bears upon the question of our foreknowledge of the Pearl
Harbor attack, but in the process FDR had maneuvered himself into a position
where his only political course of action was to abandon the fliers to their
fate. From that time to the present
it has been in the interests of the governments of the United States and of
Japan to stick with the story that Earhart just got lost, ran out of fuel, and
disappeared without a trace, or perhaps crash landed on tiny Gardner Island (now
Nikumaroro) and survived there for a while.
Military Parallels
Campbell doesnÕt make the connection, but at
this point we canÕt help but notice the great similarities between the Earhart
episode and our governmentÕs abandonment of large numbers of
POWs in North Vietnam and Laos after the Vietnam War. President Richard Nixon and his top
adviser Henry Kissinger had painted themselves into a corner by making secret
promises that were politically impossible for them to keep, so badly did they
want a peace agreement with the North Vietnamese. Chief among them was a promise of
reparations for the damage that we had done to the country in the war. The Communists held back prisoners as a sort
of collateral, and we never paid up.
The truth makes both the Communist governments and the U.S. look bad, so
the politically expedient course of action has been to leave the POWs to their
fate, just as Earhart and Noonan were left to theirs.
Another great parallel in the two abandonments
is that on one side are the governments and their compliant press and on the
other side are large numbers of witnesses, many of whom are American military
veterans. In the Earhart case,
Campbell reminds us, that latter category includes three high ranking officers
who might not have been eyewitnesses, but they have lent their authority to the
story told by the many witnesses on Saipan and the Marshall Islands. They are Saipan veteran Marine General
Graves Erskine, former Marine Commandant General Alexander A. Vandegrift, and the famous Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz,
who had been the commander in chief of the U.S. Pacific Forces.
With the mention of those three illustrious
military officers, we are reminded further of the Earhart parallels with
another historical incident in which a famous military leader has taken strong
issue with the position of the government and the press. The incident is the 1967 attack on the USS Liberty by Israel that left 34 American
servicemen dead and 174 injured. The military officer who rejected the official
story that it was an accident, a case of mistaken identity by the Israelis, was
Admiral Thomas Moorer.
I am also reminded of my own experience in the
U.S. Army that is recounted in my article, ÒA Condensation of Military Incompetence.Ó I was on mid-tour
leave in Japan in early 1968 from the Eighth Army in Korea. A traveling companion, a soldier
stationed on the DMZ, had told me about hearing a large number of infiltrators
who had come through their lines at night, he and his fellow sentinels had
fired in the direction of the noise, but had not hit any enemy soldiers. When a 31-man squad ended up in the
heart of Seoul my companion was certain that it was the same group, and his
story checks out with what I later learned from talking with my outfitÕs
inspectors from Eighth Army headquarters.
Yet the official story from that day until now is that we knew nothing
about any such infiltrators until a couple of Korean civilians many miles to
the south encountered them, that is, we did not know of any such infiltrators
who had come through our lines.
Preserving FDRÕs Reputation
A major reason why our ruling establishment
cannot admit the truth in the Earhart case is what it would do to the
reputation of President Roosevelt. According to the dominant myth, he was the
great, wise man who led us on to victory in the Good War, a war that was forced
upon him by the unanticipated Japanese sneak attack on Pearl Harbor.
How great is the need to keep FDRÕs reputation
intact was brought home to this writer in his reading of three recent books
that are generally scathing in their criticism of the wartime presidentÕs
policies, particularly with respect to the Communists. They are StalinÕs
Secret Agents: The Subversion of RooseveltÕs Government by M. Stanton Evans and
Herbert Romerstein, The
Forsaken: An American Tragedy in StalinÕs Russia by
Tim Tzouliadis, and American
Betrayal: The Secret Assault on Our NationÕs Character by Diana West. The key action that each of these
authors took to protect the Roosevelt myth is summed up in this passage from my
review of the latter book:
WestÕs
most obvious intentional weakening of her argument is her failure to mention
the anti-Communist Jewish journalist Isaac Don Levine. In my essay, ÒFDR
Winked at Soviet Espionage,Ó I fault another
conservative journalist, Ann Coulter, when, in her book Treason: Liberal Treachery from the Cold War to the War on Terrorism she
airbrushes Levine out of the picture as the man who set up and attended the
fateful meeting in 1939 between Communist defector Whittaker Chambers and
Roosevelt security chief Adolf Berle,
in which Chambers revealed to Berle the existence of a Soviet
spy cell that included State Department officials Alger and Donald Hiss, Treasury
official Harry Dexter White, and even White House aide Lauchlin Currie. I further fault Tzouliadis and imminent Red exposer M. Stanton Evans
for protecting FDR by falsely stating that Berle never informed Roosevelt of what Chambers had
revealed. West goes them one
better. She inexplicably leaves
out any mention of the meeting itself.
These critics of Franklin Roosevelt surely knew that
what they wrote about this episode was not true (or in WestÕs case, knew that
it was much too important to be omitted).
What this tells us is that preserving the reputation of FDR is such a
big deal that even his putatively most severe critics would jeopardize their
own reputations to cover up for the man.
Unacceptable Truth
That, in a nutshell, shows you what Mike
Campbell is up against with his definitive books on the Earhart saga. I provided a sample of the establishment
wall of rejection in my August 2015 article, ÒWikipediaÕs Greatest Misses:Ó
The
Amelia Earhart Wikipedia page has a
very extensive ÒBibliography of cited sourcesÓ and ÒFurther reading.Ó There is no trace of Campbell or his
work there. One may survey the
history of the site to see that references to Campbell and his work have been
put up, but have been quickly taken down.
It is obvious that the site is still closely policed and Amelia
EarhartÕs disappearance continues to be a very important historical hot
potato. So what we have here is a
brand new mystery to solve: Who is making Mike Campbell disappear from
Wikipedia, and why is it so important that he be made to disappear?
Campbell fleshes out his experience in his new
concluding chapter:
When Sunbury Press publisher Larry Knorr
accepted the first manuscript of this book for publication in the summer of
2011, I was grateful to finally find someone who believed in this work, but I
knew the struggle had only begun.
Since the bookÕs publication in June 2012, IÕve learned that the
establishmentÕs hostility to the truth about Amelia Earhart is far worse than I
imagined. This antipathy isnÕt
limited to the media, but among our so-called journalists and news people, who
should be the most interested, this resistance is greatest. Nearly every talk show host in the
country has ignored my requests without even extending the civility of a
response. Fox News, you ask? Not a chance. In fact, Fox News is among big mediaÕs
very worst propagandists, slavishly touting Ric GillespieÕs bilge and barring any
contrary opinions from their websiteÕs comments. In mid-June 2015, a week into TIGHARÕs
eleventh Nikumaroro trip, Fox led a herd of outlets
that published an Associated Press story that nearly canonized TIGHARÕs
executive director, whoÕs never sailed for Nikumaroro
without a boatload of media hype and corporate dollars.
Be warned. You will come away from reading Amelia Earhart: The Truth at Last, with
a great feeling of frustration.
ItÕs not a comfortable thing to know the true, tragic fate of this
famous woman, and itÕs particularly exasperating to realize that virtually
everyone you might know believes otherwise. Where is the serious concern for
EarhartÕs ultimate fate by all those people, like Hillary Clinton, who claim to
idealize her? To be fair, many well-meaning
average citizens wonÕt really know why they think Earhart just mysteriously
disappeared, but the new subtitle that Campbell has chosen for his second edition
provides a clue: ÒPropaganda Versus Fact in the Disappearance of AmericaÕs
First Lady of Flight.Ó Around no war has so much propaganda been generated than
World War II, and the official, media-supported story of Amelia EarhartÕs
disappearance is very much a part of it.
At the same time, you might find reading Mike CampbellÕs
opus to be a rare satisfying experience.
For the time that it takes for you to read it, you will likely feel, as
I did, that you are in the company of a person who really cares deeply about
the truth. It virtually radiates
from every page. Even if you hadnÕt
learned a lot about a subject of much greater historical importance than you
might have initially thought possible, you would have spent your time well to
have shared it, as it were, with a man who, for the best of reasons, is very
much unwelcome to our ruling establishment.
David Martin
May 6, 2016
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