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Did FDR Provoke Pearl Harbor?
Townhall.com ^ | December 6, 2011 | Pat Buchanan

Posted on 12/06/2011 3:32:36 PM PST by Kaslin

On Dec. 8, 1941, Franklin Roosevelt took the rostrum before a joint session of Congress to ask for a declaration of war on Japan.

A day earlier, at dawn, carrier-based Japanese aircraft had launched a sneak attack devastating the U.S. battle fleet at Pearl Harbor.

Said ex-President Herbert Hoover, Republican statesman of the day, “We have only one job to do now, and that is to defeat Japan.”

But to friends, “the Chief” sent another message: “You and I know that this continuous putting pins in rattlesnakes finally got this country bit.”

Today, 70 years after Pearl Harbor, a remarkable secret history, written from 1943 to 1963, has come to light. It is Hoover’s explanation of what happened before, during and after the world war that may prove yet the death knell of the West.

Edited by historian George Nash, “Freedom Betrayed: Herbert Hoover’s History of the Second World War and Its Aftermath” is a searing indictment of FDR and the men around him as politicians who lied prodigiously about their desire to keep America out of war, even as they took one deliberate step after another to take us into war.

Yet the book is no polemic. The 50-page run-up to the war in the Pacific uses memoirs and documents from all sides to prove Hoover’s indictment. And perhaps the best way to show the power of this book is the way Hoover does it -- chronologically, painstakingly, week by week.

Consider Japan’s situation in the summer of 1941. Bogged down in a four year war in China she could neither win nor end, having moved into French Indochina, Japan saw herself as near the end of her tether.

Inside the government was a powerful faction led by Prime Minister Prince Fumimaro Konoye that desperately did not want a war with the United States.

The “pro-Anglo-Saxon” camp included the navy, whose officers had fought alongside the U.S. and Royal navies in World War I, while the war party was centered on the army, Gen. Hideki Tojo and Foreign Minister Yosuke Matsuoka, a bitter anti-American.

On July 18, 1941, Konoye ousted Matsuoka, replacing him with the “pro-Anglo-Saxon” Adm. Teijiro Toyoda.

The U.S. response: On July 25, we froze all Japanese assets in the United States, ending all exports and imports, and denying Japan the oil upon which the nation and empire depended.

Stunned, Konoye still pursued his peace policy by winning secret support from the navy and army to meet FDR on the U.S. side of the Pacific to hear and respond to U.S. demands.

U.S. Ambassador Joseph Grew implored Washington not to ignore Konoye’s offer, that the prince had convinced him an agreement could be reached on Japanese withdrawal from Indochina and South and Central China. Out of fear of Mao’s armies and Stalin’s Russia, Tokyo wanted to hold a buffer in North China.

On Aug. 28, Japan’s ambassador in Washington presented FDR a personal letter from Konoye imploring him to meet.

Tokyo begged us to keep Konoye’s offer secret, as the revelation of a Japanese prime minister’s offering to cross the Pacific to talk to an American president could imperil his government.

On Sept. 3, the Konoye letter was leaked to the Herald-Tribune.

On Sept. 6, Konoye met again at a three-hour dinner with Grew to tell him Japan now agreed with the four principles the Americans were demanding as the basis for peace. No response.

On Sept. 29, Grew sent what Hoover describes as a “prayer” to the president not to let this chance for peace pass by.

On Sept. 30, Grew wrote Washington, “Konoye’s warship is ready waiting to take him to Honolulu, Alaska or anyplace designated by the president.”

No response. On Oct. 16, Konoye’s cabinet fell.

In November, the U.S. intercepted two new offers from Tokyo: a Plan A for an end to the China war and occupation of Indochina and, if that were rejected, a Plan B, a modus vivendi where neither side would make any new move. When presented, these, too, were rejected out of hand.

At a Nov. 25 meeting of FDR’s war council, Secretary of War Henry Stimson’s notes speak of the prevailing consensus: “The question was how we should maneuver them (the Japanese) into ... firing the first shot without allowing too much danger to ourselves.”

“We can wipe the Japanese off the map in three months,” wrote Navy Secretary Frank Knox.

As Grew had predicted, Japan, a “hara-kiri nation,” proved more likely to fling herself into national suicide for honor than to allow herself to be humiliated.

Out of the war that arose from the refusal to meet Prince Konoye came 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.

If you would know the history that made our world, spend a week with Mr. Hoover’s book.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: americalast; blameamericafirst; buchanan; godsgravesglyphs; history; patbuchanan; pearlharbor; pitchforkpat; skinheads
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To: af_vet_rr
There are books on that part of the 'what if".

One of the more intriguing aspects of the end of the war was the part played by Aristotle Onassis ~ he bought up Liberty ships, converted them to more civilian use, and shipped about 20 million Japanese people from Manchuria to Brazil for settlement in the South.

Anybody who tells you that you can't move 11 million illegal aliens from the US to Mexico is probably not aware of what Aristotle did.

I know a gentleman (Japanese American) who participated in relocating Japanese army units from throughout China to disembarkation areas in coastal cities.

For a short while he had effective command of the largest Japanese army under one "commander" in history. He had the name to go with that exalted status as well. His secret was simple ~ he could speak enough Japanese to tell the existing army field structure what to do, when to do it, and where to head.

After the war he devoted himself to the pursuit of peace ~

61 posted on 12/06/2011 5:19:35 PM PST by muawiyah
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To: gaijin

Spraties = Spratly Islands, South China Sea, etc.

Basically now we’re 1938, or so, all over again, but this time Japan is China, Japan is (sort of) China, and we are somewhat poorer.


62 posted on 12/06/2011 5:22:08 PM PST by gaijin
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To: gaijin
You should find this interesting

The History Place. Vietnam war

63 posted on 12/06/2011 5:22:28 PM PST by Kaslin (Acronym for OBAMA: One Big Ass Mistake America)
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To: Fiji Hill

Japan could not attack Malaya and/or the Dutch East Indies with the Philippines on their flank. We would have been in a position to strangle their supply lines with aircraft from the PI.

The US would have treated a Japanese attack on only Malaya and the DEI as a cause for war, it is still a direct threat to the Philippines.

They have nothing to gain from just occupying French islands, because they do not have any oil. Oil to feed the Army’s war in China was the reason for the war. Oil they lost when they provoked the US, Britain and The Netherlands by occupying French Indo-China

They had no reason to attack us only, because that still would have meant war with Britain and The Netherlands. If we are attacked, they then know who is next.


64 posted on 12/06/2011 5:25:04 PM PST by GreenLanternCorps ("Barack Obama" is Swahili for "Jimmy Carter".)
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To: Kaslin
This is nothing new. I read a book with the same theme decades ago and around 1982 SNL did a pretty funny skit parody on it where Eddie Murphy played the Japanese ambassador who FDR taunts calling the Japanese cowards and daring them to sneak attack on a Sunday when Americans are in church.

How about Roosevelt and Truman's working with USSR to leave them controlling Eastern Europe? That is more relevent.

Japan and Germany had to be stopped so second guessing that war start is non-productive.

65 posted on 12/06/2011 5:25:43 PM PST by sickoflibs (Cain :"Plan B is to quit, but not call it quitting. Instead call it fighting")
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To: old curmudgeon

This quote is taken out of context. The people at that meeting were discussing what their standing orders to various commanders at American installations around the Pacific theater based on the intelligence that indicated that their was a very strong likelihood that the Japanese might stage an attack. They therefore instructed that the posts should be put on high alert (I’m not sure if that’s the technical term), but to avoid firing the first shot in the case of aggressive action by the Japs so that America could claim the moral high ground. Having a clear-cut case to take to the American people was very important in those days.


66 posted on 12/06/2011 5:30:43 PM PST by JewishRighter ( Multiculturalism is killing us.)
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To: Kaslin

My uncle was on the aircraft carrier, USS Lexington in 1941. It was stationed at Pearl Harbor in December, 1941. All at once they were ordered to leave on Dec. 5 together with 2 other carriers. My uncle was planning on going out to diner when he got word to report back to the ship. This was totally unexpected and considering what happened on Dec. 7 he has always wondered if somebody did know something was up.


67 posted on 12/06/2011 5:34:17 PM PST by Uncle Hal
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To: Lou Budvis
The Japanese considered TR to be an honest broker as a result of his efforts to end to Russo-Japanese war.

there were government-inspired demonstrations in Japan when the TR-brokered treaty ended the Russo-Japanese War. The Japanese understood that the US saved the Russians from a total KO in the Far East. Like a boxing referee calling a standing eight the TR administation guaranteed a hostile Russia would remain at Japan's back.

68 posted on 12/06/2011 5:37:58 PM PST by Tallguy
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To: Uncle Hal
Edited by historian George Nash...

I know practically nothing about this person, but I have a feeling he's an old time U.S. history revisionist, not of the pro-America crowd.

Can anyone add a bit of history? I avoid the pro-revisionist google sources.

69 posted on 12/06/2011 5:49:44 PM PST by Publius6961 (My world was lovely, until it was taken over by parasites.)
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To: Kaslin
“We can wipe the Japanese off the map in three months,” wrote Navy Secretary Frank Knox.

*THAT* was far easier said, than done, Mr. Knox...

the infowarrior

70 posted on 12/06/2011 5:52:00 PM PST by infowarrior
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To: Lou Budvis

Nagumo did not have the fuel to stay for a third strike. Not with the US Navy’s carriers lurking about somewhere.

Even had he launched a third strike and successfully gotten through the now alert AA fire. He would have only bought Japan a few extra months, at best.

It does not take that long, using three shifts, to fabricate new oil storage tanks and pipes and rush them to Hawaii. Not when they are the number one priority for the US Navy.

I’ll put it this way, Japan could have sunk every US Navy ship in the Pacific and we would have come back three years later with a fleet four times as big.

Take a look at this page comparing shipbuilding and aircraft construction figures for 1941-1945:

http://www.combinedfleet.com/economic.htm

Japan lost the war the moment she decided to go to war.


71 posted on 12/06/2011 5:53:57 PM PST by GreenLanternCorps ("Barack Obama" is Swahili for "Jimmy Carter".)
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To: Uncle Hal

USS Lexington (CV-2) was ordered on December 5th to rush Marine aircraft to Midway because of the deteriorating situation with Japan and the expected attacks on The Dutch East Indies, Malaya, and The Philippines.


72 posted on 12/06/2011 6:01:16 PM PST by GreenLanternCorps ("Barack Obama" is Swahili for "Jimmy Carter".)
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To: af_vet_rr

The Japanese needed access to the closest oil supply located in the Dutch East Indies. That meant they needed bases in French Indochina, the Kra Peninsula (Thailand-Burma) & Singapore. That meant war with the Britsh Commonwealth and probably the US because their oil shipments would go right by the US bases in the Philippines.

War Plan Orange was built around a naval relief of the Philippines staged through the Hawaiian Islands. Yamamoto in true Samurai fashion flipped War Plan Orange on its head by attacking PH first, buying time for everything else.


73 posted on 12/06/2011 6:04:00 PM PST by Tallguy
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To: Kaslin
Nice link there on Vietnam. My father-in-law once told me, in a rare example of willingness to discuss his military service, a bit about the "seeds of the conflict" as noted at the link - particularly the October 1945 time frame.

He was a navigator aboard a USN patrol bomber - a big flying boat (Martin Mariner / PBM). The squadron was activated late in the war and most of the men had low rotation points by VJ Day, so instead of being mustered-out, they were sent into China to help preserve the truce between the Nationalists and the Communists. There were Marines sent into China as well... don't know about Army.

That effort apparently didn't last long, but one of the things that squadron did while there was send a plane into Vietnam to rescue a French diplomat, right around the end of the year.

74 posted on 12/06/2011 6:04:33 PM PST by Charles Martel (Endeavor to persevere...)
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To: Kaslin

my grandmother, Ohio Taft supporter, believed we did by cutting off their oil supply


75 posted on 12/06/2011 6:19:23 PM PST by griswold3 (Character is Destiny)
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To: Kaslin

Historians daintily sidestep the fundamental question of exactly WHEN the Japanese code was broken. If the War Dept. knew the exact details of the attack, then FDR did indeed sacrifice the lives of our men in Hawaii to get into the war. He covered his tracks well and still has people and institutions running interference for him..


76 posted on 12/06/2011 6:20:08 PM PST by ArtDodger (Reread Animal Farm (with your kids))
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To: Kaslin; SunTzuWu; gaijin; Tallguy; BillGunn; Siena Dreaming; GenXteacher; LS; Jim Noble

Reading any good history of Imperial Japan after WW I would present clearly that Japan had determined to follow a military expansionist policy for their future development. The only controversy was who they were going to pick a fight with. The ‘Strike North” faction thought it should be the Soviet Union and the “Strike South” faction thought it should be U.S., Netherlands, and Great Britain. The outside world was still uncertain enough about how the issue had been resolved that the Soviet Union required confirmation from its spy in Japan Richard Sorge that they were not planning to attack before Stalin released his Eastern divisions to oppose Hitler’s invasion. In this country ever more overt signs of their belligerency called forth ever more stringent diplomatic responses. Pat Buchanan joins the “Strike South” faction in interpreting these as provocations.


77 posted on 12/06/2011 6:27:03 PM PST by Retain Mike
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To: Uncle Hal
Your uncle's memory seems to be slightly flawed. The USS Enterprise left Pearl Harbor 11/28/41 with a load of aircraft for the Wake Island garrison. It was returning to Pearl on 12/7/41. The USS Lexington departed Pearl with a load of aircraft to reinforce the Midway garrison on 12/5/41. The third aircraft carrier in the Pacific was the USS Saratoga, which had just completed maintenance work in Bremerton Washington and was in transit to San Diego, where it picked additional aircraft earmarked for the Wake Island garrison. So there were only two carriers near Pearl Harbor on 12/7/41 and both were being used in aircraft deliveries, not sneaking out of Pearl to keep them safe.

The other four American carriers were in the Atlantic.

USS Lexington was close enough to the Japanese strike force so that it might conceivably on a longshot have spotted or been spotted by the Japanese, but neither force was launching recon patrols. The Lexington's deck was full of Marine aircraft that could fly off, but whose flight crews were not trained to land on carriers. The Japanese weren't flying recon because they were trying to sneak up on Pearl Harbor, and any American warship or merchantmen spotting and reporting a Japanese aircraft in the middle of nowhere would have tipped their hand.

If your uncle is still with us, pass along my thanks for his service to our country.

78 posted on 12/06/2011 6:40:28 PM PST by Cheburashka (If life hands you lemons, government regulations will prevent you from making lemonade.)
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To: LS

Read your book and like it, and understand the context of the liberal lies.

However, beyond the marxist/liberal bent on this, there has been several scholarly works on military intel (particulary British codebreaking of jap naval codes and the comm, and lack of comm, with FDR and others in our military) with various facts that point to intentional neglect on the part of FDR.
Without going into a lot of detail, had family in the know in submarine service at the time— they had shoot to kill orders in Oct. 1941- and a whole host of other orders and negligent behaviour of DC Navy command/FDR convinced him that this was all manipulated to occur, and to cost lives. Also placed it firmly at the feet of the “limeys” and their knowledge of the jap fleet, supplied to FDR and not acted upon.

To his dying day he said this was what happened, and clearly knew why. Went through a lot as a result as many did. Now rests with full honors at Arlington, and will be remembered tomorrow.


79 posted on 12/06/2011 6:44:03 PM PST by John S Mosby (Sic Semper Tyrannis)
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To: Cheburashka
So there were only two carriers near Pearl Harbor on 12/7/41 and both were being used in aircraft deliveries, not sneaking out of Pearl to keep them safe.

Enterprise was due back in Pearl the afternoon of 12/6. Halsey was trying to get his boys their Saturday liberty in Honolulu, but they ended up delayed by weather. She arrived in the evening of 12/7, was refueled and put to sea again to hunt the Japanese task force. Fortunately, Halsey took her in the wrong direction. Yelland with the Nimitz could take Kido Butai in a walk-over. Halsey in Enterprise, not so much.

Had Enterprise been in port as scheduled on 12/7 she would have been moored on "Carrier Row" on the other side of Ford Island from the Battleships, would have been attacked en masse and would probably have capsized from multiple torpedo hits and been a total loss. The US carriers were the primary target for the Japanese pilots; that's why the old USS Utah (which was sitting in a carrier berth) got hit so badly - there wasn't enough time for the Japanese to change their attack plans once they learned the CVs weren't around.
80 posted on 12/06/2011 6:55:52 PM PST by tanknetter
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