http://www.antiwar.com/justin/j081001.html



HARRY TRUMAN, WAR CRIMINAL
WorldNetDaily's Tom Ambrose defends the undefendable


My last column, "Hiroshima Mon Amour: Why Americans are barbarians," has
provoked a storm of protest from the clueless and the humorless – reinforcing
my own conviction that Americans, for the most part, are indeed barbarians,
without the ability or the desire to overcome their brainwashing and engage
in even the simplest tasks of reasoning. They don't know their own history,
except as recycled and rewritten by CNN and the court historians, and, what's
more, they don't want to know. As evidence of this brain-dead state, I submit
a screed by Tom Ambrose, an assistant editor over at WorldNetDaily,
imaginatively entitled "Raimondo's Wrong."








A GREAT HONOR?

Ambrose revs up his readers with a prefatory note about how he's never ever
felt the need to "spar with other columnists" – with one exception that
proves the rule – "no matter how much I disagreed with them. Until today." To
what do I owe this great honor? Ambrose writes:
"If his intention was to push people's buttons, he surely succeeded in that
endeavor with me. I regard what he wrote as a thoughtless, warped rant – a
pile of pacifistic pap with little redeeming value."



PACIFISTIC OR PUGILISTIC?

Pacifistic? Me? *Sigh* Okay, maybe I was a little unclear; maybe I waffled
just a little bit, and didn't state my case against the US in unequivocally
black-and-white terms, words even an Epsilon Minus Semi-Moron could
understand, so here goes: I am not just saying that the US should have
refrained from nuking Hiroshima and Nagasaki. I am telling you that the war
in the Pacific was a monstrous injustice from the word go. Franklin Delano
Roosevelt's policy was to provoke, entice, and otherwise entrap the Japanese
into war. He couldn't get into the war by the front door, in Europe, because
the American people overwhelmingly opposed such a course, so he chose to go
in through the back. Now this is a thesis not entirely unknown to Ambrose:
indeed, he not only alludes to it later on in his rambling diatribe, but
indicates his substantial agreement, admitting that:
"There is strong evidence that the US acted in a way that helped lead to the
Japanese decision to draw first blood. To his credit, Raimondo previously got
this part of the story right
."



THE WHOLE STORY

This is not just "part of the story," it is the whole story. It is
astonishing that, to illustrate this one point of agreement between us,
Ambrose links to my review of Thomas Fleming's The New Dealers' War, a book
which shows how FDR, in response to the failure of his policies at home,
sought US intervention in the war as the solution to his political and
economic problems. But if Ambrose agrees that US involvement in that war was
a colossal mistake – and not just that but part of a concerted policy by FDR
and his closest advisors to socialize the American economy, smash domestic
opposition, and build up the Soviet Union, as Fleming avers – then how could
the murderous culmination of that very policy be justified? If the Pacific
war was a mistake at its root, in its very origins, then surely its
horrifying climax was something less than desirable.


THE TRUTH ABOUT PEARL HARBOR

Furthermore, in my review of the Fleming book, cited by Ambrose, I also
discuss the thesis of Robert Stinnett's Day of Deceit, a book that proves FDR
knew in advance about the Japanese "sneak attack" on Pearl Harbor. Stinnett,
using the Freedom of Information Act, analyzes documents previously withheld
from the public and shows just what the US government knew, and how and when
they knew it, tracing the flow of information from US intelligence sources
all the way up to the White House. Not only did they know about the Pearl
Harbor "surprise" weeks in advance, but FDR and his cronies consciously
engineered it, and were, in their own way, just as responsible as the
Japanese warlords who gave the order to attack. Japan is entirely bereft of
oil, rubber, tin, and virtually all of the natural resources necessary for
the maintenance of modern civilization: she is forced to go abroad for them.
But if the free flow of commerce is obstructed, and such items cannot be
obtained peacefully, by means of trade, then Nippon must procure them in
other ways – or else live a life of primitive privation. Faced with the
prospect of death by strangulation or war, the Japanese chose the latter –
and who can blame them? The Japanese attack, seen in the context of the
economic blockade imposed on Japan by the Western powers, was a desperate act
of self-defense.


THE REAL AGGRESSORS

Japanese diplomats desperately tried to come to some accommodation with the
US, but FDR was intransigent: under no circumstances would he either lift the
embargo, or permit a Japanese challenge to British, French, and Dutch
hegemony in Southeast Asia. Seen against this backdrop, the attack on Pearl
Harbor was a last resort, an act of final desperation. The Japanese may have
struck the first blow, but it was the Americans who were the real aggressors.
When I speculated, half-seriously, that the wrong side may have won the
Pacific war – a remark that practically gave Ambrose, and several other
readers, a coronary – I didn't realize, at the time, just how literally some
people would take it. Surely they would realize, with the reference to Eminem
versus the high civilization of classical Japan, that I was making a
secondary point about the rotten state of our culture.


COME TO THINK OF IT ...

But now that I think about it, I find that I do indeed mean it literally: for
the entire history of US-Japanese relations in the years preceding that day
of infamy is a well-documented saga of unprovoked hostility and relentless
aggression on the part of the United States. In spite of Japanese efforts to
conciliate the United States, and the active opposition to war by many in the
Japanese government, the President of the United States would have none of
it. In the monumental Back Door to War, the historian Charles Callan Tansill
points out
that Secretary of State Cordell Hull, reading intercepted Japanese
diplomatic traffic, knew full well the Japanese government was desperate for
peace: yet he refused to entertain any of the Japanese proposals.


THE FAIRNESS DOCTRINE

Instead, Japan was ordered to leave China to the good graces of Mao Tse Tung
and his Kuomintang allies, and, in addition, "Japan should abandon any
thought of preserving in China, or anywhere else in the Pacific area, a
'preferential position.'" In other words, Japan must be content with its
rocky isle, whilst the British, the French, the Dutch, and even the
Portuguese must be allowed to feast, undisturbed, at the banquet of Asia.
Now, doesn't that sound fair to you?


JUST THE FACTS

My big problem, according to Ambrose, is that I'm relying on the arguments of
"revisionists" who don't have any "hard facts to substantiate their
allegations." Okay, bud, you want facts, here's a few. Take a gander at the
following series of intercepted messages between Tokyo and the Japanese
ambassador to Moscow, which Truman had full knowledge of:
July 11 – "Make clear to Russia... We have no intention of annexing or taking
possession of the areas which we have been occupying as a result of the war;
we hope to terminate the war."
July 12 – "It is His Majesty's heart's desire to see the swift termination of
the war."
July 13 – "I sent Ando... to communicate to the [Soviet] Ambassador that His
Majesty desired to dispatch Prince Konoye as special envoy, carrying with him
the personal letter of His Majesty stating the Imperial wish to end the war."
July 21 – "Special Envoy Konoye's mission will be in obedience to the
Imperial Will. He will request assistance in bringing about an end to the war
through the good offices of the Soviet Government." This notes also reveals
that a conference between the Emperor's emissary, Prince Konoye, and the
Soviet Union, was sought, in preparation for contacting the U.S. and Great
Britain.
July 25 – "It is impossible to accept unconditional surrender under any
circumstances, but we should like to communicate to the other party through
appropriate channels that we have no objection to a peace based on the
Atlantic Charter."


A MALIGNANT PYGMY

Clearly, the Japanese were willing to surrender, but not unconditionally.
Their chief concern, as Ambrose acknowledges, was preservation of the
imperial system as an institution: once assured of this, their surrender
would have been swiftly forthcoming. Ambrose dismisses the alternative of
abandoning unconditional surrender with a breezy "and if pigs had wings," but
why wouldn't this have been preferable to the incineration of more than
300,000 civilians? Yes, the buck does stop with Harry Truman, as Ambrose
avers, and this is why that malignant pygmy ought to be remembered, not as a
great man, or a good president, but as a war criminal.


CASTING PEARLS BEFORE SWINE

I can also see that my subtleties are wasted on Ambrose, who fails to
understand my point about the Japanese unwillingness to surrender even after
Nagasaki. He writes: 
"The obvious question one must ask, then, is if the Japanese were still bent
on continuing their nasty war – even after two atomic bombs were dropped in
their backyard (and the threat of Tokyo soon to follow) – what possible
rationale could one reasonably suggest to support the efficacy of those
lesser 'alternatives' which Raimondo is apparently enamored with?"



THE BOMB BOMBED

The point is that the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki made no difference as
to the outcome of the war, or the speed at which the American victory was
arrived at. The Americans could have dropped as many A-bombs as they could
muster, and still the Japanese would have failed to surrender but for the
Emperor's firm belief that his throne would not be snatched out from under
him. It was only this belief that gave the peace party the edge to win the
internal fight against the warlords, who would have had the entire nation
commit a collective seppuku before acknowledging the victory of the hated
Westerners. In the end, it wasn't the Bomb, or even two such bombs, that
ended that war: it was the recognition that a compromise was the only way to
avoid a huge number of American casualties.


NEGOTIATIONS, NOT NUKES

"Lesser alternatives" have nothing to do with it. In reality, no "lesser"
alternative, such as a demonstration bomb, was necessary: if only Truman had
taken the advice of his top advisors, such as Joseph Grew, the former
ambassador to Japan, he would have dropped the unconditional surrender
proviso, ensured the continuity of Japan's imperial dynasty, and negotiated
an end to the war.


IS JUSTICE A TWO-WAY STREET?

Ambrose naturally brings up all the favorite atrocity stories of the
Japan-bashers, Nanjing, the Bataan death march, etc., but what is the point?
Is this supposed to somehow justify the atom-bombing of Hiroshima and
Nagasaki? He doesn't quite say this, but the implication is clear enough:
burning the eyeballs out of Japanese schoolchildren is a justified act of
revenge, not only for Pearl Harbor but for all those terrible kamikaze pilots
(he mentions them specifically) who played havoc with our ships. But is that
really an admissible defense: pointing to the crimes of the other side? The
attempts by the lawyers for the defense in the Nuremberg war crimes trials to
introduce evidence of Allied atrocities was thrown out, nor was a similar
effort in the case of the Japanese warlords permitted. So how come this
principle doesn't work both ways?


DYING FOR THE 'FOUR FREEDOMS'

Ambrose points to the destruction wrought by kamikaze pilots as among Japan's
more heinous deeds, worthy of punishment. However, instead of inspiring a
desire for revenge, the kamikazes should evoke our admiration. For how many
American fighter pilots would have committed suicide in the name of the "Four
Freedoms"? Yet many thousands of Japanese willingly plunged their planes into
the flaming sea for the glory of the Emperor.


A FEW "MISTAKES"

We may have made a few "mistakes," writes Ambrose, such as setting up
concentration camps in the US where Japanese-Americans were imprisoned – oh,
and by the way, Justin, you're right about how we got into the war – but,
that said,
"Dropping the atomic bomb on Japan was not one of them. The Japanese alone
must shoulder the responsibility for their choice to initiate a bloody war
with the United States rather than looking for one of those other
'alternatives' that Justin is so fond of when he points his finger at the
United States. That the US then used every means at its disposal to put an
end to the war is absolutely justifiable even though Justin Raimondo would
like you to believe otherwise."



WAR CRIMES

So, the US was justified using any and "every means"? What about killing
every man, woman, and child in Japan? Would that have been okay? In a
civilized society, the ends can never justify the means: some methods of
warfare, by their very nature, are ruled out from the very beginning, such
as, for example, indiscriminate slaughter of unarmed civilians. This is what
it means to commit a war crime. To point out that the enemy has indulged in
such tactics is no defense, but merely an admission of guilt: and, in any
case, the sheer scale of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings is on an
entirely different level of evil from any atrocity carried out by the
Japanese.


AMBROSIAN ILLOGIC

The war, as the majority of the Japanese Cabinet realized, was already lost:
at issue were the conditions for the Japanese surrender. As for the original
responsibility for the war, it is not the Japanese but the Americans who
blocked off every avenue to compromise, who backed their British, French, and
Dutch allies in an ultimately fruitless quest to hold on to their Eastasian
possessions. I note that Ambrose, like the New York Post and the rest of the
know-nothing neocon Right, also brays about how the double nuking of Japan
"ultimately saved many lives"! It's obscene balderdash, naturally, but leave
it to Ambrose to defend such counterintuitive folderol with typical Ambrosian
illogic:
"Having seen the horrible devastation wrought by those two ghastly events,
political leaders everywhere have so far refrained from actually using the
even more powerful, more devastating weapons they have built."



IT FEELS SO GOOD

So maybe someone should drop a bomb on, say, Washington DC, or perhaps Mr.
Ambrose's place of abode, just to remind us all of how truly terrible these
weapons are, and in order to avert an even greater catastrophe. The idea that
we were "spared further anguish" by Truman's policy of mass murder is akin to
the curious notion of the madman who, when asked why he kept banging his head
against the wall, replied: "Because it feels so good when I stop."


THE CHOICE

Ambrose concludes his polemic by going into the old song-and-dance about how
war is inevitable, and some things, such as freedom, are worth fighting for
because "the alternative is completely unacceptable." But the alternative
would have been not to enter the war to begin with. Short of that, the
alternative course would have been a negotiated peace with Japan, especially
since Germany had already been defeated. Unlike nuking two cities only
marginally connected to the Japanese war effort, that would have saved
millions of lives. Ambrose claims that "pacifism" could have cost us our
freedom "had we failed to decisively win WWII." But a negotiated peace, at
the point when Truman was weighing his decision, would have left both our
victory and Japan intact, the latter acting as a buffer between a Communized
China and the West. Far from threatening our freedom, a negotiated peace
would have helped defend us against the rising threat of Soviet Russia.


A YUCKY EVIL

Finally, Ambrose addresses me directly:
"To Justin Raimondo, I conclude with this: Wake up. There are stupid, yucky,
evil people in this world and no matter how much you and I wish they didn't
exist, the fact is they do exist."

Yes, Mr. Ambrose, I'll grant you that, they certainly do exist – and their
main headquarters is in Washington, DC. For it was from that vantage point
that FDR "lied us into war," as Clare Booth Luce put it. It was from there
that the campaign to drag us into the war, and Communize half of Europe and a
good deal of Asia, was hatched, and carried out with amazing success. And it
was from there that the evil spread, throughout the world, until, today, its
dominion is global. These are the same sort of yucky people who bombed the
h*ll out of the former Yugoslavia, invaded Somalia, bombed an aspirin factory
in the Sudan to get a scandal off the front pages, and continually strafe the
cratered moonscape of Iraq on the chance that they might hit a few more
innocent civilians. I refer, of course, to our esteemed rulers and leaders,
officials of the US government and its intellectual amen-corner – the locus
of evil in the world.


WE HAVE MET THE ENEMY

And that really is the lesson of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the thesis that is
irrefutably proven by the dark history of these events and by one
incontestable fact: only the US, among all the nations who possess these
deadly weapons of mass destruction, has actually used them. Now that ought to
tell us something: indeed, it is all we really need to know. So, to Tom
Ambrose, I conclude with this: You wake up, buddy. We have met the stupid,
yucky, evil people in this world, and they are us – or, more precisely, our
elected (and unelected) representatives.



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