Posted by Eric Muller (visiting from <a 
href="http://www.isthatlegal.org/";>isthatlegal.org</a>):
WHO TO BELIEVE?  MICHELLE MALKIN, OR THE CANADIAN PRIME MINISTER?

   [1]king-roosevelt Michelle Malkin's revisionist telling of the story
   of the Japanese American internment turns crucially on one supposed
   military fact: Franklin Roosevelt and his top military brass feared a
   Japanese assault on the West Coast. This, she claims, rather than
   prejudice, panic, or economic or political pressure, explained their
   decision to uproot American citizens of Japanese ancestry from the
   West Coast, while taking no programmatic action anywhere against
   identically situated Americans of German or Italian ancestry. And, she
   argues, it explains why Roosevelt and his Secretary of War and
   Assistant Secretary of War took so seriously a couple of ambiguous
   references in top-secret decrypted Japanese diplomatic messages
   referring to the recruitment of "second generation" Japanese spies.
   Greg Robinson of the University of Quebec at Montreal has pointed me
   to the excerpt from [2]Canadian Prime Minister MacKenzie King's diary
   that you see in this post. It's from June 25, 1942, and reflects a
   conversation that King had with Roosevelt in Washington during a
   meeting of the Pacific War Council.
   The key passage is the one that begins "He said he thought the
   Japanese were foolish . . ."
   Admittedly, this is not Roosevelt's diary; it is King's. But it is a
   far, far clearer window into Roosevelt's thinking about military risks
   than the suppositions--for that is all Malkin can muster--about which
   decrypted messages Roosevelt must have seen and what he must have
   thought they meant in the context of what he must have feared about a
   Japanese assault on the West Coast.
   One other thing: before people start shouting about the American
   victory at Midway in early June of 1942, and about how the military
   situation on June 25, 1942 (when he spoke to King) was different from
   the situation on February 19, 1942 (when he signed the executive order
   authorizing the military to take action against Japanese Americans and
   others on the coast), consider this: seven of the ten permanent
   relocation centers for Japanese Americans in the U.S. interior were
   not yet open (indeed, had not yet even been built) when Roosevelt
   talked to King. ([3]Camp opening dates: Granada (Colorado): 8/27/42;
   Heart Mountain (Wyoming): 8/12/42; Jerome (Arkansas): 10/6/42; Rohwer
   (Arkansas): 9/18/42; Minidoka (Idaho): 8/10/42; Topaz (Utah): 9/11/42;
   Gila River (Arizona): 7/20/42.)
   Thus, Robinson and I have shown--[4]again--that at the time the
   government was still developing the bureaucracy and infrastructure of
   confinement, the Commander in Chief did not himself believe the
   "military necessity" rationale that Malkin imagines for him.

References

   1. file://localhost/files/eric-king.gif
   2. http://king.collectionscanada.ca/EN/default.asp
   3. http://www.janm.org/projects/clasc/map.htm
   4. http://www.isthatlegal.org/Muller_and_Robinson_on_Malkin.html

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