PersistentVision (insurgent) 12/07/03 08:53 AM
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The needless
US Pacific War with Japan -- Courtesy of Stalin and FDR [ Post 1092218
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Category: News &
Opinion Topic: History &
Archaeology |
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Synopsis: Another PH attack angle |
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Source: Enter Stage
Right.com |
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Published: October 9,
2000 Author: Michael E. Kreca |
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For Education and Discussion
Only. Not for Commercial
Use. |
East
is East and West is West and never the twain shall meet…" -- Rudyard
Kipling
When Kipling penned those immortal words during
the height of Pax Britannia in the 19th century, he believed East
and West were so different in their respective civilizations and
outlook that there would be no basis for any real understanding
between the two hemispheres. True or untrue, at the times they each
have met, it has often sadly been in the cauldron of warfare, and at
least in the case of the United States, has consequently been
expensive and largely fruitless.
Officially, the reason an
expansionist, resource-poor Japan attacked the headquarters of the
US Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii without warning on Sunday,
Dec. 7th, 1941, was to quickly forestall any US potential
interference in Tokyo's drive to seize and retain the resource rich
possessions of the USA, Britain, Holland and France in the south
Pacific Ocean. On surface, this is true. But to paraphrase famed
British statesman Benjamin Disraeli, what lay "behind the scenes?"
Since the 1920s, the Soviets planned and hoped for a
USA-Japan war because they believed such a conflict (one that they
knew the USA would likely win) would help create a large Asian power
vacuum which could then be quickly filled by Communism. The
elimination of significant Japanese military, diplomatic and
economic influence in the region, which dated back to the 1880s and
was expanded by Japan's humiliating and conclusive military defeat
of Russia in 1905, would give the Reds the opportunity they wanted.
And thanks to FDR and Stalin, they got it.
Benjamin Gitlow
was a founding and prominent member of the US Communist Party but
was permanently expelled from the organization in 1933 for daring to
openly criticize the crimes of Josef Stalin. He soon became a
staunch anti-Communist and died at age 74 in 1965. Gitlow wrote in
his revealing 1940 book entitled I Confess: The Truth About
American Communism:
As far back as 1927 when I was in
Moscow, the attitude toward the United States in the event of war
was discussed. Privately, it was the opinion of all the Soviet
leaders to whom I spoke that the rivalry between the United States
and Japan must actually break out into war between these two. The
Russians were hopeful that the war would break out soon, because
that would greatly secure the safety of Russian-Siberian borders and
would so weaken Japan that Russia would no longer have to fear an
attack from her in the East. Stalin's hopes, through the activities
of the US Communist Party, to create a public opinion in the United
States that would favor a war, presumably in defense of democracy
against the encroachment of fascism, but actually one against Japan.
Stalin is perfectly willing to let Americans die in defense of the
Soviet Union even if they are not members of the Communist
Party...
Roosevelt's predecessor Herbert Hoover had
successfully resisted pressure to send US troops and military aid to
China (other than maintaining the small contingent of US Navy river
gunboats present there off and on since the mid-1850s to guard US
economic assets) when the Japanese first occupied Manchuria in 1931.
His reason was that the Chinese would eventually wear down Japan,
just as they had eventually worn down every other invader throughout
their history.
The Japanese premier during most of the
crucial 1940-41 period was a member of the royal family, Prince
Konoye Fuminaro. Konoye--whose power base lay with big business that
was suffering under the burdensome costs of the inconclusive land
war in China and US economic sanctions--proposed a meeting with FDR
in Honolulu in August 1941 (breaking centuries of Japanese tradition
and rigid protocol by meeting with a foreigner outside of Japan) in
order to get the US to lift its embargo on longtime petroleum, iron
ore and scrap metal exports to Japan. In exchange, Konoye was
willing to withdraw Japanese troops from Indochina and sharply
reduce its military presence in China.
The US and British
ambassadors to Japan, Joseph C. Grew (a Herbert Hoover appointee)
and Sir Robert Craigie, respectively both urged FDR to confer with
Konoye and to agree to his terms. Grew especially was trying to
avoid war with Japan and did everything he could to do so. Grew
wrote:
It seems to me highly unlikely that this chance
will come again or that any Japanese statesman other than Prince
Konoye could succeed in controlling the military extremists in
carrying through a policy which they, in their ignorance of
international affairs and economic laws, resent and oppose. The
alternative to reaching a settlement now would be the greatly
increased probability of war and while we would undoubtedly win in
the end, I question whether it is in our own interest to see an
impoverished Japan reduced to the position of a third-rate
power.
Craigie agreed with Grew, stating tersely in a
dispatch to London, "Time suitable for real peace with Japan. Hope
this time American cynicism will not be allowed to interfere with
realistic statesmanship." Churchill (whose own Foreign Office was
riddled with Soviet spies, among them the notorious "Kim" Philby,
Donald Maclean and Guy Burgess) was incensed with Craigie's
conciliatory stance toward Tokyo. He told Foreign Secretary Anthony
Eden:
He (Craigie) should surely be told forthwith
that the entry of the United States into war either with Germany and
Italy or with Japan is fully conformable with British interests.
Nothing in the munitions sphere can compare with the importance of
the British Empire and the United States being co-belligerent.
Moreover, there were four close Roosevelt advisers who,
according to the US Army's 1940-48 communications surveillance of
the Soviet Embassy in Washington (a operation commonly known as
"Venona"), were Soviet spies or sympathizers. These four spearheaded
the ultimately successful attempt to frustrate Grew's and Craigie's
negotiating efforts. They were top White House aide and
Canadian-born economist Lauchlin Currie, Assistant Treasury
Secretary Harry Dexter White (who essentially was Treasury Secretary
Henry Morgenthau Jr.'s puppetmaster) New Deal tax-and-spend fanatic
Harry Hopkins and the notorious State Department official Alger
Hiss. Hiss had tapped Johns Hopkins University Asia specialist and
"adviser" to Chinese Nationalist leader Chiang-Kai-shek, Owen
Lattimore, as FDR's "China expert"--one whom Mao Tse-tung's sidekick
Chou En-lai warmly regarded as "quite sympathetic to the Chinese
Communists."
All of these men, White and Currie especially,
actively pressured FDR into waging a war with Japan. They eloquently
masked their staunch Soviet sympathies behind facile appeals to the
territorial integrity of China under Chiang (a weak, greedy and
corrupt leader who was uneasily allied with Mao and would later be
overwhelmed by him) and in the interests of a "united front against
fascism." FDR thus flatly disregarded the advice of Grew and Craigie
and refused any meeting with Konoye.
Meanwhile, German
Communist Richard Sorge's high-level Soviet spy ring in Tokyo, which
had substantial influence on ranking Japanese military officers and
numerous cabinet officials as well as close contacts with several
German diplomats, helped steer Japanese strategy toward its existing
Navy-based "Strike South" approach--conquest of the fruitful Pacific
possessions of the West and away from the Army-based "Strike North"
approach which targeted Siberia and Soviet Central Asia.
The
"Strike North" strategy had already largely fallen from favor after
Japan's massive defeat by the Red Army at Nomonhan, Mongolia in
August 1939. This defeat led to a Soviet-Japanese nonaggression pact
which ensured the security of the Soviet-Chinese border until the
final days of W.W.II and enabled the Kremlin to later immediately
transfer some 250,000 seasoned troops from the Far East westward to
battle the invading Germans.
Soon, Konoye, the victim of a
near-fatal assassination attempt, was forced out as premier in the
early fall of 1941 and replaced by the pro-German, openly aggressive
General Tojo Hideki. The Japanese militarists were now fully in
control of events and cared little about negotiating with the USA or
anyone else. The stage was being set in Washington, Moscow and Tokyo
for the US-Japan war that Moscow had wanted since the 1920s. All
that remained was to drag the USA into World War II, which FDR,
Churchill and friends failed to do with Germany after numerous
provocations but successfully did with Japan at Pearl Harbor.
On Nov. 18, 1941, Secretary Morgenthau sent to Secretary of
State Cordell Hull a long memorandum drafted by Assistant Secretary
White describing US terms for peace with Japan. These terms were so
severe that White and Currie knew Japan would never accept them.
Japanese Foreign Minister Togo Shigenori, one of the most moderate
members of the Japanese government, recalled after receiving the
Morgenthau-White-Hull memo, "I was utterly disheartened, and felt
like one groping in darkness. The uncompromising tone was no more
than I had looked for; but I was greatly astonished at the extreme
nature of the contents."
An aide to Navy Secretary Frank
Knox, Vice Admiral Francis Beatty, revealed in 1954:
Prior to December 7th, it was evident even to me... that
we were pushing Japan into a corner. I believed that it was the
desire of both President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill that
we get into the war, as they thought the Allies could not win
without us and our efforts to cause the Germans to declare war on us
failed. The conditions we imposed upon Japan -- to get out of China,
for example --were so severe that we knew that that nation could not
accept them. We were forcing her so severely that we could have
known that she would react toward the United States. All her
preparations in a military way -- and we knew their overall import –
pointed that way.
Exactly a week after this memo was
issued, FDR's Secretary of War, Henry Stimson, wrote in his diary
some two weeks before Pearl Harbor, recalling a cabinet meeting
discussing the problems with Japan. He wrote:
There the
President...brought up entirely the relations with the Japanese. He
brought up the event that we were likely to be attacked, perhaps [as
soon as] next Monday, for the Japanese are notorious for making an
attack without warning and the question was what should we do. The
question was how we should maneuver them into the position of firing
the first shot without allowing too much danger to ourselves.
Sir Oliver Lylleton, Churchill's war production minister,
knew all of Churchill's and FDR's plans and decisions to force the
USA into the war. In a June 20, 1944 speech to members of the
American Chamber of Commerce in London, he stated:
America provoked Japan to such an extent that the
Japanese were forced to attack Pearl Harbor. It is a travesty on
history, even to say that America was forced into the war.
Moreover, there was a persistent undercurrent of fear in the
Kremlin that Great Britain would make a separate peace with Germany.
These fears were intensified after Deputy Fuehrer Rudolf Hess's
mysterious May 1941 solo flight to Scotland supposedly to meet
secretly with the Duke of Hamilton, (six weeks before the German
invasion of the USSR) but Japan's bombing of Pearl Harbor seven
months after Hess's inexplicable odyssey, among other things, helped
scuttle any chances of a separate Berlin-London peace treaty,
another major benefit to Moscow.
Even after Pearl Harbor,
Joseph Grew, by then Undersecretary of State for Asian Affairs,
still hoped for some kind of negotiated settlement:
At
the same time I believe that it is important that we bear in mind
that the defeat of Japanese aggression does not necessarily entail,
as many Chinese think, our crushing Japan militarily. The complete
elimination of Japan as a force in the Far East would not be
conducive either to order or prosperity in this area.
Well, we certainly crushed Japan militarily, finally
finishing the job with two atomic bombs in August 1945. What did we
get for it all? Scores of GIs killed from Oahu to Okinawa, billions
of postwar taxpayer dollars spent rebuilding a completely wrecked
and humiliated Japan, keeping it militarily weak in the face of an
appallingly genocidal and increasingly assertive Red China with both
nations eventually becoming the USA's fiercest foreign economic
competitors.
Barely eight years after Hiroshima and
Nagasaki, the USA wound up with some 33,000 US dead in a still
divided and tense Korea, and some two decades after that, 58,000
troops killed in a still Communist Indochina--the last courtesy of a
fruitless eight-year conflict (which some have called the US version
of the Boer War) that severely damaged US social, economic and
political institutions. We then were treated to Pol Pot's
notoriously barbaric Cambodian "Killing Fields," scads of desperate
Vietnamese "boat people," thousands of US troops and a string of
warships permanently deployed in the Far East, and, finally, Chinese
Long March ICBMs aimed at the US West Coast.
All to avenge
the loathsome FDR and his pro-Soviet disciples' self-serving and
cleverly premeditated "day of infamy" and to fulfill the
bloodthirsty Josef Stalin's totalitarian fantasies. Well, hey,
winning is everything, right, sports fans?
But what did we
win?
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NewsWatcher (well of great wisdom) 12/07/03 08:56 AM
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Re: The
needless US Pacific War with Japan -- Courtesy of Stalin and FDR
[ To: PersistentVision |
Post 1092223,
reply to 1092218
] (Score: -1) |
Flag to: kudzu, kingkangaroo, heretic,
mr_mjs_2u2, hounddawg, westpacsailor, a_bert, magician, rdavis84,
laconas, jradcliffe, blackveil, texoma, Judson, RidinShotgun, Edana,
plummz, loner
Insanity?
"Why do you have to make every thread into a homo-erotic
one?" (SoL Posting To OWK)
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WestPacSailor (rebel) 12/07/03 06:49 PM
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Re: The needless US Pacific War with Japan -- Courtesy of Stalin
and FDR [ To: NewsWatcher |
Post 1093197,
reply to 1092223
] (Score: 1) |
velllly intelesting.
"Sometimes you get a pooch that can't be screwed."
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jb_campbell (neophyte) 12/08/03 12:41 AM
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Re: The needless US Pacific War with Japan -- Courtesy of Stalin
and FDR [ To: PersistentVision |
Post 1093790,
reply to 1092218
] (Score: 1) |
Excellent essay. Disagree only with characterization
of Chiang as "weak and greedy." Compared with whom? He kicked Mao's
butt pretty convincingly for many years when left to his own
devices. It was Mao Tse-tung who was weak and greedy for
slaughtering "class enemies." He was working for
Rothschild/Rockefeller and the US multinationals as he slaughtered
millions of his own people to please the truly greedy ones.
George C. Marshall, following CFR orders, was personally
responsible for bringing Mao to power. Mao's rabble were armed with
captured Japanese weapons and Chiang was disarmed by Marshall. His
infamous quote: "As Chief of Staff I armed 110 Nationalist Chinese
divisions. Now, with a stroke of the pen, I disarm them." That was
in 1949, just before the anti-Communist Chinese ran out of ammo. The
US Congress, in defiance of Marshall's treachery, sent a shipload of
arms and ammunition to Chiang's forces. Marshall had the ship routed
to the Bay of Bengal where he then ordered it sunk.
Chiang
wasn't weak and his greed certainly didn't compare with that of the
Rockefeller gang - did it?
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plummz (freedom fighter) 12/08/03 12:49 AM
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Re: The needless US Pacific War with Japan -- Courtesy of Stalin
and FDR [ To: PersistentVision |
Post 1093791,
reply to 1092218
] (Score: 2) |
without warning
I call
bullshit.
VT1 *
Constitutional anarcho-capitalist * abolitionist Confederate *
agnostic sedevacantist * rogue Illuminatus * objective Objectivist
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PersistentVision (insurgent) 12/08/03 07:47 AM
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Re: The
needless US Pacific War with Japan -- Courtesy of Stalin and FDR
[ To: PersistentVision |
Post 1094145,
reply to 1092218
] (Score: 2) |
Flag to: rusalka, SonOfLiberty, Randal,
KingKangaroo, The_Expatriate, Heretic
The professional celebrity, male and female, is the crowning result
of the star system of a society that makes a fetish of
competition.--C. Wright Mills
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BlondGermanNight (agent provocateur) 12/08/03 07:49 AM
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Re: The needless US Pacific War with Japan -- Courtesy of Stalin
and FDR [ To: PersistentVision |
Post 1094150,
reply to 1094145
] (Score: 2) |
That link does not work.
Principiis obsta.............Finem respice
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PersistentVision (insurgent) 12/08/03 07:51 AM
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Re: The needless US Pacific War with Japan -- Courtesy of Stalin
and FDR [ To: BlondGermanNight |
Post 1094158,
reply to 1094150
] (Score: 2) |
www.enterstageright.com
The professional celebrity, male and female, is
the crowning result of the star system of a society that makes a
fetish of competition.--C. Wright Mills
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