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IDPT: Pentagon Still Scapegoats Pearl Harbor Fall Guys By Robert B. Stinnett 8/12/2001 1:47 am Sat |
http://www.independent.org/tii/news/001207Stinnett.html
December 7, 2000 December 7, 1941: A Setup from the Beginning
By Robert B. Stinnett* As Americans honor those 2403 men, women, and children killed
-- and 1178 wounded -- in the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor,
Hawaii on December 7, 1941, recently released government
documents concerning that "surprise" raid compel us to revisit some
troubling questions. At issue is American foreknowledge of Japanese military plans to
attack Hawaii by a submarine and carrier force 59 years ago. There
are two questions at the top of the foreknowledge list: (1) whether
President Franklin D. Roosevelt and his top military chieftains
provoked Japan into an "overt act of war" directed at Hawaii, and
(2) whether Japan's military plans were obtained in advance by the
United States but concealed from the Hawaiian military commanders,
Admiral Husband E. Kimmel and Lieutenant General Walter Short so
they would not interfere with the overt act.
The latter question was answered in the affirmative on October 30,
2000, when President Bill Clinton signed into law, with the support
of a bipartisan Congress, the National Defense Authorization Act.
Amidst its omnibus provisions, the Act reverses the findings of nine
previous Pearl Harbor investigations and finds that both Kimmel and
Short were denied crucial military intelligence that tracked the
Japanese forces toward Hawaii and obtained by the Roosevelt
Administration in the weeks before the attack.
Congress was specific in its finding against the 1941 White House:
Kimmel and Short were cut off from the intelligence pipeline that
located Japanese forces advancing on Hawaii. Then, after the
successful Japanese raid, both commanders were relieved of their
commands, blamed for failing to ward off the attack, and demoted in
rank. President Clinton must now decide whether to grant the request by
Congress to restore the commanders to their 1941 ranks. Regardless
of what the Commander-in-Chief does in the remaining months of
his term, these congressional findings should be widely seen as an
exoneration of 59 years of blame assigned to Kimmel and Short.
But one important question remains: Does the blame for the Pearl
Harbor disaster revert to President Roosevelt?
A major motion picture based on the attack is currently under
production by Walt Disney Studios and scheduled for release in
May 2001. The producer, Jerry Bruckheimer, refuses to include
America's foreknowledge in the script. When Bruckheimer
commented on FDR's foreknowledge in an interview published
earlier this year, he said "That's all b___s___."
Yet, Roosevelt believed that provoking Japan into an attack on
Hawaii was the only option he had in 1941 to overcome the
powerful America First non-interventionist movement led by aviation
hero Charles Lindbergh. These anti-war views were shared by 80
percent of the American public from 1940 to 1941. Though Germany
had conquered most of Europe, and her U-Boats were sinking
American ships in the Atlantic Ocean - including warships -
Americans wanted nothing to do with "Europe's War."
However, Germany made a strategic error. She, along with her Axis
partner, Italy, signed the mutual assistance treaty with Japan, the
Tripartite Pact, on September 27, 1940. Ten days later, Lieutenant
Commander Arthur McCollum, a U.S. Naval officer in the Office of
Naval Intelligence (ONI), saw an opportunity to counter the U.S.
isolationist movement by provoking Japan into a state of war with the
U.S., triggering the mutual assistance provisions of the Tripartite
Pact, and bringing America into World War II.
Memorialized in McCollum's secret memo dated October 7, 1940,
and recently obtained through the Freedom of Information Act, the
ONI proposal called for eight provocations aimed at Japan. Its
centerpiece was keeping the might of the U.S. Fleet based in the
Territory of Hawaii as a lure for a Japanese attack.
President Roosevelt acted swiftly. The very next day, October 8,
1940, the Commander-in-Chief of the U.S. Fleet, Admiral James O.
Richardson, was summoned to the Oval Office and told of the
provocative plan by the President. In a heated argument with FDR,
the admiral objected to placing his sailors and ships in harm's way.
Richardson was then fired and in his place FDR selected an
obscure naval officer, Rear Admiral Husband E. Kimmel, to
command the fleet in Hawaii. Kimmel was promoted to a four-star
admiral and took command on February 1, 1941. In a related
appointment, Walter Short was promoted from Major General to a
three-star Lieutenant General and given command of U.S. Army
troops in Hawaii. Throughout 1941, FDR implemented the remaining seven
provocations. He then gauged Japanese reaction through
intercepted and decoded communications intelligence originated by
Japan's diplomatic and military leaders.
The island nation's militarists used the provocations to seize control
of Japan and organized their military forces for war against the U.S.,
Great Britain, and the Netherlands. The centerpiece - the Pearl
Harbor attack - was leaked to the U.S. in January 1941. During the
next 11 months, the White House followed the Japanese war plans
through the intercepted and decoded diplomatic and military
communications intelligence. Japanese leaders failed in basic security precautions. At least 1,000
Japanese military and diplomatic radio messages per day were
intercepted by monitoring stations operated by the U.S. and her
Allies, and the message contents were summarized for the White
House. The intercept summaries were clear: Pearl Harbor would be
attacked on December 7, 1941, by Japanese forces advancing
through the Central and North Pacific Oceans. On November 27 and
28, 1941, Admiral Kimmel and General Short were ordered to remain
in a defensive posture for "the United States desires that Japan
commit the first overt act." The order came directly from President
Roosevelt. As I explained to a policy forum audience at The Independent
Institute in Oakland, California, which was videotaped and telecast
nationwide over the Fourth of July holiday earlier this year, my
research of U.S. naval records shows that not only were Kimmel and
Short cut off from the Japanese communications intelligence
pipeline, so were the American people. It is a coverup that has
lasted for nearly 59 years. Immediately after December 7, 1941, military communications
documents that disclose American foreknowledge of the Pearl
Harbor disaster were locked in U.S. Navy vaults away from the
prying eyes of congressional investigators, historians, and authors.
Though the Freedom of Information Act freed the foreknowledge
documents from the secretive vaults to the sunlight of the National
Archives in 1995, a cottage industry continues to cover up
America's foreknowledge of Pearl Harbor.
* Robert B. Stinnett has worked as a journalist for the Oakland
Tribune and the BBC, and is the author of the book, Day of Deceit:
The Truth about FDR and Pearl Harbor (Free Press, 2000). This
article is adapted from his presentation before the Independent
Policy Forum held earlier this year at The Independent Institute in
Oakland, California.
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