On Wednesday, August 29, 1945,
President Truman gave out the reports of the Army and Navy
Boards directed by Congress to investigate the responsibility
for the great disaster of December 7, 1941, at Pearl Harbor.
These Boards had filed their reports nine months ago. Under
the pretext that issuance of them would disclose important
military secrets President Roosevelt suppressed them. But
President Truman has not by any means given out the whole
story. Portions of it are still suppressed. He says they will
never be given out. And that is the simple truth. They will
never be given out by this government until Congress compels
the government to release all the information which it is
hiding from the people and which it hopes to hide from
history.The
Roberts Report – which was also doctored before being
released – blamed
Admiral
[Husband] Kimmel and
General [Walter] Short for the defeat. Now the two Army
and Navy reports expand the guilt to cover General Marshall,
Admiral Stark and former Secretary of State Hull. Marshall and
Stark were the Army and Navy chiefs in December. 1941. All the
top commanders have now been blamed, plus various lesser
commanders. But the greatest commander of all is left out –
the Commander-in-Chief. In the 150,000 words of these
findings and comments the name of Franklin D. Roosevelt stands
out in almost monumental conspicuousness by its absence. The
Army and Navy chiefs, the former Secretary of State and
Congress have been blamed and the President of the United
States has added to the culprits the 130,000,000 people of the
United States. The only person not blamed is Franklin D.
Roosevelt, who was running the whole show. However, in spite
of all the suppressions, the story of Pearl Harbor is known.
And here I propose to tell it. Put in plain terms the tragedy
of Pearl Harbor was the dark fruit of three incredible
blunders. First in importance was the manner in which the
crisis was managed. The second blunder was the bottling of the
fleet in Pearl Harbor. The third was the stripping of the
defenses of Pearl Harbor. It was Roosevelt who personally
managed the whole crisis. It was Roosevelt who bottled the
fleet in Pearl Harbor. It was Roosevelt who stripped the base
of its defenses. First then, let us look at the crisis as it
developed in Washington. Let us see it now in the light of the
facts which this government has hidden and which I will now
reveal publicly for the first time.
We shall have to look at
two battlefields. One was the Pacific, where Kimmel and Short
brooded week after week over their deplorable condition,
begging for more weapons, fighting against the inroads made on
what they had and living almost completely in the dark as to
what was happening in that vast, mysterious Pacific world in
which they found themselves. We shall look upon that
battlefield later.
THE JAPANESE MILITARISTS
DECIDE ON WAR WITH THE UNITED STATES
Roosevelt Maneuvers for a
Crisis
There was another
battlefield. It was mostly in the private apartment of
Secretary of State Hull to which the Japanese Ambassador
Nomura paid many calls between April and December of 1941.
Japan's ruthless policy of conquest had brought her into deep
water. The United States, Britain and the Dutch East Indies
had cut off all trade with her. Without the iron, oil, cotton,
rubber and other critical materials from these sources she
could not continue the war in China. The situation became
desperate. One party – the militarists – was for seizing the
Dutch East Indies which would solve the supply problem.
But that would mean war
with England and – almost certainly – with the United States.
The Counselor of the American Embassy in Tokyo had so informed
the Japanese Foreign Office. Nevertheless the extremists were
for the desperate try. 'The other party – the moderates, led
by the Japanese Premier Konoye – was for making the best terms
possible with the United States and getting out of the China
affair as best they could. Admiral Nomura was sent to the
United States as Ambassador to see what could be done. From
April to the end he sat with Cordell Hull, a few times with
the President. They argued endlessly. Then on November 16 he
was joined by Ambassador Kurusu to assist in the delicate
crisis.
There is no space here to
follow these conferences. If you will read the official
reports of them you will see that as the situation m Japan
became more and more desperate, the existing government was
willing to make more and more concessions. But the War Party
became more and more pressing at home for war. It was a race
between the Moderates to get an agreement in Washington and
the War-Agitators to produce a crisis in Japan. You will see
also that President Roosevelt was not going to make any
agreement that the Japanese could accept. The talks got
nowhere.
Then on October 14 the
Moderates lost in Japan. The Warmongers won. The Konoye
ministry fell and General Tojo became premier. The President
knew that would happen and he knew there could be only one
result – a Japanese attack on the Dutch Indies. But there was
also the possibility – even probability – that Japan would
attempt to deal with England first – would try to reduce
Singapore and perhaps attack us in the Philippines. He knew,
as he steadfastly refused to hasten the negotiations, that he
was producing a situation that could end only with an attack
by Japan. Why did he want Japan to attack?
By skillful maneuvers and
impossible promises he had brought the country far toward war.
From benevolent neutrality, selling to the Allies for cash, he
had moved to "Aid-short-of-war ; then to the
"Aid-at-the-risk-of-war" frame of mind. By October the once
"Aid-short-of-war" group was publishing full-page ads
demanding an immediate declaration of war. Senator [Claude]
Pepper, a White House spokesman, said the President had drawn
a line and that when Japan moved over it he would start
shooting. The President was ready for the final act – the act
of open war. Two influences restrained him. His generals and
admirals told him we were not ready. Most important was the
promise he had made to the American people – solemnly given
and repeated – not to send their sons into foreign war unless
attacked. He did not mind violating that pledge. He merely
feared the political effect of the violation.
[Joseph] Alsop and
[Robert] Kintner, White House columnist pets, had written
a short time before that "He (Roosevelt) does not feel he can
openly violate them (his pledges). But he can get around them
the smart way." They explained this meant getting the Germans
to shoot first. Then he could shoot back. But it was now clear
to him that the Germans, were not going to shoot first. Now,
however, the Japanese were about to do so. If they could be
provoked to attack, his problem would, be solved. He would
then be in the war safely – not only against Japan but 'all
the way,' as he triumphantly announced in his speech to
Congress after the attack.
In Japan the war makers
were in a desperate hurry. In the United States, Roosevelt,
for some reason, became impatient of delay. So much so that he
actually considered sometime before November 14 an invasion of
China which would have put us at war with Japan. He proposed
it to the Army and Navy staffs. They dissuaded him because we
were not ready. So he waited a little longer – babying the
Japanese along, but making it plain that they would get no
agreement, save by abject surrender, terms he knew no Japanese
government would dare accept. He did not have long to wait. By
November 14 the sands were running fast, as [U.S. ambassador
to Japan Joseph C.] Grew had warned. Something had happened
which put the play irrevocably in Roosevelt's hands. This is
the event or series of events which have remained locked up in
the keeping of the very inner Circle of the White House. When
you read of these you will know why the White House has
concealed the truth from the world.
THE BREAKING OF THE
JAPANESE CODE SEALS THEIR DOOM
A Gift from the Gods
The hour of Fate had
arrived in Tokyo. But the bedeviled ministers seemed terrified
at the appalling folly they were being driven to commit by the
violent opinion-makers of Japan. The Japanese High Command
began to move their war machine into position. Their plans
were made. They had to have the great Dutch islands. That
meant they had to paralyze Britain. But that in turn meant
they must, if possible, strike a crushing blow at the United
States before she could throw her weight into the struggle.
The blow was obvious. This country's naval strength – all the
battleships which were the core of her Pacific sea power –
were tied up at Pearl Harbor. Some madman had done that
surely, they must have thought. But there were the great ships
like ducks on a pond waiting for the hunter. Everything
depended on the United States leaving the rich target there
for the Japanese hunters. It was a giant gamble. But a safe
one, as we will see, because in the White House sat a
President who was satisfied that he knew it all. He had a plan
too. And he had made sure, as we shall see, that those
battleships and their auxiliary ships would remain quite still
and immobilized in the great shooting gallery. But while the
Japanese prepared for this gamble, frightened at the peril of
waking the still awkward and stupidly led giant America into
action they sent the astute Kurusu to Washington to join
Nomura in a last effort to get a settlement. Kurusu arrived in
Washington on November 16. But by that time the die was cast.
A gift from the gods had
been put into Roosevelt's hands. The British government had
broken one Japanese code. It proceeded to hand over to the
State Department the messages between Tokyo and various
foreign representatives which it intercepted. Roosevelt now
could know what the Japanese were saying among themselves.
November 4, Roosevelt knew the Japanese government would yield
no more as he had an intercepted dispatch from Tokyo saying:
"International situation makes any further compromise in this
matter impossible." On November 5 an intercepted Tokyo
dispatch to Washington said: "Signing of any U.S.-Japanese
agreement must be completed by November 25." And the
Ambassadors were urged by the government to "save Japanese-U.S.
relations from chaos." November 6 another intercepted dispatch
notified Nomura that Kurusu was coming and that this was the
"Last hope of the negotiations." Therefore on November 6,
Roosevelt knew that the Japanese were playing their last card;
that they would make no further concession and he knew also
the very date they had set for action – November 25.
Kurusu seemed to realize
quickly enough that he was bucking his head against a stone
wall. Troubled by the onrushing deadline he must have appealed
to Tokyo for more time. Nomura also appealed to the Japanese
government. He said in an intercepted dispatch that he
"doubted the wisdom of aggressive action." Then on November 22
came a dispatch intercepted by the British saying the deadline
had been changed to November 29. But it added: "This time we
mean business. Deadline absolutely cannot be changed. After
that things will automatically begin to happen." What was
going to happen? All this information was in the hands of Hull
and Roosevelt. Nothing that could happen could surprise them –
save undoubtedly the point of the first assault.
Roosevelt Turns the Screw
After being dissuaded from
the Chinese invasion project, and seeing the posture of
affairs in Japan, the President decided to bring matters to a
head. He did not know where the Japanese would launch their
attack. It might be on Singapore or some Dutch or British
island. In that case he had committed himself – though no one
knew it – to join the British in the war on Japan. But that
was not an ideal arrangement. His opponents could still insist
the United States was not attacked. He was apprehensive about
the political implications. He had just won a battle to junk
the Neutrality Act. But it was a tremendous battle and he won
by a very narrow majority. The enemies of a war declaration
were powerful. What was needed was an outright attack on an
American possession. Roosevelt decided, therefore, to issue an
ultimatum to the Japanese of such a character that America
could not possibly be excluded from the coming assault. He had
been discussing it since mid-November.
Then on November 26,
Secretary Hull did issue an ultimatum to the Japanese. Now he
denies it was an ultimatum. But he cannot escape this charge.
Nor can the President escape the fact that when it was
proposed, General [George C.] Marshall and
Admiral [Harold R.] Stark said: "For God's sake, don't
send it. We are not ready." Here is what happened. November
25, Knox, Stimson, Hull, Marshall and Stark met and went to
the President's office. Hull showed a plan for a three-months'
truce to be given the Japanese. Stimson said he thought it was
so drastic the Japanese would reject it. But apparently the
group approved it. Hull said he didn't know whether he would
offer it "or kick the whole thing over." The next day Hull
handed to the Japanese a very different plan – the ten-point
plan. It demanded that the Japanese (l) get out of China, (2)
get out of Indo-China and (3) repudiate their treaty with the
Axis. The Japanese rightly took this as an ultimatum. And Hull
too so regarded it then. On that day – November 26 – Stimson
telephoned Hull. Stimson wrote in his diary: "He (Hull) told
me he had broken the whole thing off. As he put it: 'I have
washed my hands of it and it is in the hands of you and Knox,
the Army and Navy.'" The next day he told the British
Ambassador the same thing. General Marshall and Admiral Stark
prepared a joint memorandum to the President urging him not to
send an ultimatum because we were not prepared. An attempt is
made to get rid of this fact by saying it did not reach the
President until the 28th, after he had confirmed the ultimatum
to the Japanese Ambassador. The Administration sponsors are
asking you to believe that the President, who was supposed to
know so much, didn't know this fact – that Marshall and Stark
knew it but had never told him before. Of course they had
warned him when he talked about an invasion of China around
November 14. They met with him constantly. The lack of
readiness was widely known. Are we supposed to believe that
the irreplaceable Commander-in-chief alone was ignorant of
this fact? When Hull handed that ultimatum to the Japanese he
and Roosevelt knew it was all over. They sat down then and
waited for "things to happen."
The Fog at Pearl Harbor
What of our two Commanders
at Pearl Harbor, inadequately prepared, and in the dark? It is
important to remember that Pearl Harbor was 3,500 miles from
the points at which the Japanese were preparing their blow·
The reconnaissance of the government on these preparations was
not in the hands of Short or Kimmel. Other agencies were
responsible for that. These agencies reported to Washington.
Kimmel and Short had to depend on Washington entirely for
their information about the international negotiations and the
physical preparation of the Japanese for an attack.
They were not getting
information. Here is an example. As far back as July 26,
Kimmel wrote Stark asking to be informed of the plans of the
government if the Japanese attack the Maritime Provinces and
England declares war on her. July 31, Stark wrote another
naval officer making an amazing confession. He – Chief of
Naval Operations, charged with the plans for eventual war –
wrote that he could not get an answer to Kimmel's question,
that when he advances it to Roosevelt all he gets is a "smile
or 'Betty, please don't ask me that.'" As late as October,
Kimmel has not yet been able to get an answer to his question.
There is no answer until November 14, when the fuse is already
lighted. Then Admiral Stark wrote him saying: "Just what we
will do in the Far East remains to be seen." He was
never informed what the U. S. would do in case of war between
Japan and Britain in the Pacific. On November 25, after Stark
knew an ultimatum would be sent, that the war was only a few
days off, he notified Kimmel that the possibility Kimmel had
been worrying about was now about to happen, that the Japanese
were about to advance in Indochina, Thailand and the Burma
Road most likely. But as to what we will do, he writes a
sentence almost beyond belief, unparalleled in the annals of
grand strategy: "I will be damned if I know what the United
States will do – anything or nothing."
The President knew without
delay the Japanese reaction to his ultimatum. On November 28 a
coded Japanese message intercepted by the British said that
"negotiations are ruptured," that the United States proposals
are humiliating but that Nomura and Kurusu are not to give the
impression that negotiations are off. On November 30, an
intercepted code message from Tokyo to the Japanese Ambassador
in Berlin directs him to notify the German government that
U.S.-Japanese relations are ruptured and that war may may come
quicker than anyone dreams with the Anglo-Saxon powers. And
the following day a British intelligence report came that the
Japanese carriers had left the home waters.
What were Kimmel and Short
told about all this? Literally nothing. Marshall was not in
Washington, he left on the 27th to watch army maneuvers in
North Carolina. Stimson, acting as Chief of Staff, sent Short
a brief message. He called it a war warning. He said
negotiations with Japan had ended – thus adopting the
interpretation of Hull's note as an ultimatum which would be
rejected. But he did not say we had given Japan an ultimatum.
He said an aggressive move was expected in a few days. He
warned "the United States desires Japan to commit the first
overt act." He said: "Prior to hostile action you are directed
to undertake such reconnaissance and other measures as you
deem necessary, but these measures should be carried out so as
not to alarm the civil population or disclose intent. Report
measures taken." The whole message was cryptic and inadequate.
But this was the fault of Stimson, not Marshall. Next day,
Short, who was told to report what he was doing, sent a long
message describing in detail the measures he had taken. The
Army-Navy plan for defense of Hawaii called for three
different types of action – called Alerts. Alert No. 1 was
preparation against internal sabotage. Alert No. 2 was
mobilization against external attack. Alert No. 3 was a signal
for battle positions, when attack begins. Short put into
effect Alert No. 1 – against sabotage and internal disorder.
He had been warned several times about this. He had been
warned that all Japanese movements indicated an attack
thousands of miles from Pearl Harbor. During the next ten
days, though he reported his course, he received no word from
Washington ordering a different one.
Why the alert against
sabotage, instead of against external air or submarine attack?
The reader must have this very clearly in mind. Hawaii had
160,000 Japanese living there. It swarmed with Japanese spies.
While the General Staff felt certain the attack would come at
least 3,000 miles from Hawaii, they were profoundly frightened
lest an internal movement of suicidal Japanese patriots would
destroy planes and essential installations, crippling the
base. Protection against sabotage called for a very different
arrangement than from external attack. Short, and all his
officers, were certain that is what the High Command indicated
and he felt they knew more of the whole Pacific situation than
he did. Kimmel, too, was warned not to do anything that would
excite the civil population. Whatever he did must be done
secretly. Both were warned not even to let their own officers
in on these facts save where essential. And they were told
"hostilities would begin soon" – but against the Kra
Peninsula, Guam, Singapore, Malay.
What was Kimmel doing? It
is forgotten that Kimmel's fleet was not there to protect
Pearl Harbor. The Harbor was there merely as a fuel and supply
base for it. That fleet had a task assigned to it in case of
war. The protection of the base would be the duty of the army
and the base naval installations. We do not know what the task
assigned to Kimmel was. But it is certain that had the
Japanese overlooked Pearl Harbor and struck at the Philippines
or Singapore alone, Kimmel and his fleet would have been off
to sea instantly. Kimmel was preparing for the war task
assigned to him, not merely for the protection of Pearl
Harbor. We must also bear in mind that after November 27,
General Short never received another message giving him any
information about the international situation, That is
difficult to believe, but it is true. And, we must ask, why
was Short told to alert against sabotage while MacArthur in
the Philippines was told to alert all out against instant
attack?
Roosevelt, the
Commander-in-chief, who was now assured of the attack which
would bring him safely into the war, went off to Warm Springs
to enjoy the Thanksgiving holiday.
The Night Before Pearl
Harbor
We now come to the night
before Pearl Harbor in Washington. The President had returned
from Warm Springs because of the crisis. The Japanese envoys
had held during the week several meaningless sessions with the
State Department. But the formal answer of the Japanese
government to the ultimatum had not come. Yet Roosevelt knew
what it would be. The stage is all set for the attack on
British or, better still, British and American territory in
the Pacific. The scenery is beautifully arranged.
The President is widely
advertised as seeking peace. That night at nine o'clock he
sends a dramatic message to Hirohito appealing for peace. He
knows this to be as futile as the breeze around the White
House grounds. The Japanese navy is putting to sea; Japanese
troops are pouring southward. The intercepted codes, of which
the public knows nothing, have told the full story.
Luck now played again into
Roosevelt's hands. Our Army Intelligence Service broke the
Japanese code and learned what they were saying among
themselves. On that fateful battle eve it got possession of a
document of extraordinary importance. You will recall that the
next day – Sunday – the Japanese asked for an appointment at 1
P.M. with Hull They arrived a little late – when the bombs
were falling on Hawaii – and presented a note breaking off
relations with us. The incident has been presented to us in
shockingly false colors, We were told how the President was in
his study on Sunday for a day of rest, confident nothing would
happen after his appeal the night before to Hirohito not to
precipitate war. He was chatting with Harry Hopkins and
fiddling with his stamp collection, while Mrs. Roosevelt
entertained in another quarter one of her innumerable groups
of uplifters. Then – all of a sudden – out of a clear sky,
came news of the attack on Pearl Harbor. It's a good picture,
but utterly fraudulent. That is not the way things happened.
The preceding night – Saturday – the government had got hold
of the text of that very document which the Japanese would
present the next day. It went to Mr. Roosevelt at 10 P.M.
Hull. Knox and Stimson had it. They knew now what was to
happen. Hull telephoned Knox and Stimson to meet him next
morning for a conference at 10.
Consider the situation that
night. The President and his three aged and slow-moving
cabinet members knew everything – all save the hour and point
of attack. Far out in the Pacific the blow would fail. What,
in the name of simple common sense, would men of ordinary
intelligence do? They knew at that very moment the Japanese
ships and planes and subs and troops, under cover of darkness,
were moving to their appointed targets. They knew that out in
that vast Pacific were two commanders, wretchedly equipped,
depending solely on them for information. Would you not
suppose the very first act would be to notify General Marshall
and Admiral Stark and then, instantly, Admiral Kimmel and
General Short? Would you not think that if Marshall and Stark
were not in their offices, they were to be hunted through the
town, roused from their slumbers to give them this tremendous
news? No. The old gentlemen called a conference among
themselves for the next day and went home for the slumbers so
essential in their advanced years. The President had the news
at 10 P.M. He, too, did nothing, Worse than this, a naval aide
wag told not to give Admiral Stark his copy o£ the Japanese
note until next morning. Why? I think Congress ought to ask
for some explanation of this.
December the Seventh, 1941
The next morning – Sunday –
Admiral Stark, because of the tense situation, went to his
office. There he found the now completed copy of the Japanese
note. "My God!"' he cried, "This means war. I must get word to
Kimmel at once." For some reason that word did not go out at
all. Another Japanese code message arrived and was decoded. By
8:20 A.M. the text was in hand. It gave the hour at which the
envoys were to present their note to Secretary Hull. The hour
was 1 P.M. Washington time. Just as it was decoded another
message was intercepted. It advised the twelve Japanese
consuls in the United States that Japan was breaking with this
country. All were hurried to Knox, Stimson and the President.
They were in the hands of Hull's conference at 11 A.M. The
bombs would not fall on Pearl Harbor for another two and
three-quarters hours.
Lieut. Com. Kramer gave a
memorandum to Secretary Knox of transcendent importance. The
memorandum pointed out that I P.M. Washington time was sunrise
over Honolulu and dark night at Manila. Sunrise would be the
moment for air attack. As a surprise attack was indicated, the
hour of presenting the dispatch indicated an air attack on
Pearl Harbor. In other words, we feared an air attack on Pearl
Harbor in a little over two hours.
Can we believe that, thus
warned, the High Command in Washington, on the edge of such a
precipice, would not with whatever speed science had yet
devised get this tremendous news and its implication to the
Commanders in Hawaii? Instead the three aging secretaries sat
down to a conference. General Marshall did not get the news
until 11:25 A.M. He then sent a warning message to General
Short. There was yet an hour and three-quarters before the
explosion. The most precious hour and three-quarters the War
Department had ever lived through. Time to get many of the
ships in motion. Time to get every available man mobilized.
Time to get every available plane off the ground. General
Marshall had a scrambler phone which would reach Short
instantly. He had also the Navy's powerful shortwave
transmitter. Instead of using these he sent the message to
General Short by commercial radio at or near 12:18 P.M.,
Washington time. That would be 6:48 A.M. Honolulu time. It
reached Honolulu at 7:33 A.M. The Japanese planes were at that
moment winging to their kill. The message was sent through the
streets as the bombs were falling. Thus delayed it reached
Army Intelligence office at 11:45 A.M. to be decoded. It was
delivered to General Short at 2:58 P.M., hours alter the great
base had been destroyed. Why did not General Marshall use the
government's short-wave apparatus? Why did he not use his
scrambler phone which would have put this information in the
hands of General Short from two and a half to an hour and a
half before the attack? His explanation to the Roberts
Commission was that he was afraid it might be intercepted,
What would have been the difference? If intercepted the
Japanese would merely know what they knew already. But Short
would have known it also.
THE PLOT TO RUIN THE
COMMANDERS
While the American public
was still stunned by the news of the Pearl Harbor attack,
three ideas were promptly fed to the people by the government.
One was that the damage was slight. The second was that Kimmel
and Short were responsible. The third was that the President
was taken completely by surprise. Naval Secretary Knox, after
a quick visit to Hawaii, returned and told us we had lost one
battleship, the Arizona, three destroyers, a mine layer
and an old target ship. Some others were damaged. But the
balance of the fleet, he said, including battleships,
carriers, heavy and light cruisers, destroyers and submarines
were at sea seeking contact with the enemy, Newspapers praised
his frankness and the President for making good on his promise
of "full information." But this statement was a carefully
phrased falsehood. The Secretary juggled with the word "lost."
Few ships, indeed, were permanently lost beyond ultimate
salvage. But they were lost utterly so far as having any
striking power against the enemy was concerned.
The majestic Pacific Fleet
had been put out of action as an effective sea weapon. We had
eight battleships in Pearl Harbor. The Arizona was
blown up. The Nevada, with a hole in her side, was
settled in the mud. The California lay on her side. The
West Virginia, torpedoed six times, rested on the
bottom. The Pennsylvania and Maryland were badly
bombed. The Oklahoma sank on her side in the shallow
water. Three cruisers were badly bombed. Three destroyers were
sunk. A large drydock was destroyed. The Utah and the
Ogalala were sunk. The Army and Navy had had nearly
5000 casualties. They lost 197 planes. In time nearly all of
these vessels were reclaimed. A few were out in a month. But
generally the damage had not been repaired until the Japanese
had completed the conquest of the Philippines, Malay and
Singapore and much of the rich Indies of the British and Dutch
and stood at the gateway to Australia, Why had Knox lied? To
deceive the Japanese? Hide from them the extent of our losses?
The Japanese knew them only too well He lied to deceive the
American people who had been led to believe the Japanese would
be a pushover and who, had they known the full extent of the
losses, would have been more clamorous for the heads of the
guilty.
The Attack on Kimmel and
Short
Not only was it necessary
to conceal the losses. It was necessary to find a scapegoat.
Somebody had committed a blunder of historic dimensions. Was
it the commanders? Or was it the High Command in Washington?
Or was it an even more eminent personage? Of course there had
to be an investigation. It was important, therefore, that the
investigation be controlled. Congress was clamoring for a
congressional inquiry. The Administration blocked that. The
President and Knox, along with the Commanders were, pending
inquiry, equally suspect. But the President named Knox to do
the investigating. Meantime the mud began to fly at Kimmel and
Short. Congressman Dingell, New Deal stalwart, let fly in the
House. Knowing nothing of the facts he demanded that Kimmel
and Short be court-martialed. New Deal newspapers took up the
cry. Stories were told of how most of the sailors and marines
were ashore after a Saturday night drunk, how all the officers
even, were sleeping off the fatigue of late Saturday night
parties, how Short and Kimmel themselves were at late parties
and of how the two commanders, divided by professional
jealousies, seldom spoke to each other and conferred but
little about the defense of the island.
In five days Knox was back
with the inevitable "report." Of course Knox pointed no
accusing finger either at himself or the President. He said:
"The United States services were not on alert against the
surprise attack. The fact calls for a full investigation which
will be initiated immediately by the president." An indignant
outcry broke out against the smeared officers in Congress.
Then came the "investigation." The President named a five-man
commission. Four were officers who could be depended on not to
blame the War and Naval Secretaries or the President. But
Justice Roberts was a Republican. This was a master stroke.
What the public overlooked was that Roberts had been one of
the most clamorous among those screaming for an open
declaration of war. He had doffed his robes, taken to the
platform in his frantic apprehensions and demanded that we
immediately unite with Great Britain in a single nation. The
Pearl Harbor incident had given him what he had been yelling
for – America's entrance into the war. On the war issue he was
one of the President's most impressive allies. Now he had his
wish. He could be depended on not to cast any stain upon it in
its infancy.
His commission went to
Pearl Harbor and investigated. But it was specifically
enjoined from investigating the other segments of the story in
Washington. Certain essential documents were deliberately
concealed from it. It came up with the expected indictment –
putting the blame on Kimmel and Short and calling for their
court-martial. That fixed the black spot on the Commanders.
They were relieved of their posts. They were forbidden to make
any statement or enter into any discussion of their innocence.
And it was then announced there would be no court-martial. The
black spot was fastened on the two helpless victims to stay.
The White House took over the management of the whole affair.
Army and Naval officials, when asked for statements, said:
"The White House is doing the talking." And it did none. It
wanted to forget the case. It said: "Let's get on with the
war."
From time to time voices
rose in Congress to ask some degree of justice for the accused
men. Finally Congress, by resolution, ordered the Army and
Navy to make formal inquiry of the indicted officers. Boards
were named in each Service and the inquiries were made. The
Boards reported to their Army and Navy Secretaries in
November, 1944. The reports were suppressed by the President
on the pretense that military safety required it. Now nine
months later President Truman, without knowing enough of the
whole intrigue, has given out the reports when it is realized
that an angry Congress is about to demand them. The reports
have been subjected to alterations and deletions. Kimmel and
Short are again smeared and with them Hull, Marshall and
Stark. The reports still withhold the gravest facts – those
revealed here. And Kimmel and Short, thus dishonored, are
still denied a court martial and even a chance to speak up in
their defense.
The Surprise Attack
The next bead in the
bracelet of defense of the Administration has been that the
Army and Navy and the President himself were taken completely
by surprise. While they look upon this as a defense for
themselves, they apparently do not think it a defense for
Kimmel and Short. The theory, endlessly repeated by radio and
press, is that we were at peace, that we were actually
negotiating for a peaceful settlement and that the President
was waiting in complete security for the Japanese answer to
his last proposal for peace when, out of a clear sky, the
bombs began to fail on Pearl Harbor.
Here is the government's
whole case. Our government, while trying to induce Japan to
enter upon a peaceful settlement, was taken by carefully
studied surprise. But, notwithstanding the surprise, that
Government had adequately warned Kimmel and Short of the
attack which it did not expect; the Admiral and General did
not put their commands on the alert required, and as a
consequence the great naval base was exposed to the full fury
of the Japanese treachery.
THE FICTION OF PEACE BEFORE
PEARL HARBOR
There is a story of
profound importance yet to be told about the state of peace so
far as America was concerned before Pearl Harbor. Certainly we
had not declared war. But we had sent an army across the sea
to Iceland to join the British army there; we had been sending
arms, ammunition and destroyers and planes as a gift to
Britain and France and China. We had been with our warships
hunting down German submarines for British planes and even
bombing them. On November 25, W. Averill Harriman, the
President's agent in London, said: "The United States Navy is
shooting the Germans – German submarines and aircraft at sea."
And on September 20, 1941, a dispatch from Hyde Park reported
that "More than half of the United States Navy is forced to
remain in the Pacific at a time when the United States is
operating against German and Italian submarines and air
raiders in the Atlantic." In the Pacific we had cut off all
shipments and trade of essential materials with Japan and
frozen and seized here $130,000,000 of her funds, which Walter
Lippmann called "a declaration of economic warfare." We had
sent an American military mission to China and an American
economic adviser to Chiang Kai-shek. We had sent General
Chennault with a large number of American army fliers to China
to fight with Chiang's army. At the Atlantic Charter meeting,
Churchill had urged Roosevelt to send an ultimatum to Japan at
once. He replied saying: "Let me baby her along for another
three months."
Mr. Grew, our Ambassador to
Tokyo, had advised Roosevelt in December, 1940, that the hope
of peace had vanished in the East and that it was no longer a
question of whether we would have war with Japan but when.
The United States must decide whether it should be later or
now. And he, Grew, was for now. To this, on January 21,
1941, Roosevelt replied that he completely agreed with Mr.
Grew. And a few weeks later Admiral Stark notified Admiral
Kimmel that "war with Japan is no longer a question of whether
but of when."
There is no room here to
discuss these interesting features of what is now a section of
history. I do not wish to enter into any consideration here of
whether the warlike acts of the President listed above were
wise or not. Certainly he was supported in them by large and
important groups. I recall them now merely to supply certain
features of the international scenery in which the events I am
describing took place.
THE BATTLEFIELD AND WHAT
AMERICA HAD ON IT
The Actors in the Drama
The Commander of all our
military forces was General George C. Marshall, Chief of
Staff. The Commander of the Navy was Admiral Harold R. Stark,
Chief of Naval Operations. Both, of course, were subject to
the President who had by now got into the habit of referring
to himself as the Commander-in-chief. This was not a mere
peccadillo. He was already performing directly that function,
issuing orders to Stark which the Secretary of the Navy knew
nothing of and issuing orders to Marshall without consulting
the Secretary of War. His intrusions into operations of the
Navy were more frequent because, while Roosevelt had, under
the influence of flatterers who surrounded him, come to think
of himself as a master of diplomacy, an expert in political
economy, an adept in political manipulation, a wizard in
public finance, a profound student of foreign affairs and a
military strategist of large dimensions, he regarded himself
as little less than a genius in naval organization and
direction. This obsession led to the habit of secrecy to avoid
the annoyance of hostile advice upon projects he wished to
manage.
Thus in June, when he
directed the transfer of naval vessels from the Pacific to the
Atlantic, the Secretary of the Navy heard about it first from
the Secretary of War. Later, when Hull was asked what had
happened to the proposals submitted by the Japanese Premier
directly to the President, he said: "I am wondering myself."
We have seen that the Chief of Naval Operations could not find
out what our plans for the Pacific war were and an American
Admiral first learned of certain plans of our government in
his theater from a British admiral. We have seen this
headstrong man, surrounded by subservient and obsequious
courtiers like Harry Hopkins, Henry Wallace, Sam Rosenman and
others, playing secretly the devious game of diplomacy with
the Japanese and running, often behind the backs of his
admirals and generals, segments of a rapidly developing war in
two vast oceans.
The point upon which all
the forces we have been examining were converging was the
small island of Oahu and, in particular, its great naval base
near Honolulu – Pearl Harbor. It was supposed to be one of the
strongest in the world. The commander of the military
establishment in Hawaii was General Walter C. Short. The
Pacific Fleet was based at Pearl Harbor and it was under the
command of Admiral Husband E. Kimmel. Responsibility for the
defense of the island was in the hands of General Short.
Admiral Kimmel was expected to give whatever assistance was
required from the Navy. But Admiral Kimmel's area of
operations extended over the whole Pacific. Further to the
West was the Asiatic Fleet based in the Philippines and under
the command of Admiral Thomas C. Hart.
Why Was the Fleet in Pearl
Harbor?
Here we must note a fact of
great importance. The Pacific Fleet had always been based on
our West Coast. Pearl Harbor was a supply and repair ase of
operations in the mid-Pacific. It was Roosevelt who forced the
change of bringing the Fleet into Pearl Harbor. In 1940,
Admiral Richardson was made Commander-in-Chief of the Pacific
Fleet. He was one of the Navy's foremost figures. Since his
earliest days, after leaving Annapolis, he had made the study
of Japanese warfare his life work. He was beyond question the
Navy's outstanding authority upon Pacific naval warfare and
Japanese strategy.
He was the logical man for
the post. As the war clouds darkened over the Pacific he was
in the spot for which his whole professional life had been a
training. Richardson was ordered to berth the Pacific Fleet in
Pearl Harbor. This he refused to do – an act no one but a very
distinguished officer could risk. He was ordered a second time
and again refused. It was Richardson's belief – and indeed
generally supported by the Navy – that the Fleet should never
be berthed inside Pearl Harbor where it would be a mark for
attack. This was particularly true in such troubled times when
the airways of the East were hot with rumors of approaching
conflict. What is more, Richardson held the belief that Pearl
Harbor was the logical first point of attack for the Japanese
High Command, wedded as it was to the theory of undeclared and
surprise warfare.
But Richardson was
overruled by Roosevelt, the amateur admiral. Whether
Richardson was relieved of his command or resigned in protest
I do not know. Certainly he departed from it. At this point,
Admiral Husband E. Kimmel was placed in command. What his
views were on the berthing of the Fleet in Pearl Harbor I do
not know. But in time he came to look upon the Harbor as
extremely vulnerable. He arrived at the conclusion that the
Fleet should not be held in Pearl Harbor, that it was a
mistake to keep it there for political rather than naval
reasons and that the longer it was kept there for political
reasons the more difficult it would be to withdraw it without
creating further international political repercussions. His
advice on this was disregarded, as was Richardson's. He soon
learned that neither he nor the Navy Command was running the
United States Navy. This was another terrible blunder
responsible for the tragedy at Pearl Harbor.
In November, 1941, just
before the battle, the United States had in its Navy 216 major
surface combat ships. The Pacific had always been the home of
the greater portion of these vessels. But as the menace grew
in Asia where the President looked upon war as certain, he
began transferring war vessels to the Atlantic.
Our Battle Strength in
Pearl Harbor
By June there were 114
major surface combat vessels in the Atlantic and only 102 in
the Pacific. Moreover by this time the President had given
away 50 destroyers to the British and these were desperately
needed by Kimmel as the crisis neared. While some of our
pulp-paper generals and statesmen were telling the people that
Japan was a pushover, the United States, Britain and the Dutch
combined had in the Pacific 152 major combat vessels against
Japan's 180 – perhaps more. The advantage of surprise lay with
her and the battlefield was thousands of miles closer to her
shores than to ours. I should add that nearly 40 of the
vessels we had were laid up for repairs. Much of the trained
personnel had been taken away for service in the Atlantic,
leaving the Pacific Fleet manned heavily by raw recruits.
These required constant training: Admiral Kimmel wrote to the
Navy begging to be kept informed of the international
situation so that he could know when to convert from training
to service routines.
Despite all this, while the
President was ordering Kimmel to "keep ships popping up here
and there to worry the Japanese" and Stark was instructing him
to make plans for bombing inflammable targets in Japan, the
President in May transferred from the Pacific to the Atlantic
three battleships, six cruisers, 18 destroyers, six transports
with all the trained marines on the West Coast. The commanders
in the Pacific protested without avail. Then in June the
President ordered the transfer of three more battleships, four
more cruisers, and two squadrons of destroyers to the
Atlantic. The naval defenses of the Pacific were being
stripped by the President. Stark protested in vain. Then
Kimmel went directly to the President and succeeded in
dissuading him from this last raid upon his Fleet.
By this time the
President's chief adviser on such matters – where he wanted
advice – was Harry Hopkins, whose carefully taken policy was
always to please the President. On one occasion a
distinguished admiral had to go to Mr. Hopkins' bedroom where
Hopkins, reclining in his pajamas, gave him a curt "no" to his
appeal not to take away any further vessels from his area.
Next Admiral King demanded the transfer of more ships from the
Pacific to his Atlantic command. Knox was agreeable. It was
prevented by Stark's resistance.
The islands' inadequacy in
planes was deplorable. The Navy was responsible for
long-distance reconnaissance. This meant observations 800
miles all around from Oahu. To do this properly Kimmel would
need not less than 180 patrol planes. Kimmel had only 80 or 90
long-distance patrol planes. He had a couple of squadrons of
marine planes. He had two carriers – a third was up for
repairs. The Army was much worse off. If the Navy were called
away the Army would have to take over long-distance
reconnaissance. It should have had 180 B-17s for long-distance
patrol. It had six. It had had 12 but was forced to dismantle
six to keep the other six supplied with parts for flying. It
should have had at least 200 fighter planes. It had few old
P-36's not suitable for combat, ten A-20's good for 600 miles
flight (300 miles out and back) and a bunch of old B-18's
which could not be used against an enemy without inviting
suicide.
Less than ten days before
Pearl Harbor, the Army and Navy proposed to ship 50 planes
from Hawaii to Wake and Midway and a similar movement of
Marines and Army personnel. It would have depleted the Army's
already pitiful fighter strength by 40 per cent. General Short
continually begged for more planes, more men, more detection
equipment. Instead of getting reinforcement in the imminent
peril of war, the two men had to fight continually to hold
what they had. Kimmel too had protested frequently. He advised
against "backing into war. If we have decided on war it would
be better to take direct defensive action."
The stripping of the naval
and airplane and military defenses of Hawaii – particularly of
the naval defenses – was another great cause of the disaster
at Pearl Harbor. And this was done by the amateur
Commander-in-chief over the advice and protests of his
military and naval advisers and of Admiral Kimmel and General
Short.
This pathetic tragedy of
blunders may be summed up as follows:
- By January l, 1941,
Roosevelt had decided to go to war with Japan.
- But he had solemnly
pledged the people he would not take their sons to foreign
wars unless attacked. Hence he dared not attack and so
decided to provoke the Japanese to do so.
- He kept all this a
secret from the Army and Navy.
- He felt the moment to
provoke the attack had come by November. He ended
negotiations abruptly November 26 by handing the Japanese an
ultimatum which he knew they dared not comply with.
- Immediately he knew his
ruse would succeed, that the Japanese looked upon relations
as ended and were preparing for the assault. He knew this
from the intercepted messages.
- He was certain the
attack would be against British territory, at Singapore
perhaps, and perhaps on the Philippines or Guam. If on the
Philippines or Guam he would have his desired attack. But if
only British territory were attacked could he safely start
shooting? He decided he could and committed himself to the
British government. Rut he never revealed this to his naval
chief.
- He did not order Short
to change his alert and he did not order Kimmel to take his
fleet out of Pearl Harbor, out where it could defend itself,
because he wanted to create the appearance of being
completely at peace and surprised when the Japs started
shooting. Hence he ordered Kimmel and Short not to do
anything to cause alarm or suspicion. He was completely sure
the Japanese would not strike at Pearl Harbor.
- Thus he completely
miscalculated. He disregarded the advice of men who always
held that Pearl Harbor would be first attacked. He
disregarded the warning implicit in the hour chosen for
attack and called to Knox's attention. He disregarded the
advice of his chiefs that we were unprepared.
- When the attack came he
was appalled and frightened. He dared not give the facts to
the country. To save himself he maneuvered to lay the blame
upon Kimmel and Short. To prevent them from proving their
innocence he refused them a trial. When the case was
investigated by two naval and army boards, he suppressed the
reports. He threatened prosecution to any man who would tell
the truth.
Now, if there is a shred of
decency left in the American people they will demand that
Congress open the whole ugly business to the light of day.
John T. Flynn was a
leader of the anti-interventionist America First Committee,
and a liberal columnist for The New Republic and other
publications, who opposed both the New Deal and World War II.
A prolific author, he wrote close to a dozen books, including
The Roosevelt Myth,
As We Go Marching,
Country Squire in the White House,
The Road Ahead, and others. He was one of the first to
point out the dangers of U.S. intervention in Southeast Asia.