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The
Myths of
World War
II
by Harry Browne
March
25, 2002
A number of people have complained about my stand on the current War on
Terrorism by citing the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and the dropping
of the atomic bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. These events are recounted
as evidence that sometimes the U.S. is attacked without justification and
that sometimes innocent people must be killed for a greater good. Here is my
reply to one such letter.
Dear Mr. ——:
Thank you for writing with your concerns.
The "Unprovoked Attack"
"The U.S. was minding its own business prior to December 7, 1941
but, we were still attacked by Japan."
Unfortunately, the U.S. (meaning Franklin Roosevelt) was not
minding its own business. FDR browbeat the Japanese for a year before
Pearl Harbor (1941). He cut off all exports to Japan, froze Japanese
assets in the U.S., and demanded that the Japanese get out of Manchuria.
The U.S., Britain, and the Netherlands had already agreed that all
three nations would go to war against Japan if the Japanese entered
Thailand — which they did a week
before Pearl Harbor. So the U.S. was already committed to war (without the
knowledge of Congress or the American people) a week before Pearl Harbor.
As Secretary of War Stimson reported in his diaries, FDR then told his
cabinet that they had to figure out how to get the Japanese to fire the
first shot. Fortunately for them, the Japanese had already decided to bomb
Pearl Harbor if the U.S. didn't back down from its bullying.
I don't call Roosevelt's actions to be the U.S. minding its own business.
The Atomic Bomb
"The Japanese did not surrender until two nuclear bombs were
detonated on their soil."
That also is not the case. The Japanese had sued for surrender several
times during the year before Hiroshima. The Japanese asked for only one
condition — that the Emperor be
allowed to remain in place.
The U.S. refused because FDR had coined the ridiculous phrase
"unconditional surrender" and was determined to stick to it.
When the Japanese eventually surrendered without condition, the U.S.
allowed the Emperor to remain in place anyway.
Almost every leading U.S. general and admiral was appalled by Truman's
dropping of the atomic bomb —
especially on two cities with no military significance whatsoever. You can
read some of their comments by
clicking here.
If terrorism is the act of killing innocent people to pressure a
government to change its policies, what was the killing of over 100,000
innocent people — supposedly to end
a war, but a war that could have been ended months before?
Foreign Policy Is Simply Politics
How many Japanese and Americans died unnecessarily because of a
megalomaniac in the White House —
who was conducting an aggressive foreign policy from 1939 onward without
the knowledge of Congress or the American people?
Only when all his cabinet officers wrote their memoirs after the war
did most of this become known — and
by then practically no one was interested in revisiting the causes of the
war.
The same thing is happening today. The country is accepting the
president's version of events without question. What he's doing makes no
sense. But he has his own Pearl Harbor and so, like FDR, he's unstoppable.
Appeasement?
"I don't think talking or appeasing the terrorists will do
anything but embolden them."
I have no interest in appeasing anyone. I simply want the U.S. to stop
bullying the world and creating enemies.
How Soon We Forget
"I will concede that we (the U.S.) stick our noses where it does
not belong sometimes but like the Japanese, the terrorists have brought
the fight to U.S. and it is time we showed them and the world what happens
when you mess with the best."
I don't understand why so many Libertarians understood before September
11 how dangerous it was for the U.S. to be meddling in other people's
affairs — but now suddenly it's as
though there's absolutely no connection between a dangerous foreign policy
and an aggressive act against the U.S.
And if foreign-policy meddling contributed to the events of September
11, what do you think is going to happen to us as a result of what
President Bush is doing now? Shouldn't we be trying to stop an
even-greater disaster from occurring?
I want only to speak the truth so that, as events unfold, I hope that
more and more people will come to realize what a terrible mistake is being
made.
I appreciate your concerns. Few people have the faintest idea what went
on in World War II or what went on before September 11. Our government has
created a terrible mess that is dividing Americans — even dividing Libertarians. But if it's
okay for people to spout jingoistic slogans without any knowledge of the
facts, why is it wrong for someone
to point out the obvious?
If I seem to be ignoring some historical event, I hope you'll grant me
the possibility that I know about it already, and that I actually know what I'm talking about —
even if it doesn't conform to the one-liners in high school history books.
With best wishes,
Harry Browne
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