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Victor Davis Hanson: In the Eye of the Beholder. Imagine if we’d reported on WWII the way we do now
NRO ^ | May 12, 2006 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 05/12/2006 4:41:46 AM PDT by Tolik

Imagine if we’d reported and opined on WWII the way we do now.

I think Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Henry Stimson, and George Marshall conducted the Second World War brilliantly, despite “thousands of mistakes.” But I can also envision how our present intelligentsia and punditocracy would have sized up their sometimes less than perfect efforts or applied their own reporting to the struggle against Japan and Germany. So imagine something like the following op-ed appearing, say, around May 1, 1945.

The Present Debacle

May 21, 1945 — After the debacles of February and March at Iwo Jima, and now the ongoing quagmire on Okinawa, we are asked to accept recent losses that are reaching 20,000 dead brave American soldiers and yet another 50,000 wounded in these near criminally incompetent campaigns euphemistically dubbed “island hopping.”

Meanwhile, we are no closer to victory over Japan. Instead, we are hearing of secret plans of invasion of the Japanese mainland slated for 1946 or even 1947 that may well make Okinawa seem like a cake walk and cost us a million casualties and perhaps involve a half-century of occupation. The extent of the current Kamikaze threat, once written off as the work of a “bunch of dead-enders,” was totally unforeseen, even though such suicidal zealots are in the process of inflicting the worst casualties on the U.S. Navy in its entire history.

Worse still, our sources in the intelligence community speak of a billion-dollar boondoggle now underway in the American southwest. This improbable “super-weapon” (with the patently absurd name “Manhattan Project”—in the midst of a desert no less!) promises in one fell swoop to erase our mistakes and give us instant deliverance from our blunders—no concern, of course, for the thousands of innocents who would be vaporized if such a monstrous fantasy bomb were ever actually to work.

We are only now coming off even more terrible losses in Europe, after being surprised by a supposedly defeated enemy in the Ardennes where another 20,000 Americans were killed and another 60,000 wounded or missing—again, due to our continued strategic incompetence and abject intelligence failures. Macabre reports of American bazooka shells bouncing off German Tiger tanks and our Shermans ablaze like Ronson lighters have only now come to light as we plow the Belgium countryside for yet another new American war cemetery. Tragically, this is not the first, but the fourth year of this war, when victory rather than endless bloodshed has been long promised.

A number of issues arise. Why is Henry Stimson (“Gentlemen do not read each other's mail”) still Secretary of War? After the debacles at Pearl Harbor, the Philippines tragedy, the Kasserine Pass disaster, the unforeseen bocage in Normandy, the Falaise Gap escape, the Anzio mess, the fatal detour to Rome, the surprise at the Bulge, the bloodbath at Tarawa, and now the Iwo Jima and Okinawa nightmares, is not five years of his incompetence and arrogance enough? A number of our retired generals seems to agree, who have recently bravely come forward to remind us that Sec. Stimson long ago tried to dismantle key elements of our intelligence services, attempted to curtail the operational command of our Army Air Corps generals in conducting bombings of Europe, and has on more than one occasion intervened to remove targets from Gen. LeMay’s campaign over Japan.

As we see thousands of Americans dying and our enemies still in power after four years of war, it is also legitimate to question the stewardship of Army Chief of Staff Gen. George Marshall. The Sherman tank tragedy, the daylight bombing fiasco, the absence of even minimally suitable anti-tank weapons and torpedoes—all these lapses came on his watch, and the man at the top must take full responsibility for mistakes that have now cost thousands of American lives. Indeed, it is not just that America has worse tanks and guns than our German enemies, but they are inferior even to the rockets and armor of our Soviet allies. The recent publication of “The Sherman Tank Scandal” follows other revelations published in “Asleep at the Philippines,” “The Flight of Gen. MacArthur,” “Gen. Patton and the Atrocities on Sicily,” “Do Americans Execute POWs?” “Torture on Guadalcanal,” “Incinerating Women and Children?” and “Civilian Massacres in Germany”—publications in their totality that suggest a military out of control as often as it is incompetent.

Such problems start at the top. It is not out of “Roosevelt hating,” but out of the need for truth that requires this paper to remind the American people that Mr. Roosevelt, in whose hands our collective fate lies, has been untruthful to his wife about his liaisons, untruthful to the American people about the extent of his crippling illness, and thus, not surprisingly, untruthful to the United States Congress about the extent of our prewar involvement with the British Empire in its European war and the secret nature of our present commitments.

Recently we have learned that President Roosevelt, the former law school dropout, once again has violated basic freedoms enshrined in our Constitution. Supposed German suspects were subject to military tribunals, tried in secret, and then executed. Tens of thousands of Italians, Germans, and Japanese war captives are detained in hundreds of American prison compounds, without charges and often in secret. How many were truly captured in uniform, and under what conditions, is never disclosed.

Unfortunately this violation of American values comes not in isolation, but on the heels of the unlawful internment of thousands of American citizens in Western concentration camps, the cover-up of the Cobra disaster in Normandy and the criminally negligent killing of General McNair, and still more rumors that hundreds of American soldiers perished in secret in training exercises on the eve of the Normandy invasion. Yet, the American people to this day have no precise idea how many of their enlisted men and officers have been killed, much less where they perished or how.

Indeed, what little we know comes to light only due to the brave efforts of a few unnamed operatives in the Office of Strategic Services who have in secret provided such information concerning patently illegal activities to the responsible news organizations.

Yet even this government’s propaganda efforts ring hallow, as we noticed with the recently released film footage purportedly showing Adolph Hitler incompetently handling a Colt .45 revolver. In fact, such a weapon, little known in Germany, is hard to load and shoot, especially the early model that the Fuhrer was shown trying to fire. To be fair, his apparent unease is not necessarily proof that Mr. Hitler was unfamiliar with firearms, much less fraudulent in his demonstration of military experience.

Remember as well that these clandestine transgressions of this administration follow a long record of constitutional disrespect—whether trying to pack the Supreme Court with compliant justices, unilaterally turning over our destroyers to the United Kingdom, or, well before Pearl Harbor, ordering, by fiat, attacks on the high seas against German submarines. Such abuses of presidential authority, characterized by intrigue with British agents and unauthorized spying on foreign nationals, go a long way in explaining the German decision to declare war against us on December 8, 1941, presenting the United States with the present catastrophe of a two-front conflict.

We can envision that when this lamentable war is over, fought with such malfeasance, the real heroes will not be Gen. Marshall, Secretary Stimson, or yes-men like Gen Eisenhower, but courageous mavericks such as a Charles Lindbergh or Senator Robert Taft, who long ago warned us that we were provoking an unnecessary war, one that, as they feared, was subsequently to be waged barbarically and yet incompetently at the same time.

The final irony is that we may well end up friendlier with our current fascist enemies than with our Communist allies. It is not hard to envision a policy looming on the horizon that soon coddles Hitler’s current friend Gen. Franco, while opposing his dire enemy Joseph Stalin. We have it on good authority that already there are postwar contingency plans to train and reform the Japanese and German militaries to serve as a bulwark against a Communist Soviet Union and a soon to be Communist China, as America readies for yet another war, one that may last not five, but 50 years. How ironic that a struggle that started out in 1939 to ensure a free Eastern Europe and China may well end up, at best, guaranteeing their enslavement to totalitarians every bit as cruel as Hitler and Tojo.

Citizens should not have to look to our actors and intellectuals for answers, but, in the absence of political accountability, they often do. After the release of The True Story of the B-17 Slaughter, Gary Cooper thankfully came forward to remind us how President Roosevelt took us into a British war that we were utterly unprepared for. Next look for Coop’s recently completed and powerful American Gestapo this fall. Likewise, Jimmy Stewart remarked from the front lines above Germany (so unlike our president, who failed to serve in any of America’s past wars) that it is hard to know who the real enemy is after we have bombed the children of Hamburg. And Clark Gable is currently preparing a documentary on the Pacific theater, 12/7, that outlines the racist nature of that campaign that seeks the extermination of all the living Japanese we encounter.

Finally, we welcome the upcoming courageous anthology edited by John Steinbeck, Ernest Hemingway, and William Faulkner, Worse Than Our Enemies?, that charts the near criminal direction of American foreign policy under this administration’s plans of total and endless war, of preparing for a new imperial conflict against the Soviet Union before the current one with Germany and Japan is even over. It is in this context that the venerable John Ford recently resigned from the Navy, and instead will produce a series of films Why We Shouldn’t Fight that will reveal what was really behind this needless campaign of annihilation against the Japanese.

Victor Davis Hanson is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution. He is the author, most recently, of A War Like No Other. How the Athenians and Spartans Fought the Peloponnesian War.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Front Page News; Political Humor/Cartoons; Politics/Elections; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: left; media; mediabias; theleft; vdh; victordavishanson; waronterror; wot; wwii; wwiv
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To: Fairview
Yet even this government’s propaganda efforts ring hallow, as we noticed with the recently released film footage purportedly showing Adolph Hitler incompetently handling a Colt .45 revolver. In fact, such a weapon, little known in Germany, is hard to load and shoot, especially the early model that the Fuhrer was shown trying to fire. To be fair, his apparent unease is not necessarily proof that Mr. Hitler was unfamiliar with firearms, much less fraudulent in his demonstration of military experience.

"Most" people would have no interest in reading such a "long" article. For those who do read it, the paragraph above is a reference to a very recent event. Let's hope that lots of readers do take the time for this excellent article. Of course, they would also have to have seen the film footage of Zarqawi with his weapon in order to understand the reference.

One more quote:

Indeed, what little we know comes to light only due to the brave efforts of a few unnamed operatives in the Office of Strategic Services who have in secret provided such information concerning patently illegal activities to the responsible news organizations.

21 posted on 05/12/2006 5:06:03 AM PDT by maica ( We have a destination in mind, and that is a freer world. -- G W Bush)
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To: RobFromGa

The sad thing is that no young person today would get the comedy in that line.


22 posted on 05/12/2006 5:07:39 AM PDT by mainepatsfan
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To: Tolik

save for later reading


23 posted on 05/12/2006 5:10:41 AM PDT by frankiep (Visualize Whirled Peas)
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To: dighton

Powerful stuff.


24 posted on 05/12/2006 5:13:32 AM PDT by Coop (Proud founding member of GCA - Gruntled Conservatives of America)
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To: mainepatsfan

Post of the day (even though it's still early here).


25 posted on 05/12/2006 5:13:37 AM PDT by Fairview
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To: Tolik
Imagine if we’d reported on WWII the way we do now

Well, then you would have to imagine that Roosevelt, Stimson, Marshall and King were as clueless as the Bush administration.

You would have to imagine that they did NOT have the Office of Censorship up and running by Pearl Harbor Day +12. You would have to imagine that they did NOT create a Federal propaganda agency to spread "good news" and to supress bad news within six months of Pearl Harbor.

You would have to imagine that they did not shoot out-of-uniform enemy soldiers captured on our territory without trial, but instead voluntarily turned them over to the US civil courts.

You would have to imagine that they did not intern enemy aliens who had managed to attain US nationality.

You would have to imagine that instead of celebrating the Carson Robinson Orchestra's version of "We're Gonna Have to Slap the Dirty Little Jap" that President Roosevelt had them arrested for hate speech.

You would have to imagine Shinto priests at the White House.

In short, you would have to imagine a lot besides changes in the behavior of reporters.

26 posted on 05/12/2006 5:16:55 AM PDT by Jim Noble (And you know what I'm talkin' 'bout!)
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To: mainepatsfan

True story - back in 1991, while stationed on a ship in Pearl Harbor, I rented the movie THE NAKED AND THE DEAD. I watched it one night onboard when hardly anyone was there. At the beginning, they showed naval battle scenes. One young guy came down and started watching. He asked me what war. WW II I answered. Where, he asked. Pacific theater, I answered. So far, so good. Wanted to know which war and the location. Then he asked the question that has stayed with me ever since - who were we fighting. I turned to him and said, "you mean to tell me, we are sitting in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii and you don't know who we fought in World War II?" His answer - hey, I don't know that history stuff. Sad, but true.


27 posted on 05/12/2006 5:33:19 AM PDT by 7thson (I've got a seat at the big conference table! I'm gonna paint my logo on it!)
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To: Tolik

WWII had Frank Capra ... OIF had Michael Moore ... nuff said.


28 posted on 05/12/2006 5:35:26 AM PDT by sono ("If Congressional brains were cargo, there'd be nothing to unload." - Rush Limbaugh)
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To: 7thson
He probably wondered why this thing was stuck out into the harbor.
29 posted on 05/12/2006 5:43:39 AM PDT by mainepatsfan
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To: zot; SeraphimApprentice

Ping.


30 posted on 05/12/2006 5:46:07 AM PDT by GreyFriar ((3rd Armored Division -- Spearhead))
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To: mainepatsfan

On a side note, have you been to Pearl recently. When stationed there in the early 90's, the Memorial was just okay. Now, they have really jazzed it up. They now have a small sub you can tour as well as the Battleship Missouri on Ford Island. Way, way better than before. Still gives you a chills when they take you out to the Memorial.


31 posted on 05/12/2006 5:50:52 AM PDT by 7thson (I've got a seat at the big conference table! I'm gonna paint my logo on it!)
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To: 7thson

I have not been there but I do certainly plan on doing so someday.


32 posted on 05/12/2006 5:53:19 AM PDT by mainepatsfan
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To: Coop
“Next look for Coop’s recently completed and powerful American Gestapo this fall.”

Et tu, Coope?

;-)

33 posted on 05/12/2006 5:58:29 AM PDT by dighton
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To: dighton
I'm already hard at work on my new novel called What about the Illegals?!?
34 posted on 05/12/2006 6:04:43 AM PDT by Coop (Proud founding member of GCA - Gruntled Conservatives of America)
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To: Fairview

I was just thinking the same thing. (Great minds think alike)
On the other hand think of it as a teachable moment.


35 posted on 05/12/2006 6:16:54 AM PDT by Valin (Purple Fingers Rule!)
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To: Tolik
Imagine if we couldn't listen for "chatter," one of the most important pattern indicators of an impending attack.
36 posted on 05/12/2006 6:26:51 AM PDT by OESY
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To: Berlin_Freeper

The Germans did try to influence American public opinion and sentiment before the war. There was some famous people that jumped on the bandwagon like the flyer Charles Lindbergh.


The German American Bund

The Bund
http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/us_history_1929_1945/114285

GERMAN AMERICAN BUND!
http://rexcurry.net/pledgebund.html

German-American Bund
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German-American_Bund


37 posted on 05/12/2006 6:27:05 AM PDT by Valin (Purple Fingers Rule!)
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To: Tolik

Brilliant.


38 posted on 05/12/2006 6:29:36 AM PDT by aculeus
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To: Tolik

save


39 posted on 05/12/2006 6:48:24 AM PDT by larryjohnson (USAF(Ret))
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To: Tolik

I didn't know about the submarine order.

Great post!


40 posted on 05/12/2006 6:51:29 AM PDT by <1/1,000,000th%
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