A ship under attack at Pearl Harbor in 1941 |
By Alan Caruba
No,
Pearl Harbor is not ancient history. It’s part of my history and many others who
were alive at the time. I was just an infant, but the Japanese sneak attack on
our Hawaii naval base led to early memories of being on trains filled with young
soldiers, many of whom did not live to return home.
The
attack was on December 7, 1941 and a day later in a speech to Congress, Franklin
Delano Roosevelt called it a “date that will live in infamy.” War was declared
on Japan and on Germany. Four years later both enemy nations were conquered,
largely due to America’s capacity to gear up to provide everything our armed
forces needed. It was won, too, because it was a war to protect freedom from
authoritarian, anti-Democracy enemies.
A new
book, “Blinders,
Blunders, and Wars: What America and China Can Learn”, has been published by
the Rand Corporation that describes itself as a “research organization that
develops solutions to public policy challenges to make communities throughout
the world safer and more secure, health and more prosperous.” It was formed
after World War II to connect military planning with research and development
decisions. It is an independent, non-profit organization. The study looks at
eight strategic blunders.
As David
C. Gompert, the lead author of the book and senior fellow at Rand, said,
“Leaders who blunder into war tend to have unwarranted confidence in their
ability to script the future and control events. They favor information,
analysis, and advisors that confirm their beliefs over those that contradict
them. In essence, blinders cause blunders.”
While
Americans are still debating whether we should have gone to war in Iraq in 2003
or whether our troops should have been withdrawn by 2011, the cold fact of
Islamic aggression has seen President Obama reintroduce and increase our “boots
on the ground.” Enemies cannot be ignored. At best they can be “contained”
until, like the former Soviet Union, they collapse or change in some fashion.
Assuming, as our current negotiations with Iran suggest, that they do not harbor
extremely dangerous intentions can be fatal.
The
authors of the Rand study call Japan’s decision to bomb Pearl Harbor “a blunder
of the highest order.” It followed a succession of decisions the Japanese
leadership, largely military, had made to invade China and southern Indonesia in
the quest to secure the oil and raw materials it needed for its industrial
sector. They saw themselves as a people superior to others in Asia and the
world. As Herbert Feis, the author of “The Road to Pearl Harbor” wrote, “The
Japanese people came to believe that the extension of their control over this
vast region was both natural and destined.”
World
War II had its roots in the sanctions meted out to Japan and Germany after World
War I. In Japan’s case, its invasion of Manchuria in 1931 and China in 1937 put
the U.S. on guard and produced sanctions that included halting exports of scrap
iron, steel, and aviation fuel, as well as arms, ammunition, and critical raw
materials. The U.S. began to build up its naval forces as well. It was a good
decision.
The
attack on Pearl Harbor sealed Japan’s fate. “On December 7, 1941, Yamamoto,
commander of the carrier task force north of Hawaii, order the attack. Two waves
of Japanese aircraft, 353 in total, damaged all eight battleships in Pearl
Harbor. Four were sunk, two of which were raised eventually. Six of the eight
returned to service later in the war.”
“Significantly, the three U.S.
aircraft carriers were at sea on routine maneuvers. No U.S. submarines were
destroyed. A third wave of attack was not ordered by Yamamoto due to fuel
shortage; consequently, facilities such as dry docks, ammunition dumps, power
stations, and fuel storage facilities were not destroyed…Despite the tragic
losses, Pearl Harbor and most of its fleet were able to recover fairly
quickly.”
The
Japanese leaders had seriously misunderstood Americans. “America instantly took
a war footing. Six months later, at Midway, Japan sought to finish off the
American carriers. Instead, aided by code breaking and some luck, planes from
three U.S. carriers sank four of the six Japanese carriers that had struck Pearl
Harbor.”
The
arrogance and miscalculations of the Japanese leadership led to the loss of 2.3
million of their people, the firebombing of its major cities, the invasion of
Okinawa, and the destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki by atomic bombs.
The Rand
study has lessons for America today. “Japan saw the United States as having weak
will and capability. The U.S. military had been allowed to deteriorate over a
twenty-year period; isolationism and neutrality reflected America’s interwar
mood.”
Today,
our military is as small or smaller than it was at the beginning of World War
II. A President elected on the promise to remove our troops from Iraq and
Afghanistan is having second thoughts, but is emptying out our detention center
in Guantanamo, returning its inmates to the battlefield in the Middle
East. After six years in office, he is about to appoint his fourth Secretary of
Defense.
We have
been in a state of war with Islamic fascists since even before September 11,
2001. They have even declared themselves to be the Islamic
State.
There
have been three generations of Americans born since the attack on Pearl Harbor
in 1941 and that is time enough for many of them to either never have learned or
to have forgotten the lessons of that event. The Obama administration has done
everything in its power to deflect any anger toward the Muslim fanatics killing
people in the name of their holy war. We are constantly warned against
“Islamophobia.”
To avoid
a sneak attack, you have to know who your enemy is and why. Despite a previous
attack on the World Trade Center in 1993, we let down our guard. We cannot do
that again for a very long time to come.
© Alan
Caruba, 2014
2 comments:
Alan:
While you are correct in total, you are in error in detail. The commander of the attack fleet was not Yamamoto. He was commander of the IJN.
Paul L. Quandt
War was declared on Germany on Dec 11 after Germany declard war on the US.
Also, Japan was on the winning side in WW I, so no sanctions. They were limited, as were the US and Britain, to the number of capital ships they could field.
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