Thursday, September 29, 2005

List of politicians who voted against Chief Justice Roberts...

Some familiar names in the list from the reparations movment, too....

Coincidence?

Akaka (D-HI)
Bayh (D-IN)
Biden (D-DE)
Boxer (D-CA)
Cantwell (D-WA)
Clinton (D-NY)
Corzine (D-NJ)
Dayton (D-MN)
Durbin (D-IL)
Feinstein (D-CA)
Harkin (D-IA)
Inouye (D-HI)
Kennedy (D-MA)
Kerry (D-MA)
Lautenberg (D-NJ)
Mikulski (D-MD)
Obama (D-IL)
Reed (D-RI)
Reid (D-NV)
Sarbanes (D-MD)
Schumer (D-NY)
Stabenow (D-MI)

Thursday, September 22, 2005

Legislating Historical Revisionism: Bills sponsored by Japanese-American politicians

When will it stop? When will people wake up and see how this history is being manufactured? What could the "other purposes" mentioned below possibly be?

More taxpayer dollars for brainwashing kids?

109th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. R. 1492
To provide for the preservation of the historic confinement sites where Japanese Americans were detained during World War II, and for other purposes.

IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

April 6, 2005

Mr. THOMAS (for himself, Ms. MATSUI, and Mr. HONDA) introduced the following bill; which was referred to the Committee on Resources

A BILL
To provide for the preservation of the historic confinement sites where Japanese Americans were detained during World War II, and for other purposes.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,

SECTION 1. PRESERVATION OF HISTORIC CONFINEMENT SITES.
(a) Preservation Program- The Secretary shall create a program within the National Park Service to encourage, support, recognize, and work in partnership with citizens, other Federal agencies, State, local, and tribal governments, other public entities, educational institutions, and private nonprofit organizations for the purpose of identifying, researching, evaluating, interpreting, protecting, restoring, repairing, and acquiring historic confinement sites in order that present and future generations may learn and gain inspiration from these sites and that these sites will demonstrate the Nation's commitment to equal justice under the law.

(b) Grants- The Secretary, in consultation with the Japanese American National Heritage Coalition, shall make grants to citizens, State, local, and tribal governments, other public entities, educational institutions, and private nonprofit organizations to assist in carrying out the actions described in subsection (a).

(c) Matching Fund Requirement- The Secretary shall require a 25 percent non-Federal match for funds provided under this section.

(d) Sunset of Authority- This Act shall have no force or effect on and after the date that is 2 years after the disbursement to grantees under this section of the total amount of funds authorized to be appropriated under section 3.

SEC. 2. DEFINITIONS.
For purposes of this Act--
(1) the term `historic confinement sites' means--

(A) the 10 internment camp sites referred to as Gila River, Granada, Heart Mountain, Jerome, Manzanar, Minidoka, Poston, Rohwer, Topaz, and Tule Lake and depicted in Figures 4.1, 5.1, 6.1, 7.1, 8.4, 9.2, 10.6, 11.2, 12.2, and 13.2, respectively, in `Confinement and Ethnicity: An Overview of World War II Japanese American Relocation Sites', published by the Western Archeological and Conservation Center, National Park Service, in 1999; and

(B) other historically significant locations, as determined by the Secretary, where Japanese Americans were detained during World War II; and
(2) the term `Secretary' means the Secretary of the Interior.

SEC. 3. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.
There are authorized to be appropriated to the Secretary $38,000,000 to carry out this Act. Such sums shall remain available until expended.

109th CONGRESS
1st Session
S. 1719

To provide for the preservation of the historic confinement sites where Japanese Americans were detained during World War II, and for other purposes.

IN THE SENATE OF THE UNITED STATES

September 19, 2005

Mr. INOUYE (for himself, Mr. BENNETT, and Mr. AKAKA) introduced the following bill; which was read twice and referred to the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources

A BILL
To provide for the preservation of the historic confinement sites where Japanese Americans were detained during World War II, and for other purposes.

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,

SECTION 1. PRESERVATION OF HISTORIC CONFINEMENT SITES.
(a) Preservation Program- The Secretary shall create a program within the National Park Service to encourage, support, recognize, and work in partnership with citizens, Federal agencies, State, local, and tribal governments, other public entities, educational institutions, and private nonprofit organizations for the purpose of identifying, researching, evaluating, interpreting, protecting, restoring, repairing, and acquiring historic confinement sites in order that present and future generations may learn and gain inspiration from these sites and that these sites will demonstrate the Nation's commitment to equal justice under the law.

(b) Grants- The Secretary, in consultation with the Japanese American National Heritage Coalition, shall make grants to State, local, and tribal governments, other public entities, educational institutions, and private nonprofit organizations to assist in carrying out subsection (a).

(c) Property Acquisition-

(1) AUTHORITY- Federal funds made available under this section may be used to acquire non-Federal property for the purposes of this section, in accordance with section 3, only if that property is within the areas described in paragraph (2).

(2) PROPERTY DESCRIPTIONS- The property referred to in paragraph (2) is the following:

(A) Jerome, depicted in Figure 7.1 of the Site Document.
(B) Rohwer, depicted in Figure 11.2 of the Site Document.
(C) Topaz, depicted in Figure 12.2 of the Site Document.
(D) Honouliuli, located on the southern part of the Island of Oahu, Hawaii, and within the land area bounded by H1 to the south, Route 750 (Kunia Road) to the east, the Honouliuli Forest Reserve to the west, and Kunia town and Schofield Barracks to the north.

(3) NO EFFECT ON PRIVATE PROPERTY- The authority granted in this subsection shall not constitute a Federal designation or have any effect on private property ownership.

(d) Matching Fund Requirement- The Secretary shall require a 25 percent non-Federal match for funds provided under this section.

(e) Sunset of Authority- This Act shall have no force or effect on and after the date that is 2 years after the disbursement to grantees under this section of the total amount of funds authorized to be appropriated under section 4.

SEC. 2. DEFINITIONS.
For purposes of this Act the following definitions apply:

(1) HISTORIC CONFINEMENT SITES-

(A) The term `historic confinement sites' means the 10 internment camp sites referred to as Gila River, Granada, Heart Mountain, Jerome, Manzanar, Minidoka, Poston, Rohwer, Topaz, and Tule Lake and depicted in Figures 4.1, 5.1, 6.1, 7.1, 8.4, 9.2, 10.6, 11.2, 12.2, and 13.2, respectively, of the Site Document; and

(B) other historically significant locations, as determined by the Secretary, where Japanese Americans were detained during World War II.

(2) SECRETARY- The term `Secretary' means the Secretary of the Interior.

(3) SITE DOCUMENT- The term `Site Document' means the document titled `Confinement and Ethnicity: An Overview of World War II Japanese American Relocation Sites', published by the Western Archeological and Conservation Center, National Park Service, in 1999.

SEC. 3. PRIVATE PROPERTY PROTECTION.
No Federal funds made available to carry out this Act may be used to acquire any real property or any interest in any real property without the written consent of the owner or owners of that property or interest in property.

SEC. 4. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATIONS.
There are authorized to be appropriated to the Secretary $38,000,000 to carry out this Act. Such sums shall remain available until expended.

Thanks but no thanks. I'm tired of taxpayer dollars going to entities such as "The Japanese American National Heritage Coalition" so they can dole out grants to their buddies to whitewash their history. What a scam!

UPDATE: Here's a whole bunch of bills that come up with the key word "internment".

1 . Wartime Parity and Justice Act of 2005 (Introduced in House)[H.R.893.IH]

2 . Honoring Fred T. Korematsu for his loyalty and patriotism to the United States and expressing condolences to his family, friends, and supporters on his death. (Agreed to by Senate)[S.RES.126.ATS]

3 . Guam World War II Loyalty Recognition Act (Introduced in House)[H.R.1595.IH]

4 . Recognizing the historic commitment of the United States to the recovery of and full accounting for Americans who are prisoners of war or in a missing status. (Engrossed as Agreed to or Passed by House)[H.J.RES.18.EH]

5 . Recognizing the historic commitment of the United States to the recovery of and full accounting for Americans who are prisoners of war or in a missing status. (Introduced in House)[H.J.RES.18.IH]

6 . Wartime Treatment Study Act (Introduced in House)[H.R.3198.IH]

7 . Wartime Treatment Study Act (Introduced in Senate)[S.1354.IS]

8 . To amend title 38, United States Code, to authorize the placement in a national cemetery of memorial markers for the purpose of commemorating servicemembers or other persons whose remains... (Introduced in House)[H.R.2188.IH]

9 . To provide for the preservation of the historic confinement sites where Japanese Americans were detained during World War II, and for other purposes. (Introduced in House)[H.R.1492.IH]

10 . To provide for the preservation of the historic confinement sites where Japanese Americans were detained during World War II, and for other purposes. (Introduced in Senate)[S.1719.IS]

11 . To provide for the preservation of the historic confinement sites where Japanese Americans were detained during World War II, and for other purposes. (Introduced in House)[H.R.360.IH]

12 . Prisoner of War Benefits Act of 2005 (Introduced in Senate)[S.1271.IS]

13 . Prisoner of War Benefits Act of 2005 (Introduced in House)[H.R.1598.IH]

14 . Belated Thank You to the Merchant Mariners of World War II Act of 2005 (Introduced in Senate)[S.1272.IS]

15 . Belated Thank You to the Merchant Mariners of World War II Act of 2005 (Introduced in House)[H.R.23.IH]

16 . To provide for the preservation of the historic confinement sites where Japanese Americans were detained during World War II, and for other purposes. (Reported in House)[H.R.1492.RH]

17 . Great Basin National Heritage Route Act (Introduced in Senate)[S.249.IS]

18 . Great Basin National Heritage Route Act (Reported in Senate)[S.249.RS]

19 . National Heritage Areas Act of 2005 (Referred to House Committee after being Received from Senate)[S.203.RFH]

20 . National Heritage Areas Act of 2005 (Engrossed as Agreed to or Passed by Senate)[S.203.ES]

UPDATE 2: The links to the bills above do not work. If you'd like to read the bills, please go to http://thomas.loc.gov/ and type in "internment".

Professor Charles Lofgren critiques "In Defense of Internment".

This piece by Professor Charles Lofgren is an excellent read, although I do not agree entirely with its conclusions.

Here's a link.

Professor Lofgren provides advice that should produce a better written book in its second printing. His type of criticism is welcome reading.

Lofgren wants to see more evidence linking the government's decision to evacuate to information they were receiving at the time and how this explained "military necessity". This is akin to a document stating, "we are evacuating based on MAGIC intercepts. We are not evacuating because we are hysterical racists who lack political will". I doubt such evidence exists. Like a good criminal defense attorney the demand for such evidence provides reasonable doubt.

Professor Lofgren also wants more specific information from February 17-20 1942, which he states as the shift to "mass evacuation" from "selective removal". Does such information exist? Has it been permanently redacted? Are we to ignore all the other evidence indicating security problems on the West Coast until this new information is (if ever) revealed?

Lofgren's last sentence also threw me. Opponents of evacuation (at least in government) may have held similar beliefs, what he does not say why. Suffice to say "why" has nothing to do with opponents believing there were no security threats on the West Coast.

Lastly, I've argued that the Commision on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians "never quite brings together the argument" the evacuation was based on racism, wartime hysteria and lack of political will. That's not stopping their bogus conclusions from being fed to our kids at Sakai School as the infallable truth with our own tax dollars....

Perhaps we should disolve the Civil Liberties Public Education Fund, reimburse the American taxpayer, reconsider turing every Relocation Center into a National Park Service shrine to revisionism and refrain from indoctrinating our kids with an extremely biased version of this history that has been legislated upon us by politicians lobbied by ethnic special interests.

At least until we get the professor's concerns ironed out.

Here's Professor Lofgren's piece:

Hardships of War

A review of In Defense of Internment: The Case for 'Racial Profiling' in World War II and the War on Terror by Michelle Malkin

By Charles A. Lofgren

Posted June 22, 2005

This review appeared in the Summer 2005 issue of the Claremont Review of Books. Click here to send a comment.



On February 19, 1942, almost two and a half months after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066. Citing the need to protect against espionage and sabotage, the order authorized the Secretary of War and military commanders designated by him "to prescribe military areas…from which any or all persons may be excluded, and with respect to which, the right of any person to enter, remain in, or leave shall be subject to whatever restrictions the Secretary of War or the appropriate military commander may impose in his discretion."

Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson promptly named Lieutenant General John L. DeWitt, headquartered at the Presidio of San Francisco, as the military commander to implement the order. Within two weeks DeWitt established military zones covering Washington state, Oregon, California, and southern Arizona from which "such persons or classes of persons as the situation may require" would subsequently be excluded. Further orders resulted in the exclusion of approximately 112,000 people from the designated areas. Meanwhile, on March 21, 1942, Congress passed Public Law 503, criminalizing knowing violations of such orders. Most of the excluded population spent time in detention camps.

But this skeletal account obviously leaves out a key detail: practically all of the people thus "relocated" (or "evacuated") were of Japanese ancestry. About a third were Japanese immigrants (the Issei), who were aliens ineligible for citizenship under the naturalization law of the period, but the rest were American-born (mostly Nisei, or second-generation) and hence citizens. In the actual event, however, this further detail of citizenship proved no barrier to removal, nor did it condemn the program constitutionally in the eyes of the United States Supreme Court. Upholding first an initial curfew on the coast, in Hirabayashi v. United States (1943), and then the exclusion itself, in Korematsu v. United States (1944), the wartime Court essentially deferred to what it portrayed as the judgments of military commanders about military necessity "made without the benefit of hindsight." (In another case, Ex parte Endo, the Court ducked the issue of whether loyal citizens could constitutionally be detained. It gave Ms. Endo her freedom through a disingenuously narrow reading of Executive Order 9066 and Public Law 503 as not authorizing her continued detention.)

By contrast, from World War II down to the present, few scholars have had anything good to say about the relocation. Some solid, objective studies have nonetheless appeared. Particularly useful is Stetson Conn's careful reconstruction of the relocation decision itself. Conn, a civilian historian with the Army's Office of Military History, concluded that "the only responsible commander who backed the War Department's [mass evacuation] plan as a measure required by military necessity was the President himself, as Commander in Chief." Yet Roosevelt gave the issue little attention. Until mid-February, General DeWitt himself had opposed removing citizens, but then developed his own comprehensive plan. Narrower in geographic focus than the War Department's subsequent plan, this proposed sweeping in 25,000 Japanese aliens and 44,000 citizens of Japanese descent, along with 64,000 German and Italian aliens.

So whence came the war department's plan? Conn linked it especially to Major (and soon Lieutenant Colonel) Karl Bendetsen, a mobilized reserve lawyer in the Provost Marshal General's office. Shuttling back and forth between Washington, D.C., and San Francisco, Bendetsen in effect took every opportunity to ratchet upward the sweep of the proposed evacuation. In late January and early February 1942, Secretary Stimson and Assistant Secretary of War John J. McCloy themselves edged toward selective removal of citizens from high-risk areas. When the War and Justice Departments reached an impasse on handling citizens, Stimson and McCloy took the issue to FDR on February 11. Reporting the results to Bendetsen, McCloy stated, "We have carte blanche to do what we want to as far as the President's concerned." This produced the final rounds of consultations and planning, during which Stimson and McCloy shifted to favor mass removal. Executive Order 9066 followed, along with the orders from Stimson to DeWitt to remove Issei and Nisei alike.

All of which brings us to Michelle Malkin's In Defense of Internment. Aiming "to provoke a debate on a sacrosanct subject that has remained undebatable for far too long," Malkin "challenges the religiously held belief that internment of enemy aliens and the West Coast evacuation and relocation of ethnic Japanese were primarily the result of 'wartime hysteria' and 'race prejudice.'" Her "central thesis…is that the national security measures taken during World War II were justifiable, given what was known and not known at the time" (her emphasis).

Besides wanting to set straight the record on the relocation program, she is worried that nowadays "[n]o defensive wartime measure that takes into account race, ethnicity, or nationality can be contemplated, let alone implemented, without government officials being likened to the 'racist' overseers of America's World War II 'concentration camps.'" In approaching her task, she is "not a professor whose tenure relies on regurgitating academic orthodoxy about this episode in American history." Instead, she describes herself as possessing the credentials of "an open mind, a willingness to reject political correctness as a substitute for thought, and the ability to view the writing of history as something other than a therapeutic indulgence."


* * *
On Malkin's telling, what was known at the time consisted partly of very public events. She relates how a Japanese pilot, returning from the Pearl Harbor attack with a punctured fuel tank, crash-landed on Niihau, a small island northwest of Honolulu, and received succor from a Japanese-American couple and a laborer born in Japan—even after they learned of the Pearl Harbor attack. The husband and wife went so far as to terrorize their fellow islanders and assist the downed pilot in an unsuccessful attempt to make radio contact with Japanese forces. Finally, a native Hawaiian couple, "[i]n their own 'Let's Roll' moment of heroism," overpowered and killed the pilot. The Japanese-American husband then committed suicide. According to naval intelligence officers in late January 1942, the episode revealed the potential for further collaboration, in the event of an invasion, between ethnic Japanese in the islands, both citizens and aliens, and Japanese forces.

Malkin's focus then broadens to the whole Pacific theater. After describing the shelling of oil fields near Santa Barbara by a Japanese submarine on February 23, 1942, she shifts back to early December. "[T]here were many phony rumors of sabotage and erroneous reports of attacks," she notes, but "for every false alarm, there were many more real and unsettling forays along our shores that, when added to Japan's shocking military triumphs abroad, rightfully heightened America's anxiety." Japanese submarine activity off Hawaii and along the West Coast reinforced the shocked reactions to Pearl Harbor itself and to Japan's successes against American, British, and Dutch forces and possessions in the western Pacific. An opinion piece by Walter Lippmann, "the most influential columnist and preeminent liberal intellectual of the day," raised concern about "the enemy alien problem on the Pacific Coast, or much more accurately, the fifth column problem," as Lippmann described it. Malkin also relates the efforts of Japan to use schools and patriotic societies in Hawaii and on the West Coast to retain the loyalties of both Issei and Nisei.

More important still for the decision-makers were intelligence reports. These disclosed a spy ring operating out of the Japanese consulate in Honolulu and another on the West Coast, each seeking to draw in Issei and Nisei as eyes and ears. In the aftermath of the December attack, moreover, naval and army intelligence agents stressed that spy networks were still in place. While doubting that the bulk of the Nisei were disloyal, the same agents as well as civilian investigators operating under FDR's orders suggested several thousand of them did pose threats. In late January 1942, the commission under Supreme Court Justice Owen Roberts, appointed to investigate the Pearl Harbor disaster, reported that Japanese spies in Hawaii had aided the attack. What gave still greater impetus was the Army's decrypting effort, code-named magic, which broke the Japanese diplomatic codes. Army and Navy cryptologists were able to read the communiqués sent via commercial cable companies to and from Japan's embassy in Washington and its consulates in key cities. The magic reports themselves were highly classified with only a few direct recipients, among whom were Roosevelt himself, Secretary of War Stimson, and Assistant Secretary McCloy, but not General DeWitt, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, or Attorney General Francis Biddle. The information contained in the reports nonetheless went to a broader group in sanitized form to disguise the source. (Public acknowledgement of magic occurred just after World War II; declassification of the full set of documents began in the 1970s.)

Malkin finds evidence within both the magic intercepts and their sanitized versions confirming the field agents' reports on Japanese espionage efforts within the continental United States and Hawaii, including the successful targeting of some Issei and Nisei. While it is true that magic reports on domestic espionage ceased once Japan's diplomatic and consular operations in the United States closed at the outbreak of war, magic had already lent credence to the threat. Specifically, she argues, pre-war magic reports about spying help explain the early evacuations from Terminal Island in Los Angeles Harbor (about which more below) and Bainbridge Island in Puget Sound, near the Bremerton Naval Shipyard. In addition, the puzzling extension of the exclusion area to include southern Arizona becomes understandable, for magic had indicated that in case of war Japan would use Mexico as a base for its American intelligence operations.

Moving into an examination of the "internment" program in operation, Malkin provides useful clarifications. Strictly speaking, the "internment" label itself applied only to the detention of enemy aliens. Within days of the Pearl Harbor attack, federal officers, mainly in the Justice Department, began picking up German, Italian, and Japanese aliens already identified by intelligence sources as risks. Within a week, 2,451 were in custody nationwide, and by the end of the war 26,655 (11,229 of them Japanese) had been detained at one time or another, in 46 well-guarded camps around the country. Existing legislation, including the Alien Enemies Act of 1798, served as the basis for these detentions.

By contrast, persons evacuated under the War Department's West Coast program were not internees (although several thousand Nisei became such after renouncing their American citizenship). The Army's initial effort was to induce voluntary movement from the restricted military areas to locations further east. A variety of reasons, including limited individual resources and opposition from inland communities, made this approach unworkable, however, and mandatory removal followed. The evacuees went first into assembly centers up and down the coast, and then to ten relocation camps running from eastern California to Arkansas. These were run far more loosely than the internment camps for enemy aliens, and the civilian War Relocation Authority set up a program for screening the evacuees and granting leaves to those with acceptable records who could find employment outside the western states. By December 1944, when the mandatory program ended, about 35,500 had left the camps under these conditions. Another 4,300 college-age evacuees also received leaves, to study outside the West Coast.

How well does Malkin achieve her goals? Perhaps the first thing to note is that when In Defense of Internment appeared in August 2004, the ensuing exchanges in cyberspace proved she had succeeded in stimulating debate. Critics blogged on and on, for pages and pages, with Malkin giving as well as she took. The evacuation/relocation program of World War II clearly remains a hot-button issue, not least because of its salience in the debates accompanying our own war on terror, but also because it had truly unsavory aspects. On the latter front, Malkin quickly disclaimed arguing that racism played no role. She did not intend to write a comprehensive account that would re-plow much-tilled ground.


* * *
By my reading, Malkin offers a largely fair assessment of the relocation program in operation, once the underlying decision occurred. It is not an assessment that will please those who equate it with the Nazis' death camps. To be sure, the relocation camps were "concentration camps," but in the older military sense: camps for concentrating and controlling a particular population. Life in them was spartan, but the War Relocation Authority sought to turn them into self-contained and self-governing communities. In this regard, success varied somewhat from camp to camp, with the center at Tule Lake, California, posing a particular problem after malcontents from other camps, along with several thousand evacuees who refused to swear loyalty to the United States, were moved there in July 1943. Overall, Malkin agrees that the actual removal and detention remained something of a work-in-progress after the first orders came down, and on occasion the program was bungled.

Where Malkin goes astray in handling the actual evacuation and ensuing detention, I believe, is in comments that range from off-putting and irrelevant to needlessly inaccurate. In the off-putting and irrelevant category is her observation that the cramped, sometimes crude quarters in three of the assembly centers were subsequently used by military personnel. This recalls Justice Hugo Black's majority opinion in the Korematsu case: "hardships are part of war, and war is an aggregation of hardships. All citizens alike, both in and out of uniform, feel the impact of war in greater or lesser measure." But the issue is whether the people caught up in the relocation should have been subjected to the hardships in the first place.

Needlessly wrong is her assertion that "[i]n upholding the constitutionality of the exclusion orders, the U.S. Supreme Court in Korematsu v. United States ruled that no one of Japanese ancestry was compelled 'either in fact or by law' to enter a relocation center." What Justice Black actually wrote and meant was something quite different. He wrote that had Fred Korematsu complied with orders and reported to an assembly center (rather than remain at large in the military area, as he did), the Court could not "say either as a matter of fact or law, that his presence in that center would have resulted in his detention in a relocation center." Black's reasoning on the point was lawyerly: some who reported to assembly centers were "released upon condition that they remain outside the prohibited zone until the military orders were modified or lifted." Hence there was a small chance that if Korematsu had complied, he would not have been involuntarily taken to and detained in a relocation camp. By this route, the Court in Korematsu avoided reaching the constitutional validity of the detention program itself. But Black also explained that a separate part of the overall program (not at issue in Korematsu) was to "go under military control to a relocation center[,] there to remain for an indeterminate period until released conditionally or unconditionally by the military authorities." In short, Black conceded that "in fact" people were involuntarily detained in the relocation centers, and he carefully avoided stating that "by law" the program entailed no involuntary detention.

The brunt of criticism has fallen on Malkin's claims about the relocation as a response to a military threat perceived as real at the time. Unfortunately, she does not carefully sort out what was known at the time from what was not. One of Malkin's blogger critics quickly observed that the Japanese submarine's shelling of the oil field near Santa Barbara on February 23, 1942, could hardly have been a factor in the key decisions of the preceding several weeks. In response, Malkin noted that she had linked the shelling to the speeded-up evacuation of Terminal Island on February 25. This comes about 80 pages later.

Similar difficulties are explained away less easily. After describing the shelling episode, Malkin turns to Japanese operations in the Pacific immediately after Pearl Harbor and to Secretary Stimson's fear of raids against the American mainland. The reader then learns that Admiral Tamon Yamaguchi, a Japanese naval commander, had precisely this in mind. Relegated to a footnote is Malkin's qualification that the source from which she drew the episode "states that other Japanese officers were unenthusiastic about Yamaguchi's plan." She does not mention at all that Yamaguchi presented his plan at a conference on February 20-23, 1942, on board a Japanese battleship. Did Yamaguchi's plan help shape American thinking relating to the evacuation? Could it have? One suspects not. (Malkin covers herself, perhaps, by noting that similar ideas circulated in the Japanese media.)

Another problem of sequence emerges when the reader learns "[i]n the Philippines, Pulitzer Prize-winning author and statesman Carlos Romulo described massive Japanese espionage activity in the country prior to the war." Malkin then provides several details. The source is a book by Romulo, one written and published following his arrival in the United States in June 1942. A bit further on, as added evidence for why Americans in late 1941 and early 1942 could reasonably have worried about the enemy in their midst, the reader learns that "Japan's surrender in 1945 came as a traumatic blow to many Hawaiian Issei," and that Tomoya Kawakita, a Nisei who served in Japan's army, "tortured scores of American POW's held in a Japanese prison camp." The torture occurred during the war, of course, and Kawakita was exposed after the war once he returned to Los Angeles.


* * *
Malkin would have done better by redirecting her efforts into a more careful investigation of the true role of intelligence reports in the decision to relocate the Issei and Nisei. The episode on Niihau Island in Hawaii, involving the downed Japanese pilot returning from the Pearl Harbor raid, is one example. The behavior of the Japanese-American couple that aided the pilot was "shockingly disloyal," as Malkin correctly labels it, and naval intelligence was right to take it seriously. Yet with respect to the naval intelligence reports on the episode that were filed in late January 1942, just after the release of the report by the Roberts Commission, Malkin only concludes that they "reinforc[ed] Roberts's assertions and, presumably, further exacerbat[ed] concerns among military leaders about the so-called 'Japanese situation'" (my emphasis). Did the Niihau reports from late January actually affect assessments of the situation on the West Coast? We don't find out, or even learn who received them. But one may doubt whether they added much to the felt urgency of the situation in late January, as suggested by Malkin, because on January 7 the Roberts Commission itself had heard similar testimony about the Niihau incident from Lieutenant George P. Kimball, a naval intelligence officer in Hawaii. (Malkin does not mention Kimball's testimony.)

As another example, Malkin writes, "Terminal Island in Los Angeles Harbor…had been singled out in magic messages [note the plural] as a hotbed of Japanese espionage activity" (my emphasis). But among the magic decrypts she references in the book, I find only one, from May 9, 1941, that bears on Terminal Island. She elsewhere quotes language from it twice. As far as I can determine, it is also the only magic message on the point that appears among the many included in the book's ample appendices. The message, from Japan's Los Angeles consulate, included the brief statement, "We have already established contacts with absolutely reliable Japanese in the San Pedro and San Diego area, who will keep a close watch on all shipments of airplanes and other war materials…." Does this remark reveal Terminal Island as "a hotbed of Japanese espionage"? In any case, Malkin's "hotbed" comment itself, as quoted above, carries no footnote citation, but is followed by a discussion of a detailed report from naval intelligence about the Terminal Island population. The latter report established a good case for removing several hundred Kibei (Nisei who had spent time in Japan). Whether it supported a broader removal is less clear, for in a sentence not quoted by Malkin, it stated, "there do exist in this colony a great many known and trusted nisei…who are at present acting as observers and informers for the Naval Intelligence Service and the F.B.I." Did magic tip the scales? Perhaps. Perhaps not.

A similar question arises from a comment by Malkin about magic's impact on General DeWitt, whose own plan involved large-scale evacuation even though he opposed indiscriminate removal of the Nisei. Malkin writes, "It appears that DeWitt did not have clearance to magic in early 1942, but he did have access to intelligence reports that were derived from magic—reports that warned of Japanese-controlled espionage cells up and down the West Coast." The magic and magic-derived reports undeniably testify to espionage activity, but did they disclose "Japanese-controlled espionage cells," either to DeWitt or to his superiors in Washington who made the actual decision? From the evidence, this seems less certain.

Here Malkin could have done real service. By the time she wrote her book, critics had already roundly attacked claims by another author (David Lowman) about the warnings provided both by magic and by other intelligence reports on the dangers posed by the West Coast Issei and Nisei. Thus forewarned, Malkin might have carefully and systematically sorted out, as best the evidence allows, the actions of several groups that were or may have been involved in espionage activity: Japanese consular personnel, the disaffected whites and blacks whom Japan clearly hoped to recruit, sympathetic Issei, similarly-inclined Nisei within the civilian population, and Nisei in the armed forces (mentioned in one of the decrypts). She also might have systematically sifted information that Japanese consular officials derived from open sources—she mentions the Los Angeles Times—from what "presumably was based on surveillance or espionage by Japan's agents." One wonders, too, how many of the culprits had already been interned as enemy aliens.

Indeed, Malkin never quite brings together the argument that for the decision-makers in Washington, D.C., military necessity, as inferred from sources known at the time, was the reason for the indiscriminate mass evacuation that actually occurred. During congressional testimony in 1984, to be sure, Colonel Bendetsen and Assistant Secretary McCloy recalled that magic had influenced the removal decision over 40 years earlier, but the recollections of old men are suspect. Malkin simply does not examine in sufficient detail the shift in thinking during the key period of February 17-20, 1942, away from a more selective removal. And some evidence points elsewhere, away from military necessity. During this period, for example, Secretary Stimson had before him a letter from West Coast congressmen, one that FDR had forwarded to him on February 16 for a reply. The congressmen recommended evacuation of "all persons of Japanese lineage…from all strategic areas." They also called for enlarging the areas to "encompass the entire strategic area of the states of California, Oregon and Washington, and [the] Territory of Alaska." To what extent did political considerations tip the decision? Malkin avoids such issues.

In the end, the removal took a particular course, one which swept up 112,000 people, many of them citizens, from a vast area. What does the experience teach post-9/11 America? Curiously, Malkin makes only a limited connection despite the implied linkage in the book's title. (She devotes more attention to lambasting the critics of the relocation, who in the 1980s obtained an official apology from Congress as well as monetary compensation for surviving evacuees.) Although defending "racial profiling" in the aftermath of 9/11 on a variety of grounds, she does not use the World War II evacuation to argue for wholesale detention today.

What then is the moral for Malkin? This: don't be misled by the pandering of "civil rights absolutists" intent on using "legends" about the World War II experience as "multicultural group therapy…to color and poison the current national security debate." Are there specific lessons from the removal? Vigorously gather intelligence. Prevent people in suspect categories from holding sensitive civilian and military jobs. Avoid hard-to-win jury trials of subversives. Guard the secrets. As she recognizes, but without much recognition of the irony, the leading governmental opponents of mass relocation in 1942 said pretty much the same things.

Thursday, September 08, 2005

Bruce Ramsey's piece in the Seattle Times

You can read it here for now.

I'll find time to blog more on it and the professor a little later. You got a taste of Muller before. Robinson's almost as bad. They're performing what I call "agenda based academics" and it's mighty ugly.

So a veteran of Iwo Jima I know writes a short reponse to Ramsey expressing his displeasure and providing a quick history lesson, saying:

How could you possibly write such an article about the 1940s relocation/internment of west coast Japanese without even a mention of the MAGIC deciphered Japanese codes, which showed WIDESPREAD anti-American activities among the Japanese population..............check it out............At that time, all braches of the military, the US Supreme Court, Congress,almost all the press, agreed that military necessity required the removal of west coast Japanese. All other Japanese thru out the nation were not affected. Thank you.

Ramsey responds: I mentioned Michelle Malkin's book, which was all about the MAGIC codes. She established in the book that the Japanese government had sent coded messages to its consulates in L.A. and elsewhere before Pearl Harbor to recruit spies. But the evidence was lacking that such spies, or saboteurs, actually had been recuited among the Japanese-Americans. And even if there had been spies, what level of risk do you have to have to imprison 110,000 people and hold them without hearings for three years? Most were citizens who had been born here. We did not imprison the German-Americans and Italian-Americans, though we did intern German, Italian and Japanese citizens.

The military was divided on the internment of Japanese Americans. Gen. Mark Clark was against it. DeWitt, the WEst Coast commander, was for it, but his counterpart in Hawaii was against it, which is one of the reasons the Japanese on Hawaii (35% of the population) was not interned. (IF it was militarily necessary, why was it not done in Hawaii???) The Secretary of War, Henry Stimson, was for the internment but felt it blew a hole in the Constitution, and later supported creating the 442nd Battalion. His deputy, McCloy, is the man whose memo I quoted. He was for it, but seems to be admitting it was not done for military reasons.

J.Edgar Hoover, director of the FBI, was against the internment, as was the U.S. attorney general, Francis Biddle.

Where everyone agreed was among the West Coast politicians--congressmen, governors, etc., including Earl Warren, attorney general of CAlifornia. They were not making a military judgment, because they were not military guys. They were political guys making a political judgment.

To which I responded:

Dear Bruce:

1. No evidence?

http://www.athenapressinc.com/smithsonian/Appendix3.html

Specifically, MAGIC intercept #174 that states:

"May 19,1941, from Los Angeles (Nakauchi) to Tokyo………"We have already established contact with absolutely reliable Japanese in San Pedro and San Diego area, who will keep close watch on all shipments of airplanes and other war material………..we shall maintain connection with our second generations who are at present in U.S. Army………to keep us informed of various developments in the army. We also have connections with our second generations working in aircraft plants for intelligence purposes."

Bruce, does this intercept support your contention of no evidence that spies or saboteurs had actually been recruited among the Japanese-Americans? Of course not.

2. German Americans were not interned at Crystal City, Texas? Tell that to Art Jacobs or at least visit his site.

http://www.foitimes.com/internment/

Neither Germany nor Italy had a navy that could sufficiently project enough power to invade the East Coast of the United States. Japan had developed such a force that had succeeded in developing the largest empire in the history of mankind in a matter of months. One reason for the lack of preparedness that led to Pearl Harbor was the belief Japan could not project forces so far to the east.

You may recall when the Japanese Imperial Army arrived in the city of Davao in the Philippines on December 23, 1941 the colony of 18,000 ethnic Japanese living there (as long as ethnic Japanese in the West Coast) welcomed them with open arms. Many volunteered their services as scouts and translators for the invading forces.

If Japanese-Filipinos with a history in the Philippines as long that of Japanese-Americans in America could so quickly side with the invading forces in Davao, who's to say the same thing wouldn't have happened on the West Coast? Wasn't The Philippines an American Commonwealth at the time? What does that make the status of the "Japanese-Filipinos" who 100% sided with the invading Japanese Imperial Army?

3. Mark Clark was against interment, but a Feb 12,1942, cover memo from Br.Gen. Mark Clark to Assistant Secretary of War John J. McCloy: subject-enemy aliens on the west coast: "Their espionage net containing Japanese aliens, first and second generation Japanese and other nationals is now thoroughly organized and working underground."

General Clark may have believed other means were capable of dealing with the threat, but he also admitted there was a threat.

4. Why weren't the Japanese interned in Hawaii? According to the 1940 census, ethnic Japanese made up 40% if the population of Hawaii. In California, the population was 1.6%. Military authorities had considered moving all ethnic Japanese to Molokai or the West Coast but moving 40% of the population was logistically and indeed financially impossible. That said, there was an internment camp in Hawaii and Sand Harbor. More importantly Hawaii was under military martial law at the time.

If the the authorities could have evacuated all ethnic Japanese from Hawaii they would have. They could not so they did not.

As an aside, Japan had a battle plan in place for the invasion of Hawaii that intended to utilize ethnic Japanese during the occupation. The plan was scrapped after Japan's defeat at Midway.

Here's a book you should read on the subject by another professor: http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/082480872X/qid=1126233716/sr=1-1/ref=sr_1_1/103-8828438-2623867?v=glance&s=books

5. McCloy is admitting it was not done for military reasons? McCloy is writing to an individual with absolutely no knowledge of the existence of MAGIC. In fact, MAGIC intelligence in its raw form was available to just ten men: Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox, Director of Naval Intelligence Admiral Theodore Wilkinson, Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Harold Stark, Army Chief of Staff George Marshall, Army Director of Military Intelligence General Sherman Miles, Chief of Army War Plans General Leonard T. Gerow, Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson, Secretary of State Cordell Hull, and President Franklin D. Roosevelt – they were the only men in a position to make a knowledgeable decision.

As is typical, Robinson has found a document that he claims supports his theory and he then makes a big deal out of it. It's called agenda based academics. The real value of the document is maybe the correct historical terms will begin to be used rather than the historically incorrect "internment". P.S. If your parents told you the evacuation was based on racial hysteria, you must have been quite old. The commission's report that rewrote the history was released in the early 1980s.



6. J. Edgar Hoover wasn't against evacuating, he waffled on the issue. His San Diego and Seattle offices were fully in support of the evacuation. The Portland and Los Angeles FBI field offices leaned heavily in support. He also didn't like the idea of the Dept of Justice being taken out of the loop, which is precisely what happened with the decision to evacuate all ethnic Japanese rather than convict known spies and risk important intelligence being revealed in the courts in a time of war as well as sap resources and fail to solve the immediate problem. Biddle may not have supported the evacuation either, but you'll notice he's not on the list of ten men above.


Your final comment is just absurd. Of course there was hostility towards the ethnic Japan after Pearl Harbor and vigilante killings occurred. Your paper still occasionally prints a letter stating this, to which you'll immediately print the reparations mantra "Then why were the guns pointing towards the inside of the camps!" Like clockwork. To right a piece stating the MAGIC intercepts and known hostility on the West Coast are somehow mutually exclusive is clearly over the top, but not surprising...

I've yet to address the Times piece during the 60th anniversary of the end of the Pacific War and the historical inaccuracies (reparations based myths) Eric Lacitis had drawn upon for his piece, but I eventually will. What profound timing for the piece! I'm sure the other 99.99% of WW2 vets were enthralled!

I recall you were writing on the business page when I was exporting to Japan and you got a lot of that wrong, too....

So that's where it stands. Robinson, Muller, Neiwert and their assorted flunkies are falling over themselves regarding this document. Does this mean they'll stop referring to the "Japanese-American Internment"? Doubt it...

UPDATE: Art Jacobs weighs in on the internment of German Americans.

RE: Bruce Ramsey / Times editorial columnist, Fair or not, internment was fearful sign of the times. Seattle Times, September 7, 2005

Dear Editor and Mr. Ramsey:

Thank you for your commentary on this matter. Your commentary like so many on this subject for whatever reason, ignorance, prejudice, or cover-up, omit the story of the at least 10,905 German Americans and some 3,400 Italian Americans who were locked up during World War II. Many German Americans were not released until August 1948 almost three years after the war in Europe was over.

Another point that is often ignored is the Alien Registration Act of 1942 which required all persons, male and female, over the age of 13 to register and be classified as an "Alien Enemy." How would like that for a "handle."

This registration resulted in the loss of civil liberties of 600,000 Italian Americans and 300,000 German Americans. Those who registered were forbidden to possess cameras, short-wave radio receivers, and firearms. In addition they were forbidden to fly; their travel was restricted to their neighborhoods, and they were required to report change of address or change of employment to the Department of Justice. And they were required to carry Alien Enemy identification cards.

I can assure you that few if any major newspapers were neutral on the internment of German Americans and as you wrote and the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution states: “The …denial of due process of law … to any person.” Yet Mr. Ramsey, my family and I (an American-born citizen) were locked up without due process...

For more on the internment of German Americans please visit http://www.foitimes.com/

Sincerely,
Arthur D. Jacobs
Major, USAF Retired
An American-born former internee at age 12

Update 2: Ramsey responds to my initial reply.

Point one: OK, you win that point. My comment was on the lack of evidence in Malkin's book-- a conclusion I have in memory, since I no longer have the book. What I remember is a lot of stuff about intentions to recruit people, not confirmation that they had been recruited and were producing intelligence for Imperial Japan.

Point two: A quick scan of the web page about German internment finds the claim that 11,000 Germans were interned. What I read was that the government selectively interned German aliens, and that some of their American family members volunteered to go in with them. There was no mass internment of German-Americans.

On ethnic Japanese in the Philippines. I don't know anything about that. I do know that the American ideal of the melting pot is not accepted in many Asian countries. The Chinese have been in Malaysia for a long time, but they still speak Chinese, not Malay. Same with the Chinese in Vietnam. The Chinese in Thailand have taken on the local culture and are more assimilated. In Philippines they are still thought of as cultural foreingers, I think. I don't know about the Japanese in Philippines, but you can't assume that it would be comparable to the United States.

Point three: There was a threat. The question was how immediate and real it was, how big it was, and whether it justified internment of 110,000 people without hearings for the duration of the war, depriving them of their liberty and, essentially, of their property.

B.R.

Update 3: And one more back to Bruce from me....

Dear Bruce,

Thank you for the courtesy of a response. We'll be going around in circles on this for years to come. Certainly the Padilla ruling today is another piece of the complicated puzzle.

Agreed there was no mass internment of German Americans, but American citizens of German ancestry were interned. The question is why. The answer is not "racism". I'm of German ancestry and my family sailed into Philadelphia in 1703. Ethnic Japanese came to the West Coast 45 years before Pearl Harbor and didn't start coming in large numbers until the turn of the century. Don't you think the fact Americans of German ancestry were interned deserves to be told? Regardless of the numbers? Of course it punches a big hole in the "racism" theory...

The Philippines was an American commonwealth at the time and ethnic Japanese had started immigrating there at the same time as our west coast. Certainly the majority of ethnic Japanese there were Nisei also. What's the status of people born in an American commonwealth? As a commonwealth, Filipinos enjoyed certain rights much in the same way Puerto Ricans do today. Yet, not one ethnic Japanese in the Philippines sided with the Americans or the Filipinos. The adults showed up the day after the invasion in Japanese military uniforms.

If you were aware of this information (as well as everything else our political and military leaders knew and didn't know) in late 1941/ early 1942, and you were given the responsibility of national security in a time of war, wouldn't you deserve to be free of criticism of "hysterical racism" 40 years later by people who were never in you shoes? Don't you think?

In Korematsu, Justice Black wrote, "There was evidence of disloyalty on the part of some, the military authorities considered that the need for action was great, and time was short. We cannot by availing ourselves of the calm perspective of hindsight -- now say that at the time these actions were unjustified."

That decision has never been reversed and is good law to this day.

Anyway, no need to respond unless you wish to. Admittedly your pieces are less emotionally strident than what I usually counter. I'm an old time islander and I can tell you this school curriculum thing at Sakai Middle School has done more to damage decades old friendships and acquaintances here on Bainbridge than Pearl Harbor ever did. All courtesy of an influx of farleft newcomers and the same 15 or so Japanese-American ethnic activists led by Frank Kitamoto and Clarence Moriwaki. A lot of old timers are angry and repulsed at how they've taken over this history in our town.

Update 4: Art Jacobs weighs in some more.

RE: Germans and German Americans, http://blog.seattletimes.nwsource.com/stop/

Ramsey said: [P]....And, according to the web page, there were individual hearings for each German detained, and the ones interned received negative decisions from the hearings board..."

My reply: Not true Bruce...My father's hearing board recommended that he not, repeat NOT be interned, yet he was interned by the Department of Justice.

Ramsey said: "According to the web page, these hearings were often unfair. That may be so. But, still, there were hearings...."

My reply: The 11,229 interned Japanese Americans who were forcibly interned also had hearings, as a matter of fact, some had two hearings.

Ramsey said: “And still, the Germans forcibly interned were non-citizens. That is, they were citizens of Germany, and Germany was at war with the United States. They may have some valid complaints, but in my view they could not demand the same rights as citizens.”

My reply: Bruce you know for a fact that the Fifth Amendment of the Constitution states that “no person shall be deprived of life, liberty, and property without due process.” Hearings were not due process, persons being heard were not allowed to have an attorney present, and were only allowed three witnesses.

And don’t forget Bruce, we were at war with Japan, thus Japanese Americans who were forcibly interned were also non-citizens, yet they, the Japanese forcibly interned, are included in P.L. 100-383, The Civil Liberties Act of 1988, which provided them with an apology and $20,000; and millions of dollars for research into the matter.


Art Jacobs
Tempe, Arizona
A former American-born internee at age 12

Update 5: The Seattle Times blog has a comment from BIJAC (obviously Frank or Clarence).

(This is a good time to make clear that I have not been and hopefully will not always be this critical of BIJAC. Hopefully criticism will be limited to BIJAC during the Frank years.)

And this one, from a Japanese-American:
My community of Bainbridge Island has been working for seven years to create a memorial to honor and remember the first Japanese Americans who were forcibly removed to concentration camps in World War II. We call our project "Nidoto Nai Yoni" which translates to "Let it not happen again." We deliberately chose this name years ago because we don't want to cast blame, but we want people to learn from this chapter in American history about the fragility of our constitution, and to hopefully inspire everyone to be vigilant to preserve and protect the rights for all.

To which I'll respond: Don't know who "their community" is referring to, but stating that they "don't want to cast blame" in the same paragraph as "concentration camps" is laughable. They're casting blame every chance they get in the press, politics and academia and it's a sordid story of bad history produced via political lobbying by ethnic special interests. It's agenda based and it's not the 100% historical truth.

Fragile constitution? The evacuation was entirely constitutional no matter who long these people delude themselves and attempt to delude you. These are the same people who say "the Nisei don't want to talk about it" and yet weekly there is a story on the subject. More accurately half the story - one sided cherry picking of the events that occured. Anybody who questions what they're saying is automatically slimed, as I was.

If BIJAC wants to get slimy I'm less reluctant to speak out more forcefully. You want some more historical truth that Bainbridge old timers know? Here it is.

Frank's dad was guilty as sin. He's not in the picture down at the post office because he was in prison where he belonged. Deep down in his guts Frank knows it. I believe that's what motivates him, besides his personal desire to make a name for himself.

There still exist old time islanders who know the full history and thankfully they have been sharing with me to document and set the record straight. I will continue to do so.