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August 08, 2004
Michelle Malkin’s In Defense of Internment
Breaking News: Japan, Not America, Guilty of War
Crimes 60 Years Ago
By Steve Sailer
For decades, the public considered
the central event in America's 20th Century history to
be the
Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
Countless
movies included a scene where swing music emanating
from a wood-sided radio is replaced by a breathless
announcer saying,
"We interrupt this broadcast …"
In recent years, however, merely
drawing attention to Japan's aggression has come to be
seen as
a little racially insensitive, something that nice
white people
just don't do. Thus the Holocaust, a much safer
topic, is increasingly portrayed as the most important
occurrence in
last century's American history.
With the crimes of the Japanese
militarists fading into the blur of Things We're Not
Supposed to Think About, the
bushido mindset, which inflicted so many atrocities
on the world, is now considered cool. Recent Hollywood
movies, such as Quentin Tarantino's "Kill Bill, Vol. 1"
and
Tom Cruise's " The
Last Samurai," are full of
Shinto.
However, some non-Japanese
Asian-American writers are still inclined to raise
unfashionable historical issues due to their relatives'
victimization by Imperial Japan, and are well
positioned to survive charges of racism. For example,
Iris Chang's aptly-titled 1998
book The Rape of Nanking: The Forgotten Holocaust
of World War II was a surprise bestseller. (If you
read even a few of its
449 reviews on Amazon, you'll see that Japanese
hypernationalism is far from dead.)
For those in the educational and
cultural establishments who believe that only whites can
be racist, the reality that America, and much of Asia
and the Pacific, was brutalized by fanatically racist
nonwhites is profoundly inconvenient.
Fortunately for their peace of
mind, the crimes of Imperial Japan can be nicely
balanced off against an alleged American crime: the
internment of Japanese Americans after the outbreak of
Pearl Harbor.
Michelle Malkin, whose parents were born in the
Philippines, bravely
takes on the internment industry in her new book
In Defense of Internment: The Case for "Racial
Profiling" in World War II and the War on Terror.
It's a daring and powerfully argued, if perhaps not
wholly convincing, effort. Most importantly, it restores
some three-dimensional perspective to a complex event.
I must say I have no idea how
Michelle can write a serious work of polemical history,
while keeping up her popular column, and having a new
baby, but she's done it. [VDARE.COM
NOTE: And even
found time occasionally to
go fishing.]
In Defense of Internment is
timely because the taxpayer-funded effort to demonize
the memory of all the public servants responsible for
the evacuation of the West Coast Japanese has left our
airport security system a sick joke.
Nobody, including Michelle, is
arguing for interning all Arab Muslims in the U.S. But
the "Slippery Slope to the Manzanar Concentration Camp"
argument is
repeatedly trotted out these days to render
unthinkable even the most narrowly-tailored racial
profiling.
Underperformin' Norman—Mineta, the
Secretary of Transportation—has
repeatedly declaimed that, because he was interned
with his family during WWII, the Transportation Security
Administration must continue its
dysfunctional system of randomly searching, say,
Navajo grandmothers, rather than (for shame!) focusing
on
Arab Muslims.
Still, Michelle could have noted
that Mineta, the only Democrat in the Cabinet, didn't
initiate his anti-profiling policy. Instead, George W.
Bush denounced profiling of Arabs back during his
second debate with Al Gore in 2000—as part of a plan
hatched by
Grover Norquist and
Karl Rove to win the
Muslim vote.
Michelle's book raises a series of
difficult questions to which I'll give my answers.
 |
Was the
internment the
result of wartime hysteria and racism? |
No doubt overexcitement played a
role. My grandfather, for example, became convinced that
a Japanese farmer who owned a sloping field above Pismo
Beach had planted his crops in a coded pattern conveying
secret information to submarines lurking offshore. That
seems like the lowest bandwidth communication medium
imaginable. But, I am told, there was no arguing with
the old boy.
And there were also many threats of
mob violence against the Japanese, with Filipinos being
especially angry.
Still, the Japanese weren't the
only ones to be evacuated or suffer other restrictions
on their freedoms. In 1941, America's most popular
athlete, Joe DiMaggio, famously hit in 56 games
straight. Yet, the next year, his
father, a San Francisco crab fisherman, was
grounded for the duration to prevent him from, I
guess, rendezvousing in the fog beyond the Golden Gate
Bridge with Mussolini's invasion fleet.
Italy, of course, had no navy to
speak of, and Il Duce's subjects showed negligible
enthusiasm for the war. Indeed, when Patton's army
landed in Sicily in 1943, the Italian soldiers put down
their guns, ran down on the beach, and helped the
Americans unload.
In
Germany, warlust was running much higher, but Hitler
never finished building any aircraft carriers so he was
never a credible threat to strike land targets in
America. Moreover, the loyalty of German-Americans had
been fully tested in World War I, when expressions of
pride in German culture in the U.S. had been crushed
during the
anti-German kulturkampf.
Our current fetish with Nazi
Germany disguises the fact Japan was much more
objectively worrisome to West Coasters in early 1942. In
Japan, fanaticism was strongest of all.
And the Japanese surface fleet was
world-beating. It boasted eleven battleships, compared
to the zero we had left afloat after their sneak attack
on Pearl Harbor, and ten aircraft carriers (six
full-sized), while the U.S. could seldom put more than
three flattops to sea in the Pacific. These aircraft
carriers had revolutionized warfare, raiding Hawaii,
Australia, and Ceylon, spanning 65 degrees of longitude,
between December and April.
Secretary of War Henry Stimson
argued that hit-and-run raids on the West Coast were
"not only possible, but probable in the first months
of the war, and it was quite impossible to be sure that
the raiders would not receive important help from
individuals of Japanese origin."
 |
Was this worry strategically plausible or a figment
generated by fear? |
Worries about Japanese attacks were
not simply a rationalization to drive out the Japanese
Americans. Serious decisions were based on these
concerns. For instance, the huge Kaiser steel mill,
where the Liberty boats were to be built, was
situated well inland in Fontana, California,
precisely to be out of range of Japanese battleships.
Arguably, incursions on California
made no long-term strategic sense for the Japanese and
were thus unlikely. The problem with trying to judge how
rationally Americans responded, however, is that the
Tokyo high command, while tactically brilliant, was
strategically nuts, with a pronounced tendency toward
what
Paul Johnson in
Modern Times called "rational hysteria."
For years, fierce young Japanese Army officers had been
assassinating moderate statesmen skeptical of their
demands for war. For Japanese, openly discussing the
risks inherent in attacking the much bigger country of
America could be a death sentence.
Having started a war it didn't know
how to end, attacks on West Coast ports to disable the
U.S. Navy made about as much strategic sense as anything
else the Japanese did.
With hindsight, we know that the
Japanese chose instead to drive south and east,
conquering Guam, Wake Island, Malaya, Singapore, Hong
Kong, the Dutch East Indies, the Philippines, and
Burma. By May of 1942, the Japanese had conquered
one-eighth of the Earth's surface.
Finally, in June, Japan's mighty
First Air Fleet turned back east, toward Midway Island,
as the initial step toward Admiral Yamamoto's goal of
conquering Hawaii and holding the population hostage
until America agreed to end the war.
This was yet another strategic
misjudgment. If Admiral Yamamoto had succeeded in
capturing Oahu, and the Japanese had
treated Americans the way they treated the
Filipinos, the U.S. would never have negotiated. It
would probably have taken until about 1946 or 1947 for
the U.S. to fight its way back within bombing range of
the Japanese mainland. But then, instead of atom-bombing
just two Japanese cities, we probably would have
annihilated a couple of dozen.
Fortunately, the Japanese were
spared the full wrath of which America was capable by
the U.S. Navy's extraordinary victory at Midway on June
4th, 1942. After that, the threat of raids on the
mainland diminished sharply.
But by then, the evacuation from
the West Coast of about 112,000 ethnic Japanese, about
one-third of the adults being citizens, had been
underway for months. (Japanese American citizens outside
of the Coastal region were left alone.)
 |
Were fears of disloyalty wholly hallucinatory? |
Japanese immigrants in Southeast
Asia had aided the invaders. But that doesn't prove than
many in America would have helped temporary raiders. For
one thing, any such traitors would have been left behind
to face the wrath of the American survivors.
But the precision of the Pearl
Harbor attacks did show that the Japanese had a spy ring
operating on Oahu. It included one American-born
citizen,
Richard Kotoshirodo.
And top Roosevelt administration
officials were hungrily reading decodings of
Japanese diplomatic cryptograms, some of which
recounted spy surveillance of mainland ports. The
Japanese government would have preferred to use whites
and blacks as its spies, but racist regimes have a much
harder time recruiting Benedict Arnolds from other
ethnic groups than do communist dictatorships. There's
no evidence that the Japanese state progressed beyond
organizing espionage to arranging sabotage, although
suicide bombings would have been a
logical step for the government that
invented the kamikaze.
Unfortunately, the first two
Japanese American citizens to have their loyalty
spontaneously tested by a Japanese incursion … flunked.
A Japanese pilot returning from shooting up Pearl Harbor
crash-landed on Niihau, the
privately-owned ranching island that serves as a
cultural preserve for Native Hawaiians. The two
American-born citizens of Japanese descent on Niihau
collaborated with the pilot and briefly took over
the island, until a
wounded Hawaiian killed the aviator with his
bare hands. One of the quislings then shot himself.
 | How severe was the
risk? |
On Hawaii, the Japanese ethnic
group made up such a large fraction of the workforce
that mass evacuation was impractical. Instead, the
territory came under
martial law. Few problems were observed. But then,
the Japanese Navy
never made it back.
Let it be noted that sabotage was
more of a left-of-center fear at that time. Stalin had
denounced "wreckers" at his
show trials, and the international left had become
obsessed by fascist
"fifth columnists" during the Spanish Civil War.
So evacuation of the Japanese from the West Coast was
supported somewhat more by liberals than by
conservatives. The most notable public spokesman
against mass evacuations was Republican Senator
Robert Taft—and the leading dissenter within the
Roosevelt Administration was FBI supremo
J. Edgar Hoover.
It should also be noted that the
1924 shutdown of immigration did much to cut down on
the threat of disloyalty. All the Japanese-born
noncitizens had been in the U.S. for at least 18 years.
Even if they hadn't grown fond of America, they had at
least gotten old enough that militancy wouldn't be as
fun-sounding as it once might have seemed. The American
citizens had all been born in this country and,
typically, educated in assimilationist public schools.
But thousands of American-born
citizens, such as Kotoshirodo, had been sent to
Japan for their education, where they'd caught
the militarist virus.
Everyone has heard, repeatedly, of
the famed
442nd Regimental Combat Team, which was formed in
the camps and went on to set records for medals won
while fighting in Italy.
We don’t hear, however, of the fact
that over a quarter (28%) of the young male citizens in
the camps
refused to swear allegiance to the U.S. Presumably,
many had been alienated by their experiences, but it
shows that stories about complete loyalty among the
internees are myths. Ultimately,
5,589 individuals even renounced their citizenship.
 | How bad was the
treatment of internees? |
By WWII standards, not all that
bad, at least after the initial chaos. The worst
injustices were that many evacuees had to sell their
property at fire sale prices. In particular, many
farmers in Los Angeles County would have made a fortune
if they had been able to hold on to their land until the
housing boom after the war. Some compensation for
property losses was voted by Congress in 1948, but it
wasn't enough.
Luckily, Japanese Americans are a
hard working and enterprising people, so most got back
on their feet relatively quickly after the war. In the
1970s, Senator S. I. Hayakawa argued that by breaking
the authority of the older generation, internment
enabled the younger people to adapt to the American
economy better and make more money after the war than
they would have otherwise.
Physical conditions in the camps
were spartan, but not much worse than those experienced
by draftees who remained stateside. And, of course, lots
of draftees ended up in much worse places, such as
Guadalcanal or,
worst of all, a
Japanese prisoner of war camp.
Workers in the relocation camps
were paid, although the maximum wage was limited to that
of an Army private's. Eventually, tens of thousands were
allowed out to take jobs or attend colleges away from
the West Coast.
Still, there was a significant
psychological difference between being drafted and being
interned. This must have been especially painful to the
status-sensitive Japanese. Also, this complete
disruption of life would be easier for a young draftee
to endure than an elderly evacuee.
In summary, I would agree with
Michelle that based on what policy makers knew in the
desperate month of February 1942, mass evacuation of the
Coast was certainly defensible.
I would add, though, that it seems
less than optimal. Hoover's proposal for
rounding up suspicious characters and removing
Japanese ethnics from around just the
most militarily crucial locations in Seattle and San
Diego sounds far better both from the standpoints of
protecting personal liberty and justice and of
maintaining wartime production.
Unlike Michelle Malkin, I approve
of the 1988 payment of $20,000 to each internee. The
U.S. is a rich country and can afford to pay off at
leisure for decisions that need to be made in haste.
That's a much better practice than
our current tendency to immediately get bogged down
interminably by half-remembered half-truths.
[Steve Sailer [email
him] is founder of the Human Biodiversity Institute and
movie critic for
The American Conservative.
His website
www.iSteve.blogspot.com features his daily
blog.] |