Freedom Betrayed, by Herbert Hoover
With the change in Presidents,
there came a departure from the Roosevelt policies that amounted almost to a
revolution.
So begins Hoover’s reflections regarding Harry Truman. I readily admit I am no expert on every
action taken by either Roosevelt or Truman, but nothing I am aware of in the
decisions and choices made by these two would cause me to make such a
statement. I am hopeful that Hoover will
shed some light on his claim.
Hoover begins his explanation by outlining the different
paths these two men took to power: Roosevelt was born to a wealthy New York
family, attended exclusive private schools, and entered political life at the
early age of 28; Truman was born in the “village” of Lamar, Missouri, educated
in public schools, took on his own living at age seventeen, and enlisted in the
army in WWI. Hoover describes their
outlooks on American life as “fundamentally different” due to these different
upbringings.
The first policy contrast identified by Hoover involves the
different outlook these two men had regarding “relief of the women and children
of the German-occupied small democracies during the whole Second World
War.” Given the evidence Hoover offers
in this regard, his statement seems accurate.
However, this doesn’t strike me as tremendously important within the
context of the major abuses of power each of the two presidents took during
this time.
That Hoover offers this as the first contrast offers a clue,
perhaps, of the reason behind Hoover’s apparent bias toward Truman. Hoover enjoyed an internationally prominent
role in foreign food relief when performing a similar function after World War
I.
It will be recalled that after the First World War Hoover
was responsible to bring food aid and other relief to Europe. He was quite well regarded in Europe for
this. In the late 1930s, Hoover
approached Roosevelt about doing the same but was rebuffed for various
reasons. Hoover spends a good amount of
time in earlier chapters discussing his attempts at securing such a position
through Roosevelt, and is open about his negative feelings toward Roosevelt on
this matter. In contrast, shortly after
the end of the war Truman has Roosevelt coordinate aid for many of the war-torn
regions. This is likely the main reason
Hoover spares Truman.
As will be clear throughout his narrative, I believe, Hoover
virtually white-washes many of Truman’s actions – certainly as compared to
Hoover’s treatment of Roosevelt. Where
Hoover does point out decisions that Truman might have made differently, he
absolves Truman of this by blaming his subordinates, or “confusion” among
Truman’s advisors. While Hoover treats
Truman more kindly, it is difficult for me to find any action or decisions of
consequence where the paths of these two presidents would have diverged
significantly.
Truman calls Hoover in for advice about the world situation
shortly after taking office. Hoover
indicates that in their discussion the two covered many subjects
…the most important being a
statement from me that I believed an early surrender could be had from Japan. I based this belief upon the Emperor’s shift
from the militarists’ Ministry to a civilian Ministry under “Elder Statesman”
Kantaro Suzuki.
Suzuki’s new cabinet included Shigenori
Togo (not to be confused with General Tojo) as Foreign Minister. Togo had tried to make peace with the
Anglo-Saxons in 1941. It seemed to me
that Japan was signaling for peace.
[Hoover suggested] saying we had no
wish to disturb the Imperial House since the Emperor was the spiritual as well
as the secular head of the nation, but otherwise the terms could be tough. I said that whether the Japanese kept the
Emperor or not made not an atom of difference to the American people as
obviously we could completely demilitarize the Japanese.
Brigadier General Bonner Fellers in 1947 confirmed this
change in position by the Japanese as a signal:
Hirohito believed that appointment
of such a well-known opponent [Suzuki] of the militarists would be regarded by
the Allies as a clear signal that Japan desired peace…. To Hirohito’s and Suzuki’s amazement, no
offer to negotiate came from the Allies….
Others advised Truman likewise. Joseph Grew, then Under Secretary of State,
also recommended to the President that he include a statement in a forthcoming
speech indicating the preservation of the Imperial House. According to Grew, Marshall, Forrestal and
Stimson supported him. However, no such
statement was made.
This advice by many of the President’s advisors – both
civilian and military – was not heeded by the President. On July 2, 1945, in a memorandum outlining
the stiff peace terms for Japan from Secretary Stimson to Truman, it was again
recommended
…if in saying this we should add
that we do not exclude a constitutional monarchy under her present dynasty, it
would substantially add to the chances of acceptance.
In one example of Hoover giving Truman a mulligan, Hoover
explains away Truman not taking advantage of this opportunity for immediate
peace by explaining that the opportunity was “lost by confusion among the
President’s advisors.”
It is true: Truman also had advisors that pressured him to
stick to the most pure definition of the term “unconditional surrender.” That a leader – in business or politics –
receives conflicting advice is not unheard of.
In fact it is normal. The issue
comes down to the decision ultimately made by the leader. In this case, Truman had the role of making
that decision. And Hoover gives Truman a pass on his decision – a decision with
horrific consequences.
What appeared to many at the time (and to many more as
further evidence has come out since the war), Truman had the opportunity for
“immediate peace” as early as April 1945 – almost four months before the
dropping of the atomic bombs on Japan.
An opportunity to save four months of island to island fighting for the
American military; an opportunity to end the death and starvation of countless
civilians; and opportunity to end the cost in both lives and treasure; and
never even getting to the decision about the atomic bomb. Hoover suggests an opportunity of such import
was lost simply due to “confusion.”
Hoover is too kind, I believe.
Truman, Stalin, and Churchill met at Potsdam in July,
1945. Eight days into the conference,
Churchill was replaced by Clement Attlee, the new Prime Minister for Great
Britain. Hoover does not mention the
purposeful delays required by Truman before attending to this conference,
instead focusing on further concessions made to Stalin. I have written about Truman’s delays
previously, when reviewing The Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb, by Gar
Alperovitz:
Truman postponed the meeting in
Potsdam with Stalin and Churchill until July, 1945 – despite the desire by the
other participants to have the meeting much sooner. As the excuse, Truman said
he could not come due to the pressing budget issues of the government. In
reality, he was waiting for news of the progress of the bomb. He was able to
postpone the meeting for over a month.
While in Potsdam, he received news
of the successful test. This completely changed his mood and demeanor at the
meetings. He was quite clear that the U.S. had a means to go it alone.
Churchill, when told later of the reasons behind this changed, was quite
pleased.
Truman delayed the meeting for over a month – despite being
implored by his counterparts to join sooner, and despite the situation in the Pacific
and Japan. He delayed the meeting for as
long as possible in order to have news of the bomb tests. The bomb tests would only matter if something
other than a quick end to the war was desired. He had many advisors telling him Japan was
ready to surrender. His military was
clear on this. How many lives were lost
on both sides because of this delay, a delay not necessary for military means?
Hoover outlines the many opportunities for peace that were
raised by Japan – well in advance of Potsdam – and ignored by the United
States. In February, 1945, Roosevelt received
a long dispatch from MacArthur outlining the terms of peace that could be made
with Japan. These terms amounted to
unconditional surrender except for maintaining the position of the Emperor;
MacArthur further urged that no concessions be made to Russia in order to
entice Russia to fight against Japan.
In March, Japan reached out to Sweden to intervene for
peace. Nothing came from this gesture
other than to demonstrate the various avenues that Japan took in an attempt to
end the war.
As mentioned earlier, in April a civilian cabinet was
installed in Japan, led by a Prime Minister known for his desire for peace.
In July, several urgent messages were sent between Prime
Minister Togo and the Japanese Ambassador in Moscow, conveying a strong desire
for peace. These messages were all
intercepted and deciphered in Washington.
These peace feelers only had one requirement – leave the Emperor under a
Constitutional Monarchy. This idea was
supported by Allied military leaders, as they knew that the Japanese military
would only stop the fight on orders from the Emperor.
In all, Hoover recounts six full months prior to Potsdam of
attempts by Japan to sue for peace.
These were all ignored. Instead,
Potsdam resulted in an ultimatum to Japan, one that allowed no recognition of
the Emperor, and therefore no opportunity for peace: In other words,
“unconditional surrender,” that horrendous term first employed by Roosevelt –
supposedly off-the-cuff.
Following are our terms. We will not deviate from them. There are no alternatives. We shall brook no delay.
Given what Japan witnessed as to the result in Germany, it
was not possible that Japan and the Emperor would have agreed to such terms. The Germans did not, and the Germans didn’t
view Hitler as a deity on earth as the Japanese did their Emperor.
Instead, Truman decided to continue the war, costing lives
on all sides and ending only with the horrific destruction of Nagasaki and
Hiroshima. Immediately after Japan
surrendered, MacArthur announced that the Emperor would be retained. Why this couldn’t have been allowed one week
prior is a mystery, unless Truman had a hidden reason for wanting to drop the
two bombs.
After the war, in correspondence with Douglas MacArthur, the
General wrote to Hoover in regards to Hoover’s written proposal to Truman to
take advantage of the Japanese signals for peace:
It was a wise and statesmanlike
document, and had it been put into effect would have obviated the slaughter at
Hiroshima and Nagasaki…. That the
Japanese would have accepted it and gladly I have no doubt.
MacArthur was not the only military leader holding this
view.
Admiral William D. Leahy:
It is my opinion that the use of
this barbarous weapon at Hiroshima and Nagasaki was of no material assistance
in our war against Japan. The Japanese were already defeated and ready to
surrender because of the effective sea blockade and the successful bombing with
conventional weapons... My own feeling was that in being the first to use it,
we had adopted an ethical standard common to the barbarians of the Dark Ages. I
was not taught to make wars in that fashion, and that wars cannot be won by
destroying women and children.
General Dwight D. Eisenhower:
Secretary of War Stimson, visiting
my headquarters in Germany, informed me that our government was preparing to
drop an atomic bomb on Japan. I was one of those who felt that there were a
number of cogent reasons to question the wisdom of such an act. ...the
Secretary, upon giving me the news of the successful bomb test in New Mexico,
and of the plan for using it, asked for my reaction, apparently expecting a
vigorous assent.
During his recitation of the relevant
facts, I had been conscious of a feeling of depression and so I voiced to him
my grave misgivings, first on the basis of my belief that Japan was already
defeated and that dropping the bomb was completely unnecessary, and secondly
because I thought that our country should avoid shocking world opinion by the
use of a weapon whose employment was, I thought, no longer mandatory as a
measure to save American lives. It was my belief that Japan was, at that very
moment, seeking some way to surrender with a minimum loss of 'face'. The
Secretary was deeply perturbed by my attitude...
Despite many statements by military and other leaders – even
at the time or shortly after the time of the atomic bombings on the Japanese
cities – that such a terrible weapon did not need to be deployed for the
purpose of ending the war or ending it sooner, the myth of the benefits of
dropping these two horrendous bombs remains.
Alperovitz also discusses the myth in his above-referenced book. I excerpt from my earlier review of this book:
There was a concerted effort to
hide the facts of the decision both from the public and from the record.
However, instead of going through this in detail, I will only offer some
quotes:
Navy Chaplain Willard Reeves:
There was an air of sadness at the
thought of Hiroshima’s needless destruction….When I returned home and told my
story, people would look at me in complete disbelief. They all seemed convinced
by the media and the governmental pronouncements that the dropping of the bomb
was absolutely essential to ending the war.
McGeorge Bundy (authored Stimson’s
official recollections of the decision regarding the bomb):
…I think we deserve some sort of
medal for reducing these particular chatterers to silence.
George F. Kennan to McGeorge Bundy:
I am afraid that if these
statements were now to appear in an official biography of Mr. Stimson, a part
of the reading public might conclude that the hope of influencing Russia by the
threat of atomic attack had been, and probably remained, one of the permanent
motivating elements of our foreign policy.
Harry Truman:
The dropping of
the bombs stopped the war, saved millions of lives….
Richard Miller, author of Truman:
The Rise to Power:
At the start of this research
project I shared the popular perception of Truman as a down-home sort of
character with a refreshing honesty that seems absent from politics today.
After going into the matter thoroughly I now view him as a professional
big-city machine politician, involved in shady personal and political dealings.
Memo from General George Lincoln to
General Dwight Eisenhower:
The implication that the atomic
bombs were dropped on a people who had already sued for peace should not be
included in a paper prepared for release to the public.
It is clear that there was a
concerted effort to make the story fit an appropriate narrative. In addition to
the quoted items above, Alperovitz makes clear that much of the record remained
(and remains) hidden from the view of independent researchers and historians.
Hoover is unequivocal when it comes to understanding how to
make peace, and what proper justice for enemy leaders is:
…The leaders of the nations who
brought this situation upon the world must be made to realize the enormity of
their acts. There can be no moral
distinction and there should be no legal distinction between such men and
common criminals conspiring to commit murder.
There should be no question of
indiscriminate and wholesale punishment of whole nations, for that merely lays
the foundation for future conflicts….
It is easy for the victor of war to hold the defeated to such
standards. Who holds the victor to such
a standard? Nowhere does Hoover apply
this standard to Roosevelt, despite all of the evidence Hoover presents
regarding Roosevelt’s purposeful actions to get the United States into the war,
and further actions to aid communists and communism. Certainly as Hoover does not apply this to
Roosevelt, there is no such damnation for Truman – despite Hoover’s view and
the view of many others that the further military actions against Japan in the
Spring and Summer of 1941 could have been avoided – including the fact that
there was no military reason to drop the two atomic bombs.
Finally, despite the fact that Japan was already defeated in
military terms well before the Russians joined the fight, Truman continued to
support all of Stalin’s demands regarding the Far East. Hoover mutters not one word against Truman
regarding his acquiescence to Stalin, whereas when Roosevelt did the same
Hoover wrote countless pages on the “betrayal.”
Hoover’s whitewashing of Truman’s actions is not surprising
to me, and does nothing to diminish his observations about Roosevelt. The whitewash is to be expected from one
political leader to another. The
surprise is in Hoover’s frank discussion regarding Roosevelt that makes this
book refreshing, while always keeping in mind that Hoover is also a political
man in the utmost sense.
You are incorrect in your penultimate paragraph in which you say that Truman yielded to all of Stalin's demands. Had FDR's preferred vice president, Henry Wallace, been the one to inherit the presidency that would have almost certainly been the case, but it was not the case with Truman. This is from the conclusion of my article, "Oliver Stone on the Japanese Surrender."
ReplyDeleteBut should we take Wallace, as Stone does, at his later word that as President he would not have actually used the bomb? In the first place, from [Dwight] MacDonald’s splendid little book we also learn that even for an American politician, the gap between Wallace’s words and his actual deeds was enormous. There is a very good chance that as President he would have continued the role he had played for FDR during the war, that of chief vilifier of the enemy. Having for so long painted Hirohito and the Japanese as at least the equivalent in evil of Hitler and the Nazis, and having been an enthusiastic supporter of FDR’s war policies that targeted German and Japanese cities, he is very unlikely to have pulled back from those policies as President.
Furthermore, [Tsuyoshi] Hasegawa reminds us that the biggest opponents in the country to a policy that would have made the use of the bombs unnecessary for shortening the war, softer surrender terms for Japan, were the leftists and the liberals. The leader among them in the State Department was the up-and-coming Dean Acheson. In the leftist view, revenge had to be wreaked upon Japan for Pearl Harbor and for their unforgivable alliance with the hated Nazis.
If Wallace had not dropped the bombs, Soviet entry into the war along with U.S. invasion of the main islands of Japan would, indeed, have resulted in the Japanese surrender, but at what a price? We also learn from Hasegawa that Stalin requested that he be allowed to occupy Hokkaido and to share in the occupation of Japan in the fashion of the occupation of Germany. Truman had the good sense to deny those requests. A President as cozy with Stalin as Wallace demonstrably was would no doubt have acceded to them, and both leaders would have been about as generous in victory toward the Japanese emperor as the Bolsheviks were to the czar. Not only would all of Korea have fallen to the Communists, but Hokkaido and quite possibly the rest of Japan would have as well, not to mention what might have happened to Europe.
Now you know the real reason why Stone and his Strelnikov-lookalike co-author Kuznick love Henry Wallace so much.
http://www.dcdave.com/article5/130122.htm
Mr. Martin
DeleteI highly commend the above referenced article of yours to those interested in this history. Thank you for providing the link.