America’s Asian Empire: Aggression, A-Bombs and
Other Atrocities
By
Mike (in Tokyo) Rogers
10/21/05 "LewRockwell"
-- -- Once
a rational person realizes that our government has lied
or bent the truth – as all governments do – in order to
look better or to present matters in a more flattering
light, then one will begin to see everything
differently, including current events. Naturally, the
consideration of any question of how humans will act in
or react to a given situation requires the use of one’s
common sense; it makes sense that any government would
try to make itself look better by hiding the truth from
the public.
This
article is another exercise in asking the reader to
consider events leading up to and concerning World War
II, while using historical fact and common sense in the
consideration of these events.
The
purported reasons for war – any war – as presented by a
government for public consumption are obviously quite
different than the real reasons. Just one moment’s
consideration of the details surrounding the current
debacle in Iraq should make this fact of life apparent.
So
what’s new? When has any government ever told its
electorate the truth about war?
Previously,
I presented some ugly truths about American
involvement in the Pacific Theater of World War II.
Quotes from high-ranking US government officials –
civilian and military – showed that US involvement did
not exactly stem from the Japanese bombing of a US
military base in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, and that the
United States was deeply involved in empire-building in
Asia well before entering the war. One of my main points
was that the attack on Pearl Harbor was used as the
excuse; historical fact would show the real reasons.
Americans need to realize that the United States was,
and still is, expanding and interfering in the business
of other nations – as it has had the reputation of doing
since
1846. The widely used excuse for this land grab is
"manifest destiny." Manifest destiny was a phrase used
to express the belief that the United States was chosen
by God to spread its form of democracy across North
America and to the Pacific Ocean. All empires use
ridiculous catch phrases to soothe the minds of their
ill-informed public. America’s manifest destiny of the
19th and 20th centuries mirrors the insanity spouted by
President George W. Bush today.
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American Progress by John Gast (1872) |
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Some
Americans today (as well as people from other nations)
are wondering why the United States thinks it has to be
the policeman for the world. This is an old question.
Since when are the internal affairs of other nations a
legitimate concern for the USA? The painfully obvious
answer to this is that the government of the United
States will consider the domestic affairs of other
nations to be its business up to and until the day the
USA stops empire building. And why not? High-ranking
government officials don’t normally send their kids off
to die in wars; high-ranking government officials are
always in bed with arms and weapons manufacturers and
always looking for a way to line their pockets. The
governments start the wars and the people pay the price.
Before discussing the real reasons for then-President
Harry S. Truman dropping atomic bombs on civilians in
Japan, another deeper look at historical fact is called
for. Investigation will show that the reason for the war
with Japan starting was not the bombing of the US Navy
base at Pearl Harbor; it was the clash of the US and
Japanese empires in Asia.
Pre-World War
Two US Empire-Building in Asia
More
undeniable proof of US imperialism in Asia well before
Franklin Roosevelt became president comes with a close
look at the "Boxer Rebellion" in China that began in
November of 1897 and ended in June of 1900. This
rebellion by the Chinese to throw out Western
imperialist forces was brutally crushed by an
eight-nation alliance of Japanese, Austro-Hungarian,
British, French, German, Italian, Russian and American
troops.
The United States was able to play a significant
role in suppressing the Boxer Rebellion because of
the large number of American ships and troops
deployed in the Philippines as a result of the US
conquest of the islands during the
Spanish American War (1898) and subsequent
Philippine insurgent activity.
Troops from all nations engaged in plunder, looting
and rape.
Get
that? Troops from all nations engaged in plunder,
looting and rape. That would include the Land of the
Free and the so-called
Arsenal of Democracy.
In
the final battle of the Boxer Rebellion, US troops
killed anti-imperialist/pro-Chinese dynasty forces as
well as innocent civilians.
Another of the more disturbing American empire-building
phases was its colonization of the Philippines. Not only
was the US government involved with imperialism; then,
as today, it committed atrocities including the massacre
of civilians. Throw on top of this that the US
government was lying about the entire affair and not
paying American troops properly, and you have a rather
faithful reflection of what is going on with the US
empire today:
In December, 1898, the US purchased the Philippines
and other territories from Spain at the Treaty of
Paris for the sum of 20 million US dollars, after
the Spanish were defeated in the Spanish-American
War. The US made plans to make the Philippines an
American colony. However, the Filipinos, fighting
for their independence from Spain since 1896, had
already declared independence on June 12 of 1898.
The United States sent over 11,000 ground troops to
occupy the Philippines.
Tensions between the Filipinos and the American
soldiers on the islands existed because of the
conflicting movements for independence and
colonization, aggravated by the feelings of betrayal
on the part of the Filipinos by their former allies,
the Americans. Hostilities started on February 4,
1899 when an American soldier named Robert William
Grayson shot a Filipino soldier who was crossing a
bridge into American-occupied territory in San Juan
del Monte, an incident historians now consider to be
the start of the war. US President William McKinley
later told reporters that the insurgents had
"attacked Manila" in justifying war on the
Philippines. The Battle of Manila (1899) that
followed caused thousands of casualties for
Filipinos and Americans alike.
The administration of US President McKinley
subsequently declared Aguinaldo to be an "outlaw
bandit," and no formal declaration of war was ever
issued. Two reasons have been given for this. One is
that calling the war the Philippine Insurrection
made it appear to be a rebellion against a lawful
government, although the only part of the
Philippines under American control was Manila. The
other was to enable the American government to avoid
liability to claims by American veterans of the
action.
In 1900, the Philippine army was ordered to engage
in guerilla warfare, a means of operation which
better suited them and made American occupation of
the archipelago all the more difficult over the next
few years. In fact, during just the first four
months of the guerilla war the Americans lost nearly
500 men killed or wounded. The Filipino resistance
fighters began staging bloody ambushes and raids.
Most infamous were the guerilla victories at
Pulang Lupa and
Balangiga. At first, it even seemed as if the
Filipinos would fight the Americans to a stalemate
and force them to withdraw. This was even considered
by President McKinley at the beginning of the phase.
The shift to guerilla warfare however, only angered
the Americans into acting more ruthless than before.
They began taking no prisoners, scorching whole
villages, and routinely shooting surrendering
Filipinos. Much worse were the concentration camps
that civilians were forced into, after being
suspected of being guerilla sympathizers. Thousands
of civilians may have died in these camps.
In nearly all cases, the civilians suffered much
worse than the actual Filipino guerillas. As a
result, many of the Filipino guerillas felt
obligated to surrender, in order to stop the
suffering the war was causing to their own people…
Some Americans, notably
William Jennings Bryan,
Mark Twain,
Andrew Carnegie, and other members of the
American Anti-Imperialist League, strongly
objected to the annexation of the Philippines. Other
Americans mistakenly thought that the Philippines
wanted to become part of the United States.
Anti-imperialist movements claimed that the United
States had betrayed its lofty goals of the
Spanish-American War by becoming a colonial
power, merely replacing Spain in the Philippines… As
news of atrocities committed in subduing the
Philippines arrived in the United States, support
for the war flagged…
In
1908,
Manuel Arellano Remondo, in a book entitled
General Geography of the Philippine Islands, wrote:
"The population decreased due to the wars, in the
five-year period from 1895 to 1900, since, at the
start of the first insurrection, the population was
estimated at 9,000,000, and at present (1908), the
inhabitants of the Archipelago do not exceed
8,000,000 in number."
~
The Philippine-American War
The
US government calling the war an insurrection, to make
it appear to be a rebellion against a lawful government,
although the only part of the Philippines under American
control was Manila? The American government not
declaring war so as to sidestep liability claims by
American veterans of the action? The US Army taking no
prisoners, burning down villages, and routinely shooting
surrendering Filipinos? Thousands of civilians dead in
US concentration camps? This undoubtedly shows that the
United States was involved with empire-building in Asia
– as well as cheating and lying to its own soldiers and
to the American public – long before the start of World
War II.
War
crimes, atrocities, killing civilians, annexing
territory… so what’s the difference between the US
empire in 1900 and today? Not much. Same story,
different day. Even Mark Twain wrote at the time:
(I used to be) a red-hot imperialist. I wanted the
American eagle to go screaming into the Pacific ...
Why not spread its wings over the Philippines, I
asked myself? ... I said to myself, "Here are a
people who have suffered for three centuries. We can
make them as free as ourselves, give them a
government and country of their own, put a miniature
of the American Constitution afloat in the Pacific,
start a brand new republic to take its place among
the free nations of the world. It seemed to me a
great task to which we had addressed ourselves."
But I have thought some more, since then, and I have
read carefully the treaty of Paris, and I have seen
that we do not intend to free, but to subjugate the
people of the Philippines. We have gone there to
conquer, not to redeem."
It should, it seems to me, be our pleasure and duty
to make those people free, and let them deal with
their own domestic questions in their own way. And
so I am an anti-imperialist. I am opposed to having
the eagle put its talons on any other land."
~ Samuel Langhorne Clemens:
A Pen Warmed Up in Hell: Mark Twain in Protest
Once
again, considering the facts above and in
Dying for the Emperor? No Way, it is plain as
day that the United States was building an empire in
Asia and was not the innocent bystander that US history
books teach American children to believe.
The
Japanese imperial army also committed atrocities in Asia
– especially in China. But the question for the reader
now is, was the United States free of guilt as to the
start of World War II? Is the United States innocent of
any charge of empire building today?
The
common sense answer to these questions is that it is
not. The United States will do as empires have always
done, and will use its own military might as well as
proxies and "friendly forces" any way it can in order to
expand the empire. In the above two cases, the US used
the Japanese (with mutual consent) in China – until the
Japanese began to threaten the US empire; and the US
government used the Philippine army as a weapon against
the Spanish and then stabbed the Philippine soldiers and
civilians in the back when they were no longer useful,
or when they presented a threat to the American empire.
These events, considered as a whole, would lead anyone
to conclude that the reason for the start of American
involvement in World War II was not only the Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor, but the clash of empires in
Asia.
Why America
Really Dropped the Atomic Bomb on Japan
History is not an exact science. We may never know the
entire truth or all the reasons for certain events. That
being said, in looking for the truth we must consider
the words and deeds of many players; we must get the
story from all sides before we can make an intelligent
judgment. Even then, it must be difficult to find any
one single reason for any war. All sides will have
grievances.
To
believe that the history of the Pacific War began on
December 7, 1941, at Pearl Harbor, and to believe that
the single reason Truman ordered the atomic bombings of
Japan was to save American lives against a fanatical
enemy, is to be completely unrealistic about those
events and circumstances surrounding them. Keeping this
in mind, then, let’s look at a few other reasons for the
atomic bombing of Japan besides those passed off by
Harry S. Truman and taught in American schools.
In
my previous article, I showed that the notion of a
Japanese citizenry worshipping the emperor as their God
and being prepared to fight to the death in World War II
is a post-war myth, and most probably an excuse
forwarded by American post-war atomic bomb apologists.
This garnered a landslide of protests by readers who all
rejected my assertions. In reply, I asked everyone who
wrote to send me any quote (with a referenced link) from
any high-ranking US government official, civilian or
military, who went on the public record condoning the
atomic bombings of Japan for the purpose of ending the
war. Only one reader replied, and he found only one
source: Truman’s memoirs.
The
truth of the matter is that most of the high-ranking
American military men publicly disagreed with the atomic
bombing of Japan or were unaware of the bomb’s
existence. I cannot find any trace of any American
military leader going on the public record in favor of
dropping the bomb on the Japanese to end the war. As for
the Japanese nation being prepared to die for the
emperor, here is what historian
Peter Metevelis
had to say about it:
Few believed they were dying for the emperor as a
war leader or for military purposes. Rather, the
state was apparently able to manipulate a deep
intellectual and aesthetic tradition of painful
beauty to convince the pilots that it was their
honor to "die like beautiful falling cherry petals"
for their real and fictive families, including
parents, fellow pilots and the emperor and people of
Japan.
~ E.
Ohnuki-Tierney:
Kamikaze, Cherry Blossoms, and Nationalism
(University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 2002), pp
204–205.
Proving that the average Japanese during World War II
was not the suicidal maniac that American history books
would lead us to believe isn’t all that difficult. It
just took a bit of research and a little common sense.
Yet, there were still more than a few who wouldn’t
accept the facts –
Truman himself gave varying excuses for dropping the
bomb.
A
frightening quote giving another reason for the atomic
bombings comes from US Brigadier General Carter Clarke,
who was in charge of preparing intercepted Japanese
cables for Truman and his advisors:
"When we didn’t need to do it, and we knew we didn’t
need to do it, and they knew we didn’t need to do
it, we used them as an experiment for two atomic
bombs."
Quoted in Gar Alperovitz,
The Decision To Use the Atomic Bomb, pp 359.
So,
if it wasn’t done solely in order to force Japan to
surrender, why did Truman order the bombings? The answer
seems obvious. Besides my own cynical – but most
certainly realistic – view that the US government,
having spent millions of tax dollars on the A-Bomb
project, had to use the bombs in order to continue
feeding the American military-industrial complex (and
the Japanese happened to be the enemy at the time), I
also would consider that the US used the bombs to scare
the USSR. This is a most believable rationale; much more
rational than the idea that the Japanese were suicidal
fanatics – who suddenly weren’t after the surrender – or
that the bombs saved a million US lives.
After Franklin Roosevelt’s death in 1945, Harry S.
Truman became President of the United States. Upon
becoming president, Truman was informed of the Manhattan
Project – the project to build the atomic bomb. Truman
was not elected to the presidency, although he
desperately wanted to be elected later on. Even though
the public reasons for dropping the bomb are weak on
their own, the rarely mentioned notion of scaring the
Soviets can still be found quite easily in the public
domain.
Searching for the reasons Truman ordered the atomic
bombing of Japan, I found this concerning the informing
of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin of the existence of the
atomic bomb:
I was perhaps five yards away, and I watched with
the closest attention the momentous talk. I knew
what the President was going to do. What was vital
to measure was its effect on Stalin. I can see it
all as if it were yesterday. He seemed to be
delighted. A new bomb! Of extraordinary power!
Probably decisive on the whole Japanese war! What a
bit of luck!
Winston Churchill:
Triumph and Tragedy, pp 669–70.
Probably one of the most damning of all accounts comes
from then Soviet Marshal Georgii Zhukov:
I do not recall the exact date, but after the close
of one of the formal meetings Truman informed Stalin
that the United States now possessed a bomb of
exceptional power, without, however, naming it the
atomic bomb.
As was later written abroad, at that moment
Churchill fixed his gaze on Stalin’s face, closely
observing his reaction. However, Stalin did not
betray his feelings and pretended that he saw
nothing special in what Truman had imparted to him.
Both Churchill and many other Anglo-American authors
subsequently assumed that Stalin had really failed
to fathom the significance of what he had heard.
In actual fact, on returning to his quarters after
this meeting Stalin, in my presence, told Molotov
about his conversation with Truman. The latter
reacted almost immediately. "Let them. We’ll have to
talk it over with Kurchatov and get him to speed
things up."
I realized that they were talking about research on
the atomic bomb.
It was clear already then that the US Government
intended to use the atomic weapon for the purpose of
achieving its Imperialist goals from a position of
strength in "the cold war." This was amply
corroborated on August 6 and 8. Without any military
need whatsoever, the Americans dropped two atomic
bombs on the peaceful and densely-populated Japanese
cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
Georgii Konstantinovich Zhukov:
The Memoirs of Marshal Zhukov
(New York: Delacorte Press, 1971) pp 674–675.
A
Soviet Marshal calling US intentions in Asia
imperialistic sounds like the pot calling the kettle
black, doesn’t it? But here is wartime US Secretary of
State James Byrnes, recalling Truman informing Stalin
about successful tests of the atomic bomb:
I am just as convinced now as I was when I wrote
that first book,
Speaking Frankly, in 1947, that Stalin
did not appreciate the significance of the
statement. I have read stories by so-called
historians who assert that he must have known, but
they were not present. I was. I watched Stalin’s
face. He smiled and said only a few words, and Mr.
Truman shook hands with him, left, coming back to
where I was seated and the two of us went to our
automobile.
I recall telling the President at the time, as we
were driving back to our headquarters, that, after
Stalin left the room and got back to his own
headquarters, it would dawn on him, and the
following day the President would have a lot of
questions to answer. President Truman thought that
most probable. He devoted some time in talking to me
that evening as to how far he could go – or should
go.
Stalin never asked him a question about it. I am
satisfied that Stalin did not appreciate the
significance of President Truman’s statement. I’m
pretty certain that they knew we were working on the
bomb, but we had kept secret how far that
development had gone.
James Byrnes, interview in US News and World Report,
August 15, 1960, pp 67–68.
The
above strongly suggests that for the US Secretary of
State, the motivation for using the bomb had nothing to
do with Japan. The quote below supports that:
"[Byrnes] was concerned about Russia’s postwar
behavior. Russian troops had moved into Hungary and
Rumania, and Byrnes thought it would be very
difficult to persuade Russia to withdraw her troops
from these countries, that Russia might be more
manageable if impressed by American military might,
and that a demonstration of the bomb might impress
Russia."
Leo
Szilard:
His Version of the Facts
Stalin was a shrewd imperialist dictator, most probably
the most successful of his type the world has yet seen.
You’d think that he of all men could recognize the truth
over announcements made for domestic or propaganda
purposes. After all, he was one of the masters.
Finally, even Truman’s own writings about the bomb and
the Soviets point to the USSR’s expansionism as the one
truly big reason for dropping the bomb:
All he (Stalin) said was he was glad to hear it and
hoped we would make "good use of it against the
Japanese."
~
Harry S. Truman,
Year of Decisions, p. 416
Why
would Truman tell a state secret to the Soviets before
the fact? To scare them out of Eastern Europe? Or
because he wanted to save a million US lives? What would
the American public think if they knew the true
intentions of one of our wartime allies, the communists?
Of
course the public announcement by the US government as
to the reason for the atomic bombing would be quite
different from the real reason. When it comes to lying
to the public concerning war, all governments do it, and
the people pay the price. So what’s new?
Edited by Jeremy Irwin.
October 21,
2005
Mike (in Tokyo) Rogers [send
him mail] was born and raised in the USA and moved
to Japan in 1984. He has the distinction of being fired
from every FM radio station in Tokyo – one of them three
times. His first book,
Schizophrenic in Japan, is now on sale.
Copyright © 2005 LewRockwell.com |