Kevin Miles Wrote:Did the US really break the Japanese code so long before Pearl Harbor?
The Japanese diplomatic code, called "Purple," Was broken at least six months before Pearl Harbor.
Quote:As the book states, did the US Government know of the attack on Pearl Harbor, and even encourage it?
Sources I have read claim that the attack was expected a week earlier.
For a long time FDR had been trying to get Germany to declare war against the United States. When that failed, he started working on the Japanese. Personally, I can think of no other reason to move the headquarters of the Pacific Fleet from San Diego to Hawaii than to make it a simultaneous threat, and attractive target. Don't forget that the Carrier Fleet was suddenly called out on "maneuvers," and all that remained in port were our aging battleships, cruisers, and destroyers.
Eleanor Roosevelt went in to see FDR immediately after he was told of the attack on Pearl. In one of her books, (I don't remember the name of it off hand) she described him as being "more serene than I have seen him in a long time."
Quote:Knowing that an attack on America was the only way to get the country to go to war? I was just wondering if this was just fiction for the story or there was truth to it? It just makes too much sense it's scary!
-Kevin
There are a lot of books that deal with this subject. One of the best is;
How The Far East Was Lost: American Foreign Policy And The Creation Of Communist China, 1939 - 1945, by Anthony Kubek. Unfortunately it has been out of print since the '60's. It deals with a lot more than just Pearl Harbor as the name implies, but it does go into the attack rather deeply. Another more recent book is,
Day Of Deceit, The Truth About FDR And Pearl Harbor, by Robert B. Stinnett. It was published in 2000, so it is still available, and it's a real eye-opener. The author spent many years researching Pearl Harbor using documents he was able to get through the Freedom Of Information Act.
Another very enlightening book is
The New Dealers War -- F.D.R. And The War Within World War II, by Thomas Fleming.
By getting the U.S. into war, FDR was able to get his name written in the history books as a "War President," rather than as the guy who put the "Great" in The Great Depression. (But That's just my evaluation.)
Ken V.