May 08,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- Some years ago, a newspaper article credited a
European visitor with the wry observation that
Americans are charming because they have such
short memories. When it comes to the nation’s
wars, however, he was not entirely on target.
Americans embrace military histories of the
heroic “band of [American] brothers” sort,
especially involving World War II. They possess
a seemingly boundless appetite for retellings of
the Civil War, far and away the country’s most
devastating conflict where American war deaths
are concerned.
Certain
traumatic historical moments such as “the Alamo”
and “Pearl Harbor” have become code words --
almost mnemonic devices -- for reinforcing the
remembrance of American victimization at the
hands of nefarious antagonists. Thomas Jefferson
and his peers actually established the baseline
for this in the nation’s founding document, the
Declaration of Independence, which enshrines
recollection of “the merciless Indian Savages”
-- a self-righteous demonization that turned out
to be boilerplate for a succession of later
perceived enemies. “September 11th” has taken
its place in this deep-seated invocation of
violated innocence, with an intensity bordering
on hysteria.
Such
“victim consciousness” is not, of course,
peculiar to Americans. In Japan after World War
II, this phrase -- higaisha ishiki in
Japanese -- became central to leftwing criticism
of conservatives who fixated on their country’s
war dead and seemed incapable of acknowledging
how grievously Imperial Japan had victimized
others, millions of Chinese and hundreds of
thousands of Koreans foremost among them. When
present-day Japanese cabinet members visit
Yasukuni Shrine, where the emperor’s deceased
soldiers and sailors are venerated, they are
stoking victim consciousness and roundly
criticized for doing so by the outside world,
including the U.S. media.
Worldwide, war memorials and memorial days
ensure preservation of such selective
remembrance. My home state of Massachusetts also
does this to this day by flying the
black-and-white “POW-MIA” flag of the Vietnam
War at various public places, including Fenway
Park, home of the Boston Red Sox -- still
grieving over those fighting men who were
captured or went missing in action and never
returned home.
In one form or another, populist nationalisms
today are manifestations of acute victim
consciousness. Still, the American way of
remembering and forgetting its wars is
distinctive for several reasons. Geographically,
the nation is much more secure than other
countries. Alone among major powers, it escaped
devastation in World War II, and has been
unmatched in wealth and power ever since.
Despite panic about Communist threats in the
past and Islamist and North Korean threats in
the present, the United States has never been
seriously imperiled by outside forces. Apart
from the Civil War, its
war-related fatalities
have been tragic but markedly lower than the
military and civilian death tolls of other
nations, invariably including America’s
adversaries.
Asymmetry in the human costs of conflicts
involving U.S. forces has been the pattern ever
since the decimation of Amerindians and the
American conquest of the Philippines between
1899 and 1902. The State Department’s Office of
the Historian
puts the death
toll in the latter war at “over 4,200 American
and over 20,000 Filipino combatants,” and
proceeds to add that “as many as 200,000
Filipino civilians died from violence, famine,
and disease.” (Among other precipitating causes
for those noncombatant deaths, U.S. troops shot
most of the water buffalo farmers relied on to
produce their crops.) Many scholarly accounts
now offer higher estimates for Filipino civilian
fatalities.
Much
the same morbid asymmetry characterizes
war-related deaths in World War II, the Korean
War, the Vietnam War, the Gulf War of 1991, and
the invasions and occupations of Afghanistan and
Iraq following September 11, 2001.
Terror
Bombing from World War II to Korea and Vietnam
to 9/11
While
it is natural for people and nations to focus on
their own sacrifice and suffering rather than
the death and destruction they themselves
inflict, in the case of the United States such
cognitive astigmatism is backlighted by the
country’s abiding sense of being exceptional,
not just in power but also in virtue. In paeans
to “American exceptionalism,” it is an article
of faith that the highest values of Western and
Judeo-Christian civilization guide the nation’s
conduct -- to which Americans add their
country’s purportedly unique embrace of
democracy, respect for each and every
individual, and stalwart defense of a
“rules-based” international order.
Such self-congratulation requires and reinforces
selective memory. “Terror,” for instance, has
become a word applied to others, never to
oneself. And yet during World War II, U.S. and
British strategic-bombing planners explicitly
regarded their firebombing of enemy cities as
terror bombing, and identified destroying the
morale of noncombatants in enemy territory as
necessary and morally acceptable. Shortly after
the Allied devastation of the German city of
Dresden in February 1945, Winston Churchill,
whose bust circulates in and out of the
presidential Oval Office in Washington (it is
currently in),
referred to the
“bombing of German cities simply for the sake of
increasing the terror, though under other
pretexts.”
In the war against Japan, U.S. air forces
embraced this practice with an almost gleeful
vengeance, pulverizing
64 cities prior
to the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki
in August 1945. When al-Qaeda’s 19 hijackers
crash-bombed the World Trade Center and Pentagon
in 2001, however, “terror bombing” aimed at
destroying morale was detached from this
Anglo-American precedent and relegated to
“non-state terrorists.” Simultaneously,
targeting innocent civilians was declared to be
an atrocity utterly contrary to civilized
“Western” values, and prima facie evidence of
Islam’s inherent savagery.
The sanctification of the site of the destroyed
World Trade Center as “Ground Zero” -- a term
previously associated with nuclear explosions in
general and Hiroshima in particular --
reinforced this deft legerdemain in the
manipulation of memory. Few if any American
public figures recognized or cared that this
graphic nomenclature was appropriated from
Hiroshima, whose city government puts the number
of fatalities from the atomic bombing “by the
end of December 1945, when the acute effects of
radiation poisoning had largely subsided,” at
around 140,000.
(The estimated death toll for Nagasaki is 60,000
to 70,000.) The context of those two attacks --
and all the firebombings of German and Japanese
cities before them -- obviously differs greatly
from the non-state terrorism and suicide
bombings inflicted by today’s terrorists.
Nonetheless, “Hiroshima” remains the most
telling and troubling symbol of terror bombing
in modern times -- despite the effectiveness
with which, for present and future generations,
the post-9/11 “Ground Zero” rhetoric altered the
landscape of memory and now connotes American
victimization.
Short memory also has erased almost all American
recollection of the U.S. extension of terror
bombing to Korea and Indochina. Shortly after
World War II, the United States Strategic
Bombing Survey
calculated that
Anglo-American air forces in the European
theater had dropped 2.7 million tons of bombs,
of which 1.36 million tons targeted Germany. In
the Pacific theater, total tonnage dropped by
Allied planes was 656,400, of which 24% (160,800
tons) was dropped on the home islands of Japan.
Of the latter, 104,000 tons “were directed at 66
urban areas.” Shocking at the time, in
retrospect these Japanese numbers in particular
have come to seem modest when compared to the
tonnage of explosives U.S. forces unloaded on
Korea and later Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos.
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The official history of the air war in Korea (The
United States Air Force in Korea 1950-1953)
records that
U.S.-led United Nations air forces flew more
than one million sorties and, all told,
delivered a total of 698,000 tons of ordnance
against the enemy. In his 1965 memoir
Mission with LeMay, General Curtis LeMay,
who directed the strategic bombing of both Japan
and Korea, offered this observation: “We burned
down just about every city in North and South
Korea both... We killed off over a
million civilian Koreans and drove several
million more from their homes, with the
inevitable additional tragedies bound to ensue.”
Other sources place the estimated number of
civilian Korean War dead
as high as
three million, or possibly even more. Dean Rusk,
a supporter of the war who later served as
secretary of state,
recalled that
the United States bombed “everything that moved
in North Korea, every brick standing on top of
another.” In the midst of this “limited war,”
U.S. officials also took care to make it clear
on several occasions that they had not ruled out
using nuclear weapons.
This even involved simulated nuclear strikes on
North Korea by B-29s operating out of Okinawa in
a 1951 operation codenamed Hudson Harbor.
In Indochina, as in the Korean War, targeting
“everything that moved” was virtually a mantra
among U.S. fighting forces, a kind of password
that legitimized indiscriminate slaughter. Nick
Turse’s extensively researched recent history of
the Vietnam War, for instance, takes
its title from
a military order to “kill anything that moves.”
Documents released by the National Archives in
2004 include a transcript of a 1970 telephone
conversation in which Henry Kissinger
relayed
President Richard Nixon’s orders to launch “a
massive bombing campaign in Cambodia. Anything
that flies on anything that moves.”
In Laos between 1964 and 1973, the CIA helped
direct the
heaviest air bombardment per capita
in history, unleashing over two million tons of
ordnance in the course of 580,000 bombing runs
-- equivalent to a planeload of bombs every
eight minutes for roughly a full decade. This
included around 270 million bomblets from
cluster bombs. Roughly 10% of the total Laotian
population was killed. Despite the devastating
effects of this assault, some 80 million of the
cluster bomblets dropped failed to detonate,
leaving the ravaged country littered with deadly
unexploded ordnance to the present day.
The payload of bombs unloaded on Vietnam,
Cambodia, and Laos between the mid-1960s and
1973 is commonly reckoned to have been between
seven and eight million tons -- well over 40
times the tonnage dropped on the Japanese home
islands in World War II. Estimates of total
deaths vary, but are all exceedingly high. In a
Washington Post article in 2012, John
Tirman
noted that “by
several scholarly estimates, Vietnamese military
and civilian deaths ranged from 1.5 million to
3.8 million, with the U.S.-led campaign in
Cambodia resulting in 600,000 to 800,000 deaths,
and Laotian war mortality estimated at about 1
million.”
On the American side, the Department of Veterans
Affairs places
battle deaths
in the Korean War at 33,739. As of Memorial Day
2015, the long wall of the deeply moving Vietnam
Veterans Memorial in Washington was inscribed
with the names of
58,307 American
military personnel killed between 1957 and 1975,
the great majority of them from 1965 on. This
includes approximately
1,200 men
listed as missing (MIA, POW, etc.), the lost
fighting men whose flag of remembrance still
flies over Fenway Park.
North
Korea and the Cracked Mirror of Nuclear War
Today, Americans generally remember Vietnam
vaguely, and Cambodia and Laos not at all. (The
inaccurate label “Vietnam War” expedited this
latter erasure.) The Korean War, too, has been
called “the forgotten war,” although a veterans
memorial in Washington, D.C., was finally
dedicated to it in 1995, 42 years after the
armistice that suspended the conflict. By
contrast, Koreans have not forgotten. This is
especially true in North Korea, where the
enormous death and destruction suffered between
1950 and 1953 is kept alive through endless
official iterations of remembrance -- and this,
in turn, is coupled with a relentless propaganda
campaign calling attention to Cold War and
post-Cold War U.S. nuclear intimidation. This
intense exercise in remembering rather than
forgetting goes far to
explain the
current nuclear saber-rattling of North Korea’s
leader Kim Jong-un.
With
only a slight stretch of the imagination, it is
possible to see cracked mirror images in the
nuclear behavior and brinksmanship of American
presidents and North Korea’s dictatorial
dynastic leadership. What this unnerving looking
glass reflects is possible madness, or feigned
madness, coupled with possible nuclear conflict,
accidental or otherwise.
To Americans and much of the rest of the world,
Kim Jong-un seems irrational, even seriously
deranged. (Just pair his name with “insane” or
“crazy” in a Google search.) Yet in rattling his
miniscule nuclear quiver, he is really joining
the long-established game of “nuclear
deterrence,” and practicing what is known among
American strategists as the “madman theory.” The
latter term is most
famously associated
with Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger during
the Vietnam War, but in fact it is more or less
imbedded in U.S. nuclear game plans. As
rearticulated in “Essentials of Post-Cold War
Deterrence,” a
secret policy document
drafted by a subcommittee in the U.S. Strategic
Command in 1995 (four years after the demise of
the Soviet Union), the madman theory posits that
the essence of effective nuclear deterrence is
to induce “fear” and “terror” in the mind of an
adversary, to which end “it hurts to portray
ourselves as too fully rational and
cool-headed.”
When
Kim Jong-un plays this game, he is
simultaneously ridiculed and feared to be truly
demented. When practiced by their own leaders
and nuclear priesthood, Americans have been
conditioned to see rational actors at their
cunning best.
Terror,
it seems, in the twenty-first century, as in the
twentieth, is in the eye of the beholder.
John W. Dower is professor
emeritus of history at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. His many books include
War Without Mercy:
Race and Power in the Pacific War and
Embracing Defeat: Japan in the Wake of World War
Two, which have won numerous prizes
including the Pulitzer, the National Book Award,
and the National Book Critics Circle award. His
latest book,
The Violent American Century: War and Terror
Since World War Two
(Dispatch Books), has just been published.
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