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In the Congressional response to his speech, a ranking member of the Foreign Affairs Committee said, "The President's speech highlights the bankruptcy of his policies. After promising to keep us out of war, he got us into one we are not ready to fight. Our weapons don't work, and we can't begin to keep our s.h.i.+pping safe. We don't have enough men to do half of what the President and the Secretary of War are trying to do. And even if we did, what they want to do doesn't look like a good idea anyhow."
Peaceful pickets outside the White House demanded that the President bring our troops back to the United States and keep them out of harm's way. The presence of photographers and reporters helped ensure that White House police did not rough up the demonstrators.
February 23, 1942-Was.h.i.+ngton Post HOUSE REJECTS RATIONING BILL.
In an embarra.s.sing defeat for the administration, the House of Representatives voted 241-183 to reject a bill that would have rationed fuel, food, and materials deemed "essential to wartime industries."
"Why should the American people have to suffer for Roosevelt's mistakes?" demanded a Congressman who opposed the bill. "If we rationed these commodities, you could just wait and see. Gas would jump past thirty cents a gallon, and there wouldn't be enough of it even at that price."
A War Department official, speaking off the record, called the House's action "deplorable." The only public comment from the executive branch was that it was "studying the situation." Had it done that in 1940 and 1941 . . .
March 17, 1942-San Francisco Chronicle MACARTHUR BAILS OUT OF PHILIPPINES!.
Leaves Besieged Garrison to Fate General Douglas MacArthur fled the Philippines one jump ahead of the j.a.panese. PT boats and a B-17 brought him to Darwin, Australia. (Incidentally, j.a.panese bombers leveled Darwin last month and forced its abandonment.) "I shall return," pledged MacArthur. But the promise rings hollow for the men he left behind. Trapped on the Bataan Peninsula in a war they do not understand, they soldier on as best they can. Since j.a.panese forces surround them, the only question is how long they can hold out.
Roosevelt hopes MacArthur can lead counterattacks later in the war. Given the disasters thus far, this seems only another sample of his blind and foolish optimism. . . .
March 23, 1942-The New Yorker CAN WE HUNT THE SEA WOLVES?.
German U-boats are taking a disastrous toll on military goods bound for England. In the first three months of the war, subs sank s.h.i.+ps carrying 400 tanks, 60 8-inch howitzers, 880 25-pounder guns, 400 2-pounder guns, 240 armored cars, 500 machine-gun carriers, 52,100 tons of ammo, 6,000 rifles, 4,280 tons of tank supplies, 20,000 tons of miscellaneous supplies, and 10,000 tanks of gasoline. A secret War Department estimate calls this the equivalent of 30,000 bombing runs.
And the administration cannot stop the bleeding. Blackout orders are routinely ignored. s.h.i.+ps silhouetted at night against illuminated East Coast cities make easy targets. Businessmen say dimming their lights at night would hurt their bottom line.
Although the Navy Department claims to have sunk several U-boats and damaged more, there is no hard evidence it has harmed even one German sailor.
Britain urges the United States to begin convoying, as she has done. U.S. Navy big shots continue to believe this is unnecessary. How they can maintain this in the face of losses so staggering is strange and troubling, but they do.
The issue is causing a rift between the United States and one of her two most important allies. Last Wednesday, Roosevelt wrote to Churchill, "My Navy has definitely been slack in preparing for this submarine war off our coast. . . . By May 1 I expect to get a pretty good coastal patrol working."
Churchill fears May 1 will be much too late.
"Those of us who are directly concerned with combatting the Atlantic submarine menace are not at all sure that the British are applying sufficient effort to bombing German submarine bases," said U.S. Admiral Ernest J. King.
As the allies bicker, innocent sailors lose their lives for no good purpose.
March 24, 1942-New York Times NEW YORKER OFFICES RAIDED OFFICES RAIDED.
Magazine's Publication Suspended A raid by FBI and military agents shuttered the offices of The New Yorker The New Yorker yesterday. The raid came on the heels of yet another article critical of the war and of the present administration's conduct of it. yesterday. The raid came on the heels of yet another article critical of the war and of the present administration's conduct of it.
"We are going to close this treason down," said FBI spokesman Thomas...o...b..nion. Mr. O'Banion added, "These individuals are spreading stories n.o.body's got a right to know. We have to put a stop to it, and we will."
He did not dispute the truth of the articles published in The New Yorker The New Yorker.
ACLU attorneys are seeking the release of jailed editors and writers. "These are important freedom-of-speech and freedom-of-the-press issues," one of them said. "We're confident we'll prevail in court."
March 26, 1942-Philadelphia Inquirer PEACE s.h.i.+PS SAIL.
Reaching Out to Germany and j.a.pan More than fifty American actors, musicians, and authors sailed from Philadelphia today aboard the Gustavus Vasa Gustavus Vasa, a Swedish s.h.i.+p. Sweden is neutral in Roosevelt's war. Their eventual destination is Germany, where they will confer with their counterparts and seek ways to lower tensions between the two countries.
Another similar party also sailed today from San Francisco aboard the Argentine s.h.i.+p Rio Negro Rio Negro. Like Sweden, Argentina has sensibly stayed out of this destructive fight. After stopping in Honolulu to pick up another antiwar delegation there, the Rio Negro Rio Negro will continue on to Yokohama, j.a.pan. will continue on to Yokohama, j.a.pan.
"We have to build peace one person at a time," explained Robert n.o.ble of the Friends of Progress. His Los Angeles-based organization, along with the National Legion of Mothers and Women of America, sponsored the peace initiative. n.o.ble added, "The j.a.panese did the proper thing under the exigencies of the time when they bombed Pearl Harbor. Now it is all over in the Pacific, and we might as well come home."
n.o.ble has been arrested twice recently, once on a charge of sedition and once on one of malicious libel. The government did not bring either case to trial, perhaps fearing the result.
Some of the travelers bound for Germany and j.a.pan have volunteered as human s.h.i.+elds against U.S. and British bombing. There is no response yet from the governments under attack to their brave commitment.
Bureaucrats in the Roosevelt administration have threatened not to allow the peaceful performers and intellectuals to return to the United States. Travel to their destinations is technically illegal, though a challenge to the ban is under way in the courts. This vindictiveness against critics is typical of administration henchmen.
April 3, 1942-transcript of radio broadcast THIS IS LONDON.
People in the States ask me how the morale situation is over here. They ask whether the English have as many doubts about which way their leaders are taking them as we do back home.
The answer is, of course they do. If anything, they have more. They've been hit hard, and it shows. Nearly two years ago, Germany offered a fair and generous peace. A sensible government would have accepted in a flash.
But Churchill had seized power a few months earlier in what almost amounted to a right-wing coup. He refused a hand extended in friends.h.i.+p, and his country has taken a right to the chin. London and other industrial cities have been bombed flat. Tens of thousands are dead, more wounded and often crippled for life.
"Look at France," a cabdriver said to me the other day. "They went out early, and they have it easy now. We just keep getting pounded on. I'm tired of it, I am."
Calls for British withdrawal from Malta and North Africa grow stronger by the day. Sooner or later-my guess is sooner-even Churchill will have to face the plain fact that he has led his country into a losing war. . . .
April 5, 1942-AP story THE PHILIPPINE FRONT.
Sergeant Leland Calvert is a regular guy. He was born in Hondo, Texas, and grew up in San Antonio. He is 29 years old, with blond hair, blue eyes, and an aw-shucks grin. He is a skilled metalworker, and plays a mean trumpet. He's a big fellow-six feet two, maybe six feet three. Right now, Leland Calvert weighs 127 pounds.
That is how it is for the Americans stuck on the Bataan Peninsula. That is also how it is for the Philippine troops and civilians crammed in with them. There are far more people than there are supplies, which is at the heart of the problem.
"I don't know who planned this," Calvert said in an engaging drawl. "I don't reckon anybody did. Sure doesn't seem much point to it. h.e.l.l, we're licked. Anybody with eyes in his head can see that."
Way back in January, rations for 5,600 men in the 91st Division were 19 sacks of rice, 12 cases of salmon, 3 sacks of sugar, and four carabao quarters. A carabao is a small, scrawny ox. Well, everybody and everything on the peninsula is scrawny now. Feeding 5,600 people with those supplies makes the miracle of the loaves and fishes look easy as pie.
And that was January. Things are much worse now. Sergeant Calvert has eaten snake and frog-not frog's legs, but frog. "Snake's not half bad," he said. "I drew the line at monkey, though. I saw a little hand cooking in a pot, and I didn't think I could keep it down." I asked him about the monkey's paw story, but he has never heard of it.
Disease? That's another story. Leland has dysentery. He has had dengue fever, but he is mostly over it now. He is starting to get beriberi, which comes from lack of vitamins. Beriberi takes the gas right out of your motor. I ought to know-I have it, too. Leland does not think he has got scurvy, but he knows men who do.
He has got malaria. Most people here have got it. Again, I am one of them. The doctors are out of quinine. They are also out of atabrine, which is a fancy new synthetic drug. And they are plumb out of mosquito nets. Something like 1,000 people are going into the hospital with malaria every day now. Without the medicines, there is not much anyone can do for them.
"If I knew why we were here, I would feel better about things," Leland said. "This all seems like such a waste, though. We're fighting for a little stretch of jungle n.o.body in his right mind would want. What's the point?"
Seems like a good question to me, too. It doesn't look like anyone here has a good answer. I don't know when I'll see that girl again. I don't know if she'll ever see me again. I wish I could say the effort here is worth the candle. But I'm afraid I'm with Leland Calvert. This all seems like such a waste.
April 14, 1942-Honolulu Star-Bulletin ADMINISTRATION PURSUES VENGEANCE POLICY.
According to a Navy Department source, two aircraft carriers and several other wars.h.i.+ps sailed from Midway yesterday, bound for the j.a.panese home islands. Aboard one of the carriers, the Hornet Hornet, are U.S. Army B-25s. Pilots have secretly trained in Florida, learning to take off from a runway as short as a flight deck.
The theory is that the B-25s will be able to strike j.a.pan from farther out to sea than normal carrier-based aircraft could. Most of Roosevelt's theories about the war up till now have been wrong, though. Maybe the planes will go into the drink. Maybe the j.a.panese will be waiting for them. Maybe some other foul-up will torment us. But who will believe this force can succeed until it actually does?
Given the administration's record to date, in fact, many people will have their doubts even then. As a wise man once said, "Trust everybody-but cut the cards."
April 21, 1942-Was.h.i.+ngton Post editorial editorial BLAMING THE TOOLS.
Everyone knows what sort of workman blames his tools. Franklin Roosevelt claims that, if a Hawaiian newspaper had not publicized the plan of attack against the j.a.panese islands, it might have succeeded. He also claims we would not have lost a carrier and a cruiser and had another carrier damaged had secrecy not been compromised.
This is nonsense of the purest ray serene. The Navy tried a crackbrained scheme, it didn't work, and now the men with lots of gold braid on their sleeves are using the press as a whipping boy. This effort, if we may dignify it with such a name, was doomed to fail from the beginning.
Reliable sources inform us that the Army pilots involved were not even told they would attempt to fly off a carrier deck till they boarded the Hornet Hornet. The j.a.panese have twice our carrier force in the Pacific. Why were we wasting so much of our strength on what was at best a propaganda stunt? Are we so desperate that we need to throw men's lives away for the sake of looking good on the home front?
Evidently we are. If that is so, we should never have got involved in this war in the first place. Our best course now, plainly, is to get out of it as soon as we can, to minimize casualties and damage to our prestige. We have already paid too much for Roosevelt's obsessive opposition to j.a.pan and Germany.
April 25, 1942-New York Times READING THE OTHER GENTLEMAN'S MAIL U.S., British Code Breakers Monitor Germany, j.a.pan "Gentlemen do not read each other's mail." So goes an ancient precept of diplomacy. But for some time now, the United States and Britain have been monitoring Germany and j.a.pan's most secret codes.
War Department and Navy Department sources confirm that the U.S. and the U.K., with help from Polish experts, have defeated the German Enigma machine and the j.a.panese Type B diplomatic cipher machine.
The most important code-breaking center is at Bletchley Park, a manor 50 miles north of London. Other cryptographers work in the British capital, in Ceylon, and in Australia. American efforts are based in Was.h.i.+ngton, D.C., and in Hawaii.
Purple is the name of the device that deciphers the Type B code. It is not prepossessing. It looks like two typewriters and a spaghetti bowl's worth of fancy wiring. But the people who use it say it does the job.
Getting an Enigma machine to Britain was pure cloak-and-dagger. One was found by the Poles aboard a U-boat sunk in shallow water (not, obviously, anywhere near our own ravaged East Coast) and spirited out of Poland one jump ahead of the Germans at the beginning of the war.
Why better use has not been made of these broken codes is a pressing question. No administration official will speak on the record. No administration official will even admit on the record that we are engaged in code-breaking activity.
Only one thing makes administration claims tempting to believe. If the United States and Britain are reading Germany and j.a.pan's codes, they have little to show for it. Roosevelt dragged this country into war by a series of misconceptions, deceptions, and outright lies. Now we are in serious danger of losing it.
April 26, 1942-Chicago Tribune WHITE HOUSE WHINES AT REVELATIONS.
In a news conference yesterday afternoon, Franklin D. Roosevelt lashed out at critics in the press and on the radio. "Every time sensitive intelligence is leaked, it hurts our ability to defeat the enemy," Roosevelt claimed.
As he has before, he seeks to hide his own failings behind the veil of censors.h.i.+p. If the press cannot tell the American people the truth, who can? The administration? FDR sure wants you to think so. But the press and radio newscasters have exposed so many falsehoods and so much bungling that no one in his right mind is likely to trust this White House as far as he can throw it.
May 1, 1942-Los Angeles Times FDR'S POLL NUMBERS CONTINUE TO SINK Franklin D. Roosevelt's popularity is sinking faster than freighters off the East Coast. In the latest Gallup survey, his overall approval rating is at 29%, while only 32% approve of his handling of the war. The poll, conducted yesterday, was of 1,191 "likely" or "very likely" voters, and has an error margin of 5%.
Poll takers also recorded several significant comments. "He doesn't know what he's doing," said one 58-year-old man.
"Why doesn't he bring the troops home? Who wants to die for England?" remarked a 31-year-old woman.
"We can't win this stupid war, so why fight it?" said another woman, who declined to give her age.
Roosevelt's approval ratings are as low as those of President Hoover shortly before he was turned out of office in a landslide. Even Warren G. Harding retained more personal popularity than the embattled current President.
May 3, 1942-Was.h.i.+ngton Post VEEP BREAKS RANKS WITH WHITE HOUSE.
Demands Timetable for War In the first public rift in the Roosevelt administration, Vice President Henry Wallace called on FDR to establish a timetable for victory. "If we can't win this war within 18 months, we should pack it in," Wallace said, speaking in Des Moines yesterday. "It is causing too many casualties and disrupting the civilian economy."
Wallace, an agricultural expert, also said, "Even if by some chance we should win, we would probably have to try to feed the whole world afterwards. No country can do that."
Support for Wallace's statement came quickly from both sides of the partisan aisle. Even Senators and Representatives who supported Roosevelt's war initiative seemed glad of the chance to distance themselves from it. "If I'd known things would go this badly, I never would have voted for [the declaration of war]," said a prominent Senator.
White House reaction was surprisingly restrained. "We will not set a timetable," said an administration spokesman. "That would be the same as admitting defeat."
Another official, speaking anonymously, said FDR had known Wallace was "off the reservation" for some time. He added, "When the s.h.i.+p sinks, the rats jump off." Then he tried to retract the remark, denying that the s.h.i.+p was sinking. But the evidence speaks for itself.
May 9, 1942-Miami Herald MORE SINKINGS IN BROAD DAYLIGHT.
U-Boats Prowl Florida Coast at Will The toll of s.h.i.+ps torpedoed in Florida waters in recent days has only grown worse. On May 6, a U-boat sank the freighter Amazon Amazon near Jupiter Inlet. She sank in 80 feet of water. near Jupiter Inlet. She sank in 80 feet of water.
That same day, also under the smiling sun, the tanker Halsey Halsey went to the bottom not far away. Then, yesterday, the freighter went to the bottom not far away. Then, yesterday, the freighter Ohioan Ohioan was sunk. So was the tanker was sunk. So was the tanker Esquire Esquire. That s.h.i.+p broke apart, spilling out 92,000 barrels of oil close to sh.o.r.e. No environmental-impact statement has yet been released.
There is still no proof that the U.S. Navy has sunk even a single German submarine, despite increasingly strident claims to the contrary.
May 11, 1942-Was.h.i.+ngton Post MOTHER'S DAY MARCH War Protesters Picket White House Mothers of war victims killed in the Pacific and Atlantic marched in front of the White House to protest the continued fighting. "What does Roosevelt think he's doing?" asked Louise Heffernan, 47, of Altoona, Pennsylvania. Her son Richard was slain in a tanker sinking three weeks ago. "How many more have to die before we admit his policy isn't working?"
A mother who refused to give her name-"Who knows what the FBI would do to me?"-said she lost two sons at Pearl Harbor. "It's a heartache no one who hasn't gone through it can ever understand," she said. "I don't think anyone else should have to suffer the way I have."
Placards read END THE WAR NOW!, NO BLOOD FOR BRITAIN!, and ANOTHER MOTHER FOR PEACE. Pa.s.sersby whistled and cheered for the demonstrators.
March 12, 1942-Los Angeles Times j.a.pAN BATTERS U.S. CARRIERS IN CORAL SEA.