Most Helpful Customer Reviews
82 of 90 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent but not for the uninitiated, January 21, 2000
Most books about Pearl Harbor, from the many volumes of the Congressional Pearl Harbor Hearings to the two-volume study by the late Gordon Prange detail all kinds of intelligence available to the United States that forewarned of the Japanese attack. If you have some background in that history, Stinnett's well-documented book adds new material to the story and discloses a set of Japanese Navy communications intercepts that complement more publicized decoded exchanges among the Japanses diplomatic corps. The notion that high minded government leaders might conspire to manipulate American public opinion in support of a cause they think important and worth American lives is not as evocative in the post-Vietnam politics than it would have been in 1941. Franklin Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson both managed to entice "enemy" attacks on U.S. forces to rally American public opinion Congressional support. They aren't alone. While damage to the U.S. fleet and personnel at Pearl Harbor far exceeded the couple of bullet holes inflicted on the USS Turner Joy and Maddox in the Tonkin Gulf in 1964, the pre-event manipulation was not all that different. That people in government might conspire to keep their machinations hidden from the press and public, sadly, isn't novel either anymore. Radiation experiments, commandos known to be captured, but written off as killed and all the rest have taught us almost too much about human nature. While Stinnett writes bitterly about the impact on lives and careers of competent officers and men caught up in concealing vital intelligence information from Hawaiian-based officers and subsequently threatened and besmirched to maintain secrecy long after the event, even now, when records are still held secret by the DOD in some bizarre interpretation of protecting the National Defense. At the same time, however, Sinnett and any person with a memory and conscience is hard put to accept the possible outcome of world events in the 1940s had the United States stayed outof the European War. If this is your first Pearl Harbor book you may get lost in the detail and obscurity needed to substantiate the book's argument. Read something else first, but read this one too.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
53 of 63 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
WE'VE BEEN DUPED!, May 2, 2000
I've read the reviews of others, and I have to admit that I'm puzzled by some of them. But, if it weren't for differences of opinion, we wouldn't have horse races, would we? I think this book is dynamite! It occurs to me that a possible dividing line of opinion might depend upon who was around, and who wasn't around back on December 7, 1941. Those of us who WERE around, are the people who were really duped by FDR. Those who were NOT around, might tend to take a somewhat nonchalant view of the information revealed in this book. The information that's revealed is startling, pure and simple. And, the fact that much more information about the Pearl Harbor attack is STILL kept under lock and key by the US Government, is cause for alarm. It's 60 years since these events unfolded. Why is germaine material still being withheld from public scrutiny? Robert B. Stinnett is to be commended for his excellent detective work and perserverance in discovering and disclosing the contents of this book. (I've ordered three copies, so far.) It should be REQUIRED reading in all US classrooms! Carl B. Jordan - former Air Force fighter pilot.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
72 of 87 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Hero or Traitor?, January 3, 2000
I am not suprised by the negative treatment that this book has received. If the author had treated any other topic, or any other President, the comments would be different. This historian has attacked one very, very, sacred cow. Some say that this book will only persuade those who are not familiar with the subject. This is untrue. It was endorsed by John Toland, the author of the Infamy, an impressive tome on this very subject. "Step by step, Stinnett goes through the prelude to war, using new documents to reveal the terrible secrets that have never before been disclosed to the public. It is disturbing that eleven presidents, including those I admired, kept the truth from the public until Stinnett's Freedom of Information Act requests finally persuaded the Navy to release the evidence." I personally doubt that FDR imagined that the losses would be so severe. Battleships were presumed to be tough, harbors protected, and Pearl did have radar. A battle yes, a massacre,no. To think otherwise contemplates an unimaginable crime. Some justify FDR on the grounds of the horrors of the enemy. However, this presumes that what did take place - and the Holocaust took place long after Dec. 7, 1941 - was predestined, and in no way influenced by the US entry into the war (and in no way possibly prevented by our neutrality). Remember, the demand for Unconditional Surrender and the Morgenthau Plan also came out of FDR's administration. There are some who still possess a Little Red Riding Hood view of America's role in the Second World War. This book helps end such childishness.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No
|