Another Attack on Pearl Harbor
I'm back on the subject of Pearl Harbor again and am considering reviewing George Victor's 2007 book The Pearl Harbor Myth (which Robert Higgs reviewed in 2008 in the Freeman).
Can anyone recommend a book that disputes claims that Roosevelt and Marshall deliberately withheld information about the pending attack from the Hawaii commanders? Roberta Wohlstetter's 1962 book is too old and Gordon Prange's book presumably does not include most of the information that Jimmy Carter de-classified in 1979. (Although At Dawn We Slept was published in 1982, Prange died in 1980 and two graduate students finished the book.)
Can anyone recommend a book that disputes claims that Roosevelt and Marshall deliberately withheld information about the pending attack from the Hawaii commanders? Roberta Wohlstetter's 1962 book is too old and Gordon Prange's book presumably does not include most of the information that Jimmy Carter de-classified in 1979. (Although At Dawn We Slept was published in 1982, Prange died in 1980 and two graduate students finished the book.)


Random Black Swan
An Alternative View
By John Matlock "Gunny" (Winnemucca, NV) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)
This review is from: The Pearl Harbor Myth: Rethinking the Unthinkable (Military Controversies) (Hardcover)
The author asks a series of questions about Pearl Harbor:
Did U.S. intelligence know of Japan's coming attack on Pearl Harbor? His answer is, Yes. There were a lot of warnings. This question, however, really needs to be expanded. Yes, there were a lot of warnings, or maybe you'd call them hints of warnings. These were received by lots of people, mostly at a lower level. After the war they reported that they had passed these warnings along to upper management. (What else could you expect them to say?) Upper management said they never got them. (What else could you expect them to say?) So my answer is: Some people had warnings. U.S. Intelligence did not at a senior level have a solid consensus.
He asks: Did President Roosevelt know? If he did, he took it to the grave with him. I think he expected an attack by Japan somewhere in the pacific but he didn't expect it to hurt as much as it did. Did he know Pearl Harbor, I think he expected elsewhere.
Was there a coverup? Absolutely. Would you admit knowing in advance and not doing anything? Only if you had some desire to spend some time in Leavenworth.
Did the US have disguised combat operations that began six months before the Pearl Harbor attack? I don't know about them being disguised, but we were escorting merchant ships part way across the Atlantic.
Conclusion. Mr. Victor believes a conspiracy was responsible for Pearl Harbor. I tend to not believe in a conspiracy when simple incompetence can account for what happened. Especially in this case where the Americans believed that the Japanese were so inferior. Mr. Victor does though present some very strong arguments that make his book interesting reading. Help other customers find the most helpful reviews
Re: An Alternative View
Pearl Harbor as a Random Black Swan
I just finished reading Leonard Mlodinow's splendid book, _The Drunkard's Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives_, in which he debunks what he calls the "should-have-known-it blame game" (pp. 201-2).
Hindsight is always 20/20, but people, including historians, often invent ex-post rationalizations and theories to "explain" that black swan events were predicted or could have been (e.g., Pearl Harbor, 9/11, October 19, 1987), thereby infusing them with a false certitude. He quotes Roberta Wohlstetter: "After the event, of course, a signal is always crystal clear; we can now see what disaster it was signalling....But before the event it is obscure and pregnant with conflicting meanings." He points out that all the reports that were cited as being important in "predicting" the attack gave conflicting signals that reasonably could have been interpreted in ways that didn't indicate an attack.
He continues: "The study of randomness tells us that the crystal ball view of events is possible, unfortunately, only after they happen. And so we believe we know why a film did well, a candidate won an election, a storm hit, a stock went down, a soccer team lost [@#$% ref!], a new product will fail, or a disease will take a turn for the worse."
Re: Pearl Harbor as a Random Black Swan