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Today's Blog: Time for the Guv to morph into Chris Christie
My husband and I and a couple hundred friends watched in Green Bay as ...(more)

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    12/7/2009
    Teddy Roosevelt more closely connected to WWII Japan than FDR

    If you’re a history buff, you’ll enjoy this piece from the weekend’s New York Times: Diplomacy That Will Live in Infamy. The history lesson details Theodore Roosevelt’s impact, 30 years prior, on Pearl Harbor Day. You may recognize the article’s author as the writer of Flags of our Fathers, the Wisconsin born and raised son of John H. Bradley, one of the heroes in the flag-raising on Iwo Jima. If you enjoy the Times piece, you may enjoy Bradley’s newest book, from which the Times piece is excerpted, The Imperial Cruise.

    James Bradley:
    When Theodore Roosevelt was president, three decades before World War II, the world was focused on the bloody Russo-Japanese War, a contest for control of North Asia. President Roosevelt was no fan of the Russians: “No human beings, black, yellow or white, could be quite as untruthful, as insincere, as arrogant — in short, as untrustworthy in every way — as the Russians,” he wrote in August 1905, near the end of the Russo-Japanese War. The Japanese, on the other hand, were “a wonderful and civilized people,” Roosevelt wrote, “entitled to stand on an absolute equality with all the other peoples of the civilized world.”

    …. In a secret presidential cable to Tokyo, in July 1905, Roosevelt approved the Japanese annexation of Korea and agreed to an “understanding or alliance” among Japan, the United States and Britain “as if the United States were under treaty obligations.” The “as if” was key: Congress was much less interested in North Asia than Roosevelt was, so he came to his agreement with Japan in secret, an unconstitutional act.

    To signal his commitment to Tokyo, Roosevelt cut off relations with Korea, turned the American legation in Seoul over to the Japanese military and deleted the word “Korea” from the State Department’s Record of Foreign Relations and placed it under the heading of “Japan.”

    Roosevelt had assumed that the Japanese would stop at Korea and leave the rest of North Asia to the Americans and the British…. It did not take long for the Japanese to tire of the territorial restrictions placed upon them by their Anglo-American partners.

    Japan’s declaration of war, in December 1941, explained its position quite clearly: “It is a fact of history that the countries of East Asia for the past hundred years or more have been compelled to observe the status quo under the Anglo-American policy of imperialistic exploitation and to sacrifice themselves to the prosperity of the two nations. The Japanese government cannot tolerate the perpetuation of such a situation.”

    ….And the American president’s support emboldened them to increase their military might — and their imperial ambitions. In December 1941, the consequence of Theodore Roosevelt’s recklessness would become clear to those few who knew of the secret dealings. No one else — including my dad on Iwo Jima — realized just how well Japan had indeed played “our game.”
    Jo Egelhoff, FoxPolitics.net




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