Michael Beschloss, The March to War; Two books explore the run-up to World War II in the United States and Japan.
www.nytimes.com/2014/05/18/books ... and-japan-1941.html
(“This story has, of course, been told many times before, but what Kaiser especially brings to the table is his mastery not only of the documents and other primary sources that directly reveal Roosevelt’s behind-the-scenes leadership but also of other archives that are sometimes too little mined by political historians, like Army and Navy war plans (the author taught history at the Naval War College)”)
Note:
(a) This is a book review on two books.
(i) David Kaiser, No End Save Victory; How FDR led the nation into war. Basic Books, 2014. (The “save” is a preposition meaning “except.”)
(ii) Eri Hotta, Japan 1941; Countdown to infamy. Alfred A Knopf, 2014.
(b)
(i) “Eri Hotta was born and raised in Tokyo. She received a BA in history at Princeton and did her M.Phil. and D.Phil. in International Relations at Oxford, where she also taught from 2001-2005. She now lives in New York.”
Macmillan, undated
us.macmillan.com/author/erihotta-1
(ii) The surname Hotta is 堀田 (hori 堀 【ほり】 (n): "(1) moat; fosse; (2) canal; ditch").
(iii) However, Amazon Japan uses her English spelling rather than kanji.
(c) “In February 1933, President-elect Franklin Roosevelt was nearly murdered in Miami by a gunman whose errant fatal shot struck Mayor Anton Cermak of Chicago. Cermak gallantly told Roosevelt, ‘I’m glad it was me instead of you.’ Today’s Americans should not disagree. Had Roosevelt been killed, the 32nd president of the United States would have been his running mate, [House] Speaker John Nance Garner of Texas.”
(i) Giuseppe Zangara
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giuseppe_Zangara
(1900-1933; executed)
(ii) Anton Cermak
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anton_Cermak
(1873-1933; of Czech origin; Democrat; Chicago mayor (1931-1933))
(iii) United States presidential inauguration
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_inauguration
(Prior to the Twentieth Amendment, [ratified on Jan 23, 1933] the date was March 4, the day of the year on which the Constitution of the United States first took effect in 1789; the last inauguration to take place on the older date was Franklin D. Roosevelt's first one on March 4, 1933
(d) “Kaiser argues that his famous 1940 deal to trade United States destroyers for British bases was ‘a logical step based on current US war plans and the ever-present possibility that Britain might fall and force the United States immediately to defend the Western Hemisphere.’ * * * United States Army intelligence was warning him that unless the still-unprepared America entered the war fast, Britain would enjoy at best a one-in-three chance to survive. * * * the author almost offhandedly quotes Roosevelt in November 1941, privately recalling his involvement years before in Harvard’s decision to reduce its share of Jewish students to 15 percent; Kaiser adds no reaction of his own.”
(i) Franklin D Roosevelt
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franklin_D._Roosevelt
(On September 2, 1940, Roosevelt openly defied the Neutrality Acts by passing the Destroyers for Bases Agreement, which, in exchange for military base rights in the British Caribbean Islands, gave 50 WWI American destroyers to Britain)
(ii) Neutrality Acts of 1930s
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutrality_Acts_of_1930s
(of 1935, 1936, 1937 and 1939)
All were signed by Roosevelt himself!
(iii) Rafael Medoff, What FDR Said About Jews in Private; His personal sentiments about Jews may help explain America's tepid response to the Holocaust. Los Angeles Times, Apr 7, 2013 (op-ed)
articles.latimes.com/2013/apr/07/opinion/la-oe-medoff-roosevelt-holocaust-20130407
("In 1923, as a member of the Harvard board of directors, Roosevelt decided there were too many Jewish students at the college and helped institute a quota to limit the number admitted")
(e) “Eri Hotta’s ‘Japan 1941’ seeks to reveal and explain the secret internal mechanics of the Tokyo regime that planned and executed the Pearl Harbor assault. * * * the Japanese leadership was a sequestered gaggle of blinkered, hallucinatory, buck-passing incompetents, who finally pushed the vacillating Emperor Hirohito into gambling on war against the United States. * * * the cumulative effect of her narrative is chilling as we watch it march toward global tragedy despite warning after warning.”
(i)
(A) blinker (n): “BLINDER”
(B) blonker (vt): “to put blinders on”
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/blinker
(ii) pass the buck: "Evade responsibility [or blame] by passing it on to someone else"
The Phrase Finder, undated.
www.phrases.org.uk/meanings/pass-the-buck.html |