The Day of Deceit: The Truth About FDR and Pearl Harbor, Robert Stinnett, 2000.
Yes, I agree -- and there are multiple layers and angles within the multiple layers and angles. The fascinating 2002 interview (below) with author Robert Stinnett lays out FDR's "provocation policy" against Japan (to ensure that the US was attacked first), which was in perfect line with Stalin's agenda to bring US & Japan to war. No, Pearl Harbor was no "surprise." FDR was so desperate for war to break out that he also refused to entertain surprising, sweeping capitulations offered prior to Pearl Harbor by Japan's PM Prince Konoye, as conveyed by US Ambassador to Japan Joseph Grew. Konoye's government fell in Oct 1941 as a result of FDR's rebuffs. Another threat to FDR/Stalin's cataclsymic war-lust would have been the House hearings Rep Martin Dies of HUAC was scheduled to hold in 1941, only FDR admin put the kybosh on them. These hearings were to have revealed massive Japanese spying network in Pearl Harbor, which could well have disrupted Japan's attack plans, also. And don't forget the US officer in Malaysia, I think it was, who traveled through jungles to get to a place from which to warn the Pentagon that the Dutch had informed him they were reading Japanese codes about the attack to come ("East Wind Rain"). He was literally told to stop calling! And that's not the half of it. It is hard to imagine the darkness of the web of betrayal spun by FDR & Stalin, so desperate to remake the world they destroyed it.Yes, I agree -- and there are multiple layers and angles within the multiple layers and angles. The fascinating 2002 interview (below) with author Robert Stinnett lays out FDR's "provocation policy" against Japan (to ensure that the US was attacked first), which was in perfect… https://t.co/BaPn5IJLjz
— @realDianaWest (@realDianaWest) December 8, 2024
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