The National Air and Space Museum recently unveiled its plan to exhibit, fully assembled, the Enola
Gaythe B-29 which, in August 1945, dropped an atomic weapon on Japan. The announcement sparked a nasty outburst of antinuclear demagoguery. Protestors assailed the
museum for whitewashing history, and more.
The focus was the Dec. 15 opening of NASMs UdvarHazy Center
near Washington, D.C. This gleaming facility will house some 300 large
aviation artifacts,
of which the Enola Gay is one. While the opening of the museum should beand
iscause for celebration, the critics had other plans.
Some 177 scholars, clergy, and activists fired off a
petition. Leading the charge was Peter Kuznick, a professor
at American University, backed by Daniel
Ellsberg,
Noam Chomsky, and Oliver Stone, to name a few. They were unhappy that the bomber
would be unadorned by antinuclear homilies and presented, to quote NASM head
John R. Dailey, as a magnificent technological achievement.
You wouldnt display a slave ship solely as a model of technological
advancement, retorted
David Nasaw (City University of New York). Critics demanded a role in planning
a new exhibit, one whose context would stimulate a national
discussion about US nuclear history and current policy.
It was never likely that Dailey, a retired Marine Corps
general, would capitulate. On Nov. 7, NASM turned down
the petition, saying that the planned exhibit
would not glorify or vilify the atomic bombing of Hiroshima.
It would be unwise to assume the struggle ends here,
however. The protesters are likely to regroup, return,
and re-engage. Theyve done it before.
If you think youve already seen this movie, youre right.
NASM was shaken by the same controversy in 1994-95. At its center was
the plan of Dr.
Martin O. Harwit, NASMs director, and his curators to display a section
of the Enola Gay fuselage in an exhibit titled, The Last Act: The Atomic
Bomb and the End of World War II. At that time, the antinuclear activists
were mostly inside the NASM tent spitting out. Today, they are outside, spitting
in. What has not changed is their goal, which is to use the Enola Gay as
a prop in a politically loaded antinuclear horror show.
Full disclosure: Air Force Magazine is not neutral. Former
Editor in Chief John T. Correll was the key figure
in exposing the earlier problem at NASM.
The controversy
became a major public issue with publication, in our April 1994 issue, of
his article, War Stories at Air and Space.
At that time, Americans believed the use of atomic weapons
in 1945 was a legitimate military action against a
dangerous foe to save US lives. They
were shocked
at hearing details of The Last Act. It was filled with anti-American
speculation. Victim photos emphasized Japanese suffering. President Harry
Truman, who ordered the bombings, was very much in the dock.
The article sparked a huge public struggle, well described
in Corrells
December 1994 editorial, Airplanes in the Mist.
In the beginning, he wrote, the museum was all set
to use the Enola Gay as a prop in a politically rigged program that
made the Japanese
in World
War II look like victims instead of aggressors. ... It portrayed the
Japanese as desperate defenders of homeland and culture, the Americans
as ruthless
invaders, driven by racism and revenge. Use of the atomic bomb was depicted
as a questionable
act, if not an immoral one.
Harwit and company soon were swamped by negative public
opinion and Congressional anger. Under pressure, Harwit
shifted course a bit, but, as Correll noted,
the exhibit creators managed to preserve the gist of their biases.
Next, 48 historians and scholars (Kuznick was one) counterattacked,
demanding that Smithsonian Secretary I. Michael Heyman stop the historical
cleansing, reject complaints by veterans, and restore Harwits
original, biased morality pageant.
However, nothing could save that exhibit, which the Washington
Post described as incredibly propagandistic and intellectually
shabby. Heyman
eventually pulled the plug and ordered a new exhibit, devoid of antinuclear
trappings.
This new exhibit opened in June 1995 and ran for three
years to widespread acclaim. Harwit resigned and new
management took over at the museum.
What does this record tell us about a possible Enola
Gay II?
First, this dispute isnt about history. Its about todays
defense posture. The protesters petition states, We fear
that such a celebratory exhibit ... helps build support for the Bush
Administrations dangerous
new nuclear policies. It reflects the desire of some for drastic
cuts in, or even the total abolition of, nuclear arms.
Second, it is about a negative vision of America. Kuznick
has worried publicly that the exhibit only helps to legitimize
the past use of nuclear weapons against
Japan, as if its legitimacy were seriously in question. To critics, Hiroshima
and Nagasaki were unjustified, Japan would have surrendered anyway, and
Washington acted only to establish postwar dominance, impress the Soviet
Union, or ...
something. In short, we have blood on our hands.
The truth was stated by Correll in his May 1995 editorial. Imperial
Japan, he
wrote, started the war, waged it savagely, and refused to surrender
until the bombs fell.
To declare this fundamental truth is to court the wrath
of the protesters, as veterans groups
and this magazine can testify. Yet it must be donerepeatedly, apparently.
The situation brings to mind the words of Give Em Hell
Harry Truman
himself, when asked why he was harsh with his critics. I never
give em
hell, said Truman. I just tell the truth, and they think
its
hell.