The Three Doctors and the Enola Gay
By John T. Correll, Editor in Chief
Air Force Magazine - November 1994, Pg. 8
ONE THING is for sure. If the Enola Gay goes
on display at the National Air and Space Museum next
May, it won't be the historically distorted show that
was originally planned. The Enola Gay is the B-29
that dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima in 1945.
After a lengthy period of restoration, the aircraft is
scheduled to be part of an exhibition in 1995 on the
fiftieth anniversary of its famous mission.
Unfortunately, what the curators had in mind was more
political than aeronautical. In effect, the Enola Gay
would have been used as a prop in an unbalanced,
emotionally charged program about the horrors of the
atomic bomb. The initial exhibit plan picked up the
story of World War II in 1945 as the end approached.
Early drafts depicted the Japanese as desperate
defenders of their homeland and culture, while the
Americans were cast as ruthless invaders, bent on
revenge.
After an article, "War Stories at Air and Space," in
AIR FORCE Magazine reported on this plan, protests from
veterans grew. Museum officials accepted a few marginal
criticisms but waved off the rest as "disinformation."
In June, the curator issued a surprise announcement
declaring the exhibit plan final. That position soon
disintegrated under withering fire from the public and
Congress. At the end of August, the curators produced a
new script. It contained some definite improvements, but
veterans' groups said it was only a first step toward
correcting the problem.
Press coverage and comment has been almost continuous
for months. Little of it has been favorable to the Air
and Space Museum or to the parent Smithsonian
Institution. A Washington Post editorial observed
the "curatorial inability to perceive that political
opinions are embedded in the exhibit" and said the
Smithsonian "needs to do more listening." The Wall
Street Journal said the museum was "in the hands of
academics unable to view American history as anything
other than a woeful catalog of crimes and aggressions
against the helpless peoples of the earth." Jeff Jacoby
wrote in the Boston Globe that "the exhibit could
be worse" had not veterans' groups, military historians,
and AIR FORCE Magazine "forced the Smithsonian to soften
the angry, politicized -- even anti-American -- tone its
curators have chosen."
A Message Gets Through
There are signs that the message is getting through.
At his installation on September 19 as the new secretary
of the Smithsonian Institution, Michael Heyman
acknowledged that the Enola Gay exhibit plan had
been "deficient" and "out of balance." Senior
Smithsonian officials have now taken a direct hand in
the revision process.
Introducing a "Sense of the Senate" resolution
September 19, Sen. Nancy Kassebaum (R-Kan.) said that
the exhibition script, even with the latest changes
taken into account, was "revisionist, unbalanced, and
offensive." (The resolution was passed unanimously
September 23.)
The Interior Department appropriations bill, adopted
on September 21, included a provision drafted by Sen.
Slade Gorton (R-Wash.) that Congress "expects" the
"Smithsonian's exhibit surrounding the Enola Gay
to properly and respectfully recognize the significant
contribution to the early termination of World War II
and the saving of both American and Japanese lives."
A few voices expressed a different view. It cannot be
much comfort to the curators, though, that among them
was Colman McCarthy, the antimilitary columnist for the
Washington Post, who argued for the original
exhibit concept on the grounds that "in 1945, two
militaristic governments were having it out" and that
"the United States committed unprovoked war crimes that
caused the slaughter of 200,000 Japanese."
Summarizing the curators' early pitch in a September
21 report, John Martin of ABC-TV said that according to
the latest research, "President Truman did not need to
drop the bomb. Japan was ready to quit." Casualty
estimates for an invasion of Japan were "wildly
exaggerated. Instead of saving American lives, dropping
the bomb may have satisfied racist hostility toward a
hated enemy, ethnically different from most Americans."
No critic of the museum has summed up the revisionist
line more succinctly than that.
The Smithsonian also drew support from an editorial
in the New York Times, which was under the
mistaken impression that the curators were making
changes voluntarily and that criticism had
"short-circuited" the "process" needlessly. In fact, the
curators had shrugged off appeals for change until the
pressure became too much to ignore.
The Three Doctors
Museum officials seem to regard the previous planning
documents for this exhibit -- three concept plans and
the first two drafts of the script -- as bygones and no
longer relevant. Many in the veterans' community take a
different view. In a report circulated in September, the
Air Force Association said, "What we hear from our
members is that it is no longer enough to clean up this
exhibition script. It is also imperative that the
Smithsonian leadership and the Board of Regents
carefully review the procedures and personnel
assignments that produced such a biased, unbalanced,
anti-American script in the first place."
Three individuals stand at the center of the
controversy:
* Dr. Martin O. Harwit, director of the
National Air and Space Museum since 1987. He was born in
Prague, Czechoslovakia, grew up in Istanbul, and came to
the United States (at age fifteen) in 1946. During his
US Army service, 1955-57, he was assigned to nuclear
weapons tests at Eniwetok and Bikini. He was a professor
of astronomy at Cornell University. In the 1980s, he
chaired NASA's Astrophysics Management Working Group.
* Dr. Tom D. Crouch, chairman of the
Aeronautics Department since 1989. He has been at the
Smithsonian since 1974. He is the author of nine books,
including The Bishop's Boys: A Life of Wilbur and
Orville Wright (1989) and many shorter works. He was
the curator of "A More Perfect Union," a controversial
exhibit at the Museum of American History that
commemorated the 200th anniversary of the US
Constitution with a program on Japanese-American
internment. (Dr. Crouch's commitment to that issue has
not flagged. He was scheduled to deliver in October a
Smithsonian-sponsored lecture, "When the Constitution
Failed: The Japanese-American Internment Episode," at
the Japanese Cultural and Community Center of Northern
California.)
* Dr. Michael J. Neufeld, official curator of
"The Last Act: The Atomic Bomb and the End of World War
II" (although Dr. Crouch seems to share in the
function). Dr. Neufeld came to the National Air and
Space Museum as a post-doctoral fellow in 1988, doing
research on Wernher von Braun and the German rocket
program. He joined the Aeronautics Department as a
curator in 1990. His background is in European economic
history. Dr. Neufeld is a Canadian citizen with
permanent resident status in the United States.
Several times this year (see boxes, pp. 8-10),
Dr. Harwit and his curators have
seemed to operate on different wavelengths. Changes
Dr. Harwit had directed were, in fact, not made. Actions
about which he had confidently given assurance had, in
fact, "fallen through the cracks." In a letter to the
Washington, D.C., Times September 4, Dr. Harwit
was "disappointed" to read that newspaper's report
suggesting "that serious differences divide the museum's
director and staff." Nothing was going on, he said,
except the normal "process of discussion and debate."
The Changes in August
Compared to the two previous scripts (in January and
May) and three even earlier concept plans, the August 31
script revision showed a serious effort to deal with the
problems of balance and context. The original script had
forty-nine photos of Japanese casualties but only three
photos of American casualties. The new balance is
twenty-six photos of Japanese casualties to fourteen for
the Americans. That doesn't make it even, but the ratio
has improved.
For the first time, we see a few pictures of Japanese
troops looking armed and dangerous. Except for the
kamikaze (who were depicted heroically), the
previous scripts had not shown Japanese forces in
aggressive or warlike roles. The August revision also
toned down the romantic image of the kamikaze
seen earlier.
Some offensive language is gone this time around. The
new script, for example, no longer says that the B-29
aircrews who flew the atomic bomb missions against Japan
were "only following orders." Dr. Harwit told AIR FORCE
Magazine in August that it never occurred to the
curators that this line might suggest an insulting
parallel to the classic war crimes defense at Nuremberg.
The announced centerpiece of the August script
revision was a new, 4,000-square-foot exhibit section to
be called "The War in the Pacific: An American
Perspective." It existed only as a promise in a press
release, but it began raising questions right away. If
the American perspective had to be added as an
afterthought, what perspective did the rest of the
program have? Smithsonian officials, recognizing that
this public relations ploy had backfired, say the
"American Perspective" subtitle has been abolished.
The new section, when it is developed, along with
other changes, when they are made, is supposed to put
the last months of the war in context, showing why a
desperate defense of the Japanese home islands was
necessary in 1945 and how the difficult part of the war
started for Japan when its victims began hitting back.
Problems Remaining
The previous script presented a series of "Historical
Controversies" casting suspicion on the actions and
motives of the United States. In August, the museum
director promised that this speculation would be
removed. The "Historical Controversies" labels are
indeed gone, but much of the problem material is still
present under different guises.
One obvious holdover asks, "Would the bomb have been
dropped on the Germans?" The curators simply dropped the
"Controversy" tag line and removed a bit of the text.
The rest of it is unchanged. Another one, "Did the
demand for unconditional surrender prolong the war?" has
acquired deeper cover. It is gone as an explicit item in
the "Historical Controversy" series, but the question
remains, scattered in bits and pieces. At one point, the
script says that "the failure of the American note of
August 10 to clearly guarantee the Emperor's position
provoked another dangerous deadlock in the Japanese
ruling elite." The implication is that the US was to
blame for Japan's reluctance to surrender, even after
the atomic bomb had been dropped.
The exhibit is still organized in the same sequential
sections leading visitors up to the "emotional center"
at "Ground Zero: Hiroshima and Nagasaki." There they
will be confronted by a massive audiovisual assault. The
curators skip no opportunity to tug at the heart
strings. A kitten in the aftermath of Nagasaki cannot
simply be dead. It must "glare" with "eternally locked
eyes."
The number of "Ground Zero" visual images has been
reduced (see chart, p. 9), but the quantity
remaining still seems excessive for the declared purpose
of showing the effects of an atomic weapon. The overall
emphasis on Japanese suffering has not changed that much
in the new script. The May version had eighty-four text
pages and ninety-seven photos on the theme of Japanese
suffering. The August revision has eighty-two pages and
eighty-four photos.
In a letter to Military Coalition organizations in
September, the Air Force Association said "the curators
are so attentive to the Hibakusha (survivors of
the atomic bombs) that a museum visitor might think
these Japanese survivors are the only ones for whom the
suffering continued after the war." To correct any such
misunderstanding, the Association suggested that for
every Hibakusha featured in the program a
disabled American veteran be comparably featured.
According to press reports, officials of the Peace
Memorial Museum in Hiroshima may refuse to lend their
artifacts for the exhibition now that it is being
changed in a way that "does not reflect the feelings of
the people of Hiroshima."
Dr. Harwit's "Dilemma"
Dr. Harwit met with mixed reviews when he explained
his position in an op-ed column titled "The Enola Gay:
A Nation's, and a Museum's, Dilemma" in the Washington
Post, August 7. He wrote that "we lack a national
consensus on what to say." One view "appeals to our
national self-image. The other point of view, slower in
coming to the fore, is more analytical, critical in its
acceptance of facts and concerned with historical
context. It is complex and, in the eyes of some,
discomfiting."
"In other words," said syndicated columnist Charley
Reese, "there is the dumb patriotic view and the smart,
sophisticated anti-American view." What it boils down
to, Mr. Reese declared, is that "the US government has
made mistakes, but dropping atomic bombs on Hiroshima
and Nagasaki was not one of them. Hiring Martin Harwit
was."
Rep. Bob Stump (R-Ariz.) said that Dr. Harwit's
conclusions in the Post column were "garbage" and
that "the museum has manufactured its own dilemma by
elevating a vocal but tiny minority of politically
correct opinion to the level of the beliefs of an entire
American generation in order to claim lack of national
consensus."
In a meeting in August at which two Air Force
Association representatives were present, Dr. Harwit
said that the exhibition would clearly affirm that the
United States used the atomic bomb in 1945 in hope of
ending the war and saving lives. Indeed, much of the
speculation to the contrary has been removed from the
August 31 version of the script.
That is a major change, and seemingly at odds with
the opinion of the exhibition's curator. "One of the
most important conclusions we can draw from this
research is that, although it is certainly still
possible to argue for the correctness of Truman's
decision to use the atomic bomb without warning, the
traditional justification used in this country is no
longer tenable," Dr. Neufeld wrote April 25 in a memo to
Dr. Harwit and others at the museum. "That
justification, which is endlessly repeated with almost
religious fervor, asserts that Truman was faced with
only two options: a) drop the bomb without warning, or
b) invade Japan at the cost of a quarter of a million,
half a million, a million or many millions of American
and/or Japanese lives, depending on what version is
being told. This account is untenable. . . ."
Down the Slippery Slope
The Air Force Association and AIR FORCE Magazine are
comparative newcomers to this controversy. Our
involvement began after we featured the Enola Gay
in our August 1993 cover story, "In Aviation's Attic."
W. Burr Bennett of Northbrook, III., one of the World
War II veterans who had been grappling with the problem
for years, wrote to alert us to strange doings at the
National Air and Space Museum. Mr. Bennett and his
colleagues had collected 8,000 signatures on a petition
asking the museum to either display the Enola Gay
properly or give it to another museum that would do so.
Inquiries and discussions over the next several
months revealed that the museum was in fact preparing to
exhibit the Enola Gay in a politically rigged
horror show that was severely lacking in balance and
historical context. Extensive contact -- in letters,
telephone calls, and one long meeting -- made it clear
to us that the curators were not to be dissuaded.
"For most Americans," said the script they published
in January, "it was a war of vengeance. For most
Japanese, it was a war to defend their unique culture
against Western imperialism." That line has since been
expunged, not because the curators have changed their
minds but because of the furor that arose when AIR FORCE
Magazine reported it in April.
Publicly, Dr. Harwit and the curators assailed AIR
FORCE Magazine's revelation of their plans as
"irresponsible" and "inaccurate." In a paper circulating
privately within the museum, however, Dr. Harwit
conceded that "we do have a lack of balance." With
criticism mounting, he appointed a "tiger team" review
panel to suggest changes.
The tiger team's findings were kept under wraps until
August, when the museum finally provided a copy to AIR
FORCE Magazine in voluntary response to a Freedom of
Information Act request. Some of the comments regarding
balance were at least as pointed as what AIR FORCE
Magazine had said. "If I didn't know better, from a
lifetime of experience, I would leave the exhibit with
the strong feeling that Americans are bloodthirsty,
racist killers who after beer parties and softball go
out and kill as many women and children as possible,"
one panel member wrote.
A revised exhibit script was completed May 31. AIR
FORCE Magazine was not able to obtain a copy, however,
until June 23. Our analysis (published as a special
report June 28 and subsequently as a magazine article)
said the revision still lacked balance and context and
was "still a partisan interpretation that many Americans
-- and most veterans -- will find objectionable."
From there, the issue caught on, playing not only on
network television, in national news magazines, and in
metropolitan newspapers but also in local and regional
news media all over the United States. More veterans'
groups joined the fray. Individual congressmen and
senators had been prodding the Smithsonian for months,
but the issue escalated sharply on August 10.
Rep. Peter Blute (R-Mass.), acting on behalf of a
bipartisan group of twenty-four congressmen, said the
proposed Enola Gay exhibit was "anti-American"
and "biased." The same day, Rep. Tom Lewis (R-Fla.) and
five colleagues said the museum should stick to telling
history, not try to rewrite it, and Rep. Sam Johnson
(R-Tex.) said the exhibit was "a blatant betrayal of
American history."
In September, delegates to the Air Force Association
National Convention said that serious "structural,
contextual, and ideological issues" still had to be
addressed to make the Enola Gay exhibition plan
acceptable and that "the National Air and Space Museum
must be held to the highest standards."
In early October, the Air and Space Museum announced
yet another script revision -- the seventh formal
planning document in this troubled series -- produced
after bilateral negotiations between the museum and the
American Legion. A review copy was promised to AIR FORCE
Magazine by Smithsonian officials, who said they were
open to further revisions.
As of October 3, W. Burr Bennett, who first alerted
AIR FORCE Magazine to the problem, had collected 14,441
signatures on his petition, and the fight goes on.
What's My Line? The Purpose of the Exhibit
Air Force Magazine - November 1994, Pg. 10
Dr. Martin Harwit, August 1994
"The focus of the exhibition will be the last months
of the war in the Pacific and the role of the Enola
Gay in bringing a fierce conflict to a sudden,
merciful end for the millions of young American
servicemen who were poised to sacrifice their lives for
their country." -- Air & Space Magazine,
August-September 1994
Dr. Tom Crouch, August 1994
"It is very important for Americans to understand the
destruction caused by the atomic bombs. The purpose of
the exhibit is to talk about what we did in Nagasaki and
Hiroshima and more importantly, the proliferation of
nuclear weapons and military expansion thereafter." --
August 5, 1994, telecast, Tokyo Broadcasting System
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