The Activists and the Enola Gay
The Smithsonian has cleaned up its act,
but the cause lives on with those who claim
we bamboozled the press, the Congress, and
the public.
By John T. Correll, Editor in Chief
Air Force Magazine - September 1995, Pg.
18
EVERY morning, a long line forms at the
National Air and Space Museum in Washington,
D.C., to see the Enola Gay, the B-29
that dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima
fifty years ago. The exhibit opened June 28,
and by the end of July, 97,525 people had
gone through it. More than ninety percent of
the comment cards turned in by visitors
expressed favorable reaction.
This program -- as all the world must
know by now -- is not the one the curators
originally had in mind. The previous
exhibit, "The Last Act: The Atomic Bomb and
the End of World War II," was canceled when
it became an intolerable political and
financial liability for the Smithsonian
Institution,of which the Air and Space
Museum is a part.
It was the Air Force Association that
exposed the museum's plan to use the
Enola Gay as a prop in a politically
rigged program about the atomic bomb. [See
"War Stories at Air and Space," Air Force
Magazine, April 1994.] Other veterans'
groups, Congress, and the news media picked
up the issue and scrutiny became intense.
More than 30,000 letters poured in to the
Smithsonian, and patrons and subscribers
quit in droves.
The Smithsonian canceled the ill-fated
exhibit last January in favor of a
straightforward exhibit that would display
the Enola Gay without political trappings.
The fire never really went out, though, and
Dr. Martin O. Harwit, director of the
museum, resigned May 2, saying that nothing
less would satisfy the critics.
Veterans' organizations have praised the
Enola Gay exhibition now running at
the Air and Space Museum, but those who
backed the original exhibit plan are now up
in arms.
The Activists' Counterattack
Revisionist scholars, peace activists,
writers, and others are pressing their
counterattack in books, journals, and
statements to news media as well as through
various public programs and platforms.
* Gar Alperovitz is a founding father of
revisionist theory about the atomic bomb. In
1965, he said the evidence "strongly
suggests" that "the bombs were used
primarily to demonstrate to the Russians the
enormous power America would have in its
possession during subsequent negotiations."
He is a senior research scientist at the
University of Maryland and the author of The
Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb, published
in July 1995.
* Kai Bird is a former journalist who now
describes himself as a historian. He is
co-chairman of the Historians' Committee for
Open Debate on Hiroshima and the author of
The Chairman: John J. McCloy, The Making of
the American Establishment (1992). He says
the Smithsonian caved in to veterans and
politicians and put on an exhibit that
"dishonors the very principles of free
speech and free inquiry."
* Martin J. Sherwin is a professor of
history at Dartmouth and Tufts and
co-chairman of the Historians' Committee for
Open Debate on Hiroshima. He is the author
of A World Destroyed: The Atomic Bomb and
the Grand Alliance (1976). In February 1994,
in his capacity as an advisor to the Air and
Space Museum on the Enola Gay
exhibit, he complained that the crew had
shown "no remorse" for the mission.
* Barton Bernstein is a professor of
history at Stanford University. The author
note with one of his recently published
essays identifies him as "a leading
revisionist scholar." He is less absolute
than his colleagues on some issues. He now
holds, for example, that use of the atomic
bomb was "probably unnecessary." (Others in
the revisionist lineup say it was absolutely
unnecessary.) His major theme is that US
casualty estimates for an invasion of Japan
in 1945 were grossly exaggerated. In fact,
it was Professor Bernstein who -- on the
basis of his reinterpretation of a June 18,
1945, entry in the diary of Adm. William D.
Leahy, the President's Chief of Staff --
persuaded Air and Space Museum Director
Harwit to mark the US casualty estimate down
to 63,000. That led to congressional and
public outrage and eventually to Dr.
Harwit's resignation.
* Robert Jay Lifton and Greg Mitchell are
the authors of Hiroshima in America: Fifty
Years of Denial, which the publisher
describes as "not just historical analysis"
but also "a landmark psychological study."
According to them, "after ordering the use
of two atomic bombs, Truman spent the rest
of his life in the throes of unrealized
guilt." He also "called forth is
'decisiveness' to block out remorseful
reflection of any kind, in that way
suppressing conscious feelings of self
condemnation." Dr. Lifton is a former Air
Force psychiatrist. Mr. Mitchell formerly
served as executive director of the Center
on Violence and Human Survival.
* Stanley Goldberg is a "historian of
science." He resigned in protest from the
Enola Gay exhibit advisory board because
"the museum administration had exposed the
curators to the direct pressure of
organizations such as the Air Force
Association and the American Legion." He
punctuates his argument with epithets like
"thought control" and "McCarthyism."
ABC Chimes In
There are some differences of position
among the revisionists, but the central
ideas of the movement are that (1) Japan was
on the verge of surrender;(2) the war would
have been over soon without the atomic bomb;
(3) the US prolonged the war by insisting on
unconditional surrender; (4) the US dropped
the bomb mainly to impress the Russians; (5)
the decision was driven by domestic
political considerations; and (6) even if we
had to invade Japan, the casualties would
not have been that severe.
The revisionists -- who had generally
fared poorly in news media comment on the
Enola Gay controversy -- gained some
prime-time support July 27 with a Peter
Jennings special, "Hiroshima: Why the Bomb
Was Dropped," on ABC television. It was a
set piece of the revisionist line.
As the Washington Post review
said, Mr. Jennings was led along by "a
largely stacked deck of revisionist
historians" to the assessment of President
Harry Truman "as an intellectual and moral
dwarf, propelled by ambitious militarists
and politicians to a nuclear slaughter of
the innocents."
Mr. Jennings said it was "unfortunate"
that veterans' groups had "bullied" the
curators of the original Enola Gay
exhibit. He declined to use the material
furnished to him and his producers by the
Air Force Association. According to Gar
Alperovitz's publisher, Knopf, his new book,
The Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb,
was the basis for the Jennings special.
Targeting AFA
With the decision past on how the Air and
Space Museum will exhibit the Enola Gay,
the activists, scholars, and others turned
their attention to the record of how the
controversy arose and unfolded. Attention
soon centered on the Air Force Association,
which was the first organization to tackle
the museum's original exhibit plan and which
produced the widely cited content analyses
of the exhibition scripts. The Air Force
Association was also the source of a
collection of documents that virtually all
participants in the controversy, including
the revisionists, draw upon.
In American Journalism Review, Tony
Capaccio and Uday Mohan say that it was "an
aggressive public relations campaign by the
Air Force Association" that "doomed the
museum's plans for a full-fledged exhibit on
the atomic bomb."
In "Blown Away" in Washingtonian
Magazine, Tom Allen and Norman Polmar
say that the editor of Air Force Magazine
was "Martin Harwit's chief nemesis in the
Enola Gay battle." Dr. Harwit told them
that "The Air Force Association must have
had an incredibly well-oiled public
relations machine."
In Museum News, Professor Mike Wallace of
John Jay College of Criminal Justice says
the Air and Space Museum "never quite
realized who and what it was up against" in
the Air Force Association, which Professor
Wallace depicts as incredibly powerful and
oppressive.
Professor Martin J. Sherwin told
reporters that the attack on the exhibition
was "orchestrated" by Air Force Magazine and
that "The Air Force Association's agenda, in
my view, was not simply to tweak an exhibit
into getting the story straight. It was a
blatant and ultimately successful attempt at
getting Martin Harwit fired and regain [sic]
control of Air and Space for Air Force-friendly,noncritical
mis-exhibits."
The Allegedly Bamboozled
The notion that AFA somehow managed to
bamboozle the press, the Congress, and the
American public is hardly credible. It is
even less credible that, as suggested by
some, we gulled the liberally inclined
Washington Post. As museum officials
knew -- and as bamboozle theorists ought to
know -- the Post got some documents
and analysis from AFA, but its reporters
acquired more materials on their own and
spent months digging into the issue.
What rankled the revisionists is that the
Post said in a January 1995 editorial
that early drafts of the Enola Gay
script were "incredibly propagandistic and
intellectually shabby" and had "a
tendentiously antinuclear and anti-American
tone." The Post also said the curators had
repeatedly made things worse by their
"misplaced condescension and refusal to see
the criticisms of bias as anything but the
carping of the insufficiently
sophisticated."
In February, another Post
editorial added: "It is important to be
clear about what happened at the
Smithsonian. It is not, as some have it,
that benighted advocates of a
special-interest or right-wing point of view
brought political power to bear to crush and
distort the historical truth. Quite the
contrary. Narrow-minded representatives of a
special-interest and revisionist point of
view attempted to use their inside track to
appropriate and hollow out a historical
event that large numbers of Americans alive
at that time and engaged in the war had
witnessed and understood in a very different
-- and authentic -- way."
In similar fashion, one congressman's
statement contains an answer to whether he
bought a pig in a poke. In September 1994,
Rep. Tom Lewis (R-Fla.) said he learned of
the controversy when a constituent wrote to
complain. "I obtained a copy of the
exhibit's script to judge it for myself,"
Representative Lewis said. "I did not think
it could be as slanted as the letter
described. I was wrong."
In Hiroshima in America, Lifton and
Mitchell say that "reporters rarely took the
trouble to examine one of the widely
available scripts to determine if the
veterans' complaints were valid. Instead,
they accepted at face value the Air Force
Association's interpretation -- including
such false assertions that the script did
not mention Japanese brutality."
That account contains several
curiosities. The source from which the
script was "widely available" was the Air
Force Association, which distributed
hundreds of copies, many of them to
reporters, whose follow-up questions
indicated that they had, indeed, read the
scripts they received. The "false assertion"
line does not square with the facts. As Air
Force Magazine's first report said, the
exhibit script "acknowledges Japan's 'naked
aggression and extreme brutality' that began
in the 1930." Those references, however,
were slight. Even after museum officials
acknowledged among themselves that the
exhibit was imbalanced and "that much of the
criticism that has been levied against us is
understandable," the exhibition plan said
little about the events leading up to the
mission of the Enola Gay. A revised script
allocated less than one page of text -- out
of 295 total text pages -- and only eight
visual images (out of hundreds) to any
mention of Japanese military activity prior
to 1945.
"History vs. Nostalgia"
At the press conference before the
official opening of the Enola Gay
exhibit, Smithsonian Secretary Dr. I.
Michael Heyman said, "I have concluded that
we made a basic error in attempting to
couple a historical treatment of the use of
atomic bombs with the fiftieth anniversary
commemoration of the end of the war." He had
said the same thing months earlier when he
canceled the "Last Act" exhibit.
AFA has repeatedly said this "history vs.
nostalgia" theory is wrong. As AFA National
President R. E. Smith said at a Senate
hearing in May, "The problem was not the
coupling of history with commemoration. It
was that the history had been given a
countercultural spin. The problem was not
that the exhibition was analytical. The
problem was that the analysis was
distorted."
Revisionists take the imputed history vs.
nostalgia split even further and say that
the traditional or "commemorative" version
-- that use of the atomic bomb was a
military action, taken to end the war and
save lives -- is wrong. Gar Alperovitz, for
example, argues that a "new consensus" has
developed among historians and that it
supports the Air and Space Museum's initial
approach, which Dr. Alperovitz describes as
"balanced."
The existence of any such "new
consensus," however, is disputed by other
scholars, notably Professor Robert P. Newman
of the University of lowa, author of Truman
and the Hiroshima Cult. Professor Newman
says, "The intellectual idea to which
Hiroshima cultists are devoted is that since
Japan was about to surrender when the bombs
were dropped, the slaughter of innocents at
Hiroshima and Nagasaki was not motivated by
military reasons. It was instead motivated
primarily by the desire to intimidate the
Russians (so-called atomic diplomacy),by
racism (we did not drop the bomb on
Germany), by the desire of Robert
Oppenheimer and company to experiment with a
new toy, by the fear of Secretary of War
Henry Stimson and others that Congress would
investigate if their $ 2 billion expenditure
was found not useful, or by the sheer
unthinking momentum of a bureaucratic
juggernaut (Manhattan project)." Professor
Newman's book summarizes mainstream
scholarly evidence and shoots down the
articles of revisionist faith, one by one,
with well-documented rebuttal.
Also in disagreement with the
revisionists is Robert James Maddox,
professor of American history at
Pennsylvania State University. He wrote "Why
We Had to Drop the Atomic Bomb" in the
May-June 1995 issue of American Heritage. He
was one of the few nonrevisionists
interviewed for the Peter Jennings special,
but he says ABC misrepresented his views and
ignored information he supplied. He called
the show "the worst piece of garbage I've
seen."
The Peace Activists Enter
Peace groups first entered the exhibition
fray in the fall of 1994 when the original
plan was rapidly coming unstuck. At his
installation on September 19, I. Michael
Heyman, new secretary of the Smithsonian,
acknowledged that the Enola Gay
exhibit plan had been "deficient" and "out
of balance." The Senate unanimously passed a
resolution September 23 calling on the
National Air and Space Museum to modify its
"revisionist and offensive" exhibition plan.
According to Philip Nobile in Judgement
at the Smithsonian, a book sympathetic to
the curators, Dr. Tom D. Crouch, chairman of
the museum's Aeronautics Department and a
principal in the Enola Gay controversy,
sought support from Father John Dear, a
"peace Jesuit" who had hammered an F-15
fighter in a disarmament demonstration at a
base in North Carolina. "You have no idea of
the forces opposing this exhibit, not in
your wildest dreams -- jobs are at stake,
the Smithsonian is at stake," Dr. Crouch
said.
Father Dear says that "Crouch urged me to
organize the media and get to Harwit, who he
felt was being manipulated." Father Dear and
"some colleagues from the peace community"
met with Dr. Harwit September 20. He quotes
Dr. Harwit as sayling, "Where have you been?
You're too late." In October,
representatives of seventeen peace
organizations -- with Father Dear acting as
spokesman -- called on the Smithsonian to
renew the focus of the exhibition on the
suffering caused by the bombs.
On November 16, 1994, a group of
forty-eight "historians and scholars"
delivered a letter of protest to Smithsonian
Secretary Heyman demanding that the
imbalances and biases be restored. The
scholars charged that by giving in to change
demanded by "special interest groups," the
Smithsonian had subjected the exhibition to
"historical cleansing."
Among those signing was Noam Chomsky, a
professor of linguistics at MIT. In
subsequent discourse, Professor Chomsky
dismissed the Japanese attacks on Pearl
Harbor and the Philippines in December 1941
as no more than "bombing military bases in
two US colonies that had been stolen from
their inhabitants." These and other offenses
by Japan "rank so low in the scale of those
that we have regularly committed, before and
since, that no honest person could take them
very seriously as a justification for
invasion [of Japan in 1945]."
According to press accounts, a group of
"peace and antinuclear activists" had a
"cordial but ultimately disappointing
two-hour meeting" with Air and Space Museum
officials December 15, After January, when
the Smithsonian canceled the "Last Act," the
activists moved to a different strategy.
The Open Debate
By March 1995, the group of forty-eight
"historians and scholars" who delivered
their protest letter to the Smithsonian in
November had reconstituted itself as the
"Historians' Committee for Open Debate on
Hiroshima" with Martin Sherwin and Kai Bird
as co-chairmen.
The members called upon "our colleagues
at colleges and universities across the
country to participate in a 'National
Teach-In on Hiroshima,' both to protest the
Smithsonian's surrender to political
censorship and to educate Americans on the
full range of scholarly debate regarding the
atomic bombings on Japan fifty years ago."
Among the most ambitious programs was staged
at American University in Washington, D.C.,
which displayed, in cooperation with the
Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum, some of the
artifacts originally planned for the Enola
Gay exhibition at the National Air and Space
Museum.
The American University program,
"Constructing a Peaceful World: Beyond
Hiroshima and Nagasaki," concentrated on
events after the bomb was dropped and looked
ahead to the nuclear arms race. The exhibit,
which ran for most of July, was held in
conjunction with a course that included a
two-week study tour of Japan. The Japanese
contributed more than half of the $ 15,000
tour scholarship fund. The exhibit had
twentyseven artifacts from the Hiroshima
Museum. Among them was a school child's
lunch box with charred remains of rice,
barley, soybeans, and strips of radish.
Between July 8 and July 20, just over 1,000
persons had been through the exhibit.
The academic director of the program was
Dr. Peter Kuznick, an associate professor of
history and one of the forty-eight
signatories to the "historians and scholars"
petition last year. Professor Kuznick told
the Washington Post that the program dealt
only with the aftermath of the bomb because
"space precluded" the inclusion of material
about Japanese aggression and atrocities and
the reasons why the United States used the
bomb. In fact, when AFA Communications
Director Steve Aubin and I saw the program
on July 21, there was an abundance of unused
space in the exhibit area.
Myths About What We Said
Judging from their published comments,
few of the scholars throwing brickbats at
AFA and Air Force Magazine bothered to read
what we actually said. A number of myths are
therefore taking root as assumptions pass
from one scholar to the next in the course
of their research.
* The sudden ambush. It is said, for
example, that we jumped prematurely on a
raw, first draft of the Enola Gay
exhibition plan and that the curators would
have fixed it themselves if we had let them
alone. The fact is that the script we
exposed was the fourth formal planning
document, not the first. It flowed directly
from three concept papers that went before
and picked up the worst features of those
earlier plans. AFA representatives had tried
for months to reason with museum officials,
but they showed no inclination to change. As
the documentary record shows, they continued
to resist change after publication of the
AFA reports.
* "Historical cleansing." It seems
important for some revisionists to believe
that AFA and military veterans insist on an
expurgated version of history. None of them
has yet explained how it is that my first
report on the atomic bomb controversy, "The
Decision That Launched the Enola Gay,
" in Air Force Magazine for April 1994,
discussed at length the very issues we are
accused of "cleansing away" -- ambiguity
about the casualty estimates and the belief
by Army Air Forces Gens. H. H. Arnold and
Curtis E. LeMay that the war could be won by
conventional bombing (albeit with horrendous
casualties). Many of the "historical
cleansing" theorists acknowledge having in
their possession a longer, fully annotated
version of that report which documents even
earlier Air Force Magazine coverage of this
information.
* "Taken out of context." This is the
same complaint that Dr. Harwit made in a
letter to the Washington Times in
March 1994. He said that AFA's assessment of
balance in the exhibit was inaccurate
because "the exhibition describes the 'naked
brutality' of Japanese forces in concrete
terms, calling attention to the rape of
Nanking, the treatment of POWs, the use of
Chinese and Koreans as slave laborers, and
the conduct of biological and chemical
experiments on human victims."
It was that letter that led AFA on April
4, 1994, to deliver a copy of the 559-page
script to the newspaper with an invitation
to "judge for yourself." All of the vaunted
context cited by Dr. Harwit was contained on
just three of the 302 text pages in the
initial script, compared to seventy-nine
text pages on Japanese casualties and
suffering. The Air Force Association
thereafter provided copies of the script to
other reporters and interested organizations
-- and would have copied and circulated
subsequent Enola Gay script revisions
had not the Air and Space Museum copyrighted
these products to keep us from doing so. For
AFA and Air Force Magazine, the critical
issues were balance and context, and the
heart of our "conspiracy" was to make the
full record open to all who wanted to
examine it.
War Crimes
Among the most strident in his
denunciation of AFA and in his defense of
the curators of the original exhibit is
Philip Nobile, who bills his book,
Judgment at the Smithsonian, as
containing "the uncensored script of the
Smithsonian's 50th anniversary exhibit of
the Enola Gay. "
The press release promoting this book
depicts Mr. Nobile as having blown the lid
off a cover-up after he "obtained a rare
copy of the 300-page document." A close
reading of the "acknowledgements" section of
the book reveals that Mr. Nobile obtained
his "rare copy" from the Air Force
Association, which made hundreds of copies
available to reporters, members of Congress,
and veterans' organizations.
Furthermore, the document that Mr. Nobile
received from AFA was not 300 pages but 559.
Mr. Nobile reprints the intended wall label
text but leaves out the visual elements. Mr.
Nobile was aware, certainly, that much of
AFA's criticism focused on the imbalance in
the visual content. As my colleague Mr.
Aubin points out, ignoring the graphic parts
of an exhibition that is primarily visual is
like watching television without looking at
the picture. Mr. Nobile's publisher says
that he addresses the moral issues as "a
trained theologian with a pontifical
degree." He hits a low point in the book
with a "mock war crimes trial of Harry
Truman." According to the press release, "Nobile's
fictional cross-examination of Truman leaves
little doubt about the defendant's guilt."
It seems unlikely that many of the
revisionist historians and scholars would
endorse this approach, but Barton Bernstein
contributed a 129-page "afterword" to the
Nobile book, which conveys an impression of
sorts simply by being there. Colman
McCarthy, a columnist for the Washington
Post, included Nobile's Judgment at the
Smithsonian on a short list of "books of
reliable scholarship and balanced analysis"
to counteract the spin he attributed to "the
easily peeved military lobby."
Fifty years after the atomic bombs fell
on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the fires of
controversy burn on.
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