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September 9, 1994
MEMO TO: Publisher, Magazine Staff
SUBJECT: August 31 Revision of Enola Gay Script
As
you know, the National Air and Space Museum has revised
the Atomic Bomb/Enola Gay exhibition script, the
one that the curators had declared in June to be final.
The museum did not announce the forthcoming revision
until August 16. We were already committed to production
for the article in the September issue at that point.
(In fact, the data compiled for that article and
circulated in an AFA paper June 28 was the basis for
much of the Congressional and media pressure that
elicited the revision.)
Observations about the revised exhibit script:
1.
This is the sixth planning document we have seen for
this exhibition. Compared to the previous concept plans
and scripts, this revision shows a serious effort to
deal with some of the problems that we and others
complained about. The most significant revisions are in
the graphic elements and consist of both additions and
deletions. To be as fair as possible to the museum,
the first item in this analysis spotlights the single
most dramatic and positive change found in the
revision.
|
January |
May |
August |
|
|
49 |
32 |
26 |
Photos of
Japanese casualties |
|
3 |
7 |
14 |
Photos of
American casualties |
We
(and others) have pointed to the gross imbalance in
casualty photos. The ratio in January was more than 16
to 1; it is now less than 2 to 1. Such change, even in
a single area, is encouraging and leads us to believe
there is hope yet for this exhibition.
2.
The proclaimed centerpiece
of the script revision -- a new 4,000 square foot
section to be entitled "The War in the Pacific: An
American Perspective" -- exists only as a promise in
a press release. The museum is saying, essentially,
"trust us." That's asking a lot, considering the
museum's taste for revisionist history and unwillingness
to make changes unless forced by outside pressure to do
so. Why is this labeled an American perspective?
What is that supposed to mean? What perspective does the
rest of the exhibit have?
3.
The new script revisions are
of two kinds -- the addition/deletion of graphics and
line- in/line-out text changes. Consequently, the
structural bias of the exhibit persists. The program
still centers on the atomic bomb. The Enola Gay is still
a prop. The exhibit leads up, as it has all along, to an
"emotional center" in unit 400, "Ground Zero: Hiroshima
and Nagasaki." No opportunity is missed to tug at the
heart strings. A kitten, for example, cannot simply be
dead. It must glare with "eternally locked eyes," After
Unit 400, the visitor departs via unit 500, "The
Legacy," which also carries a definite political spin.
4.
Some parts of the script have been changed far more than
others. Unfortunately, the critical unit 400, "Ground
Zero: Hiroshima and Nagasaki" is virtually unchanged
except for deletion of graphic elements. Also
unfortunately, the excess in this section had been so
extreme that it is still overpowering, even with
reduced visual images. The museum director has cited the
necessity to show the effects of nuclear weapons. It
does not require the present total of 69 visual images
to achieve that, especially considering the shocking
nature of the images. In an internal memo last April,
the museum director himself told the staff to "take out
all but about one third of the explicit pictures of
death and suffering in section 400." The graphic
deletions in the latest script still do not meet the
standard for balance prescribed by the museum director
in April.
|
January |
May |
August |
"Ground Zero"
Visual Images |
|
75 |
64 |
51 |
Total Photos |
|
49 |
37 |
27 |
Human Suffering
Photos |
|
25 |
23 |
15 |
Photos featuring
women, children, religious objects. |
|
26 |
24 |
18 |
Total artifacts. |
|
13 |
12 |
8 |
Artifacts related
to women, children, religion. |
5.
Among the more offensive features of the previous script
were six "Historical Controversies," all casting
suspicion on the actions and motives of the United
States. At a meeting we attended in the Pentagon August
16, Museum Director Martin Harwit said the "Historical
Controversies" would be removed and speculation about US
motives would be eliminated. Indeed, the revised script
has no "Historical Controversies" explicitly labelled as
such, but a closer examination shows why we remain
concerned.
For
example, in the case of Historical Controversy #1,
"Would the bomb have been dropped on the Germans?" the
curators simply dropped off the "Historical
Controversies" tagline and removed a bit of the text.
The question remains (200 15) with its own label
heading, within a page of its location in the previous
script. Controversy #6 -- "Was an invasion inevitable
without the bomb?" -- is also still there (200 52). The
difference is that it is preceded by the word
"Hindsight" rather than "Historical Controversy." In one
way or another, most of the other "eliminated" material
also shows up somewhere.
6.
The museum still has an attitude -- and it still shows.
This is seen, for example, in the instance of another of
the itemized "Historical Controversies" asked: "Did the
demand for unconditional surrender prolong the war?"
This entry has been removed as a series item, but
speculation about it persists in the script. It says,
for example (500 10) 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." Do the curators mean
to suggest by that wording that the United States was
to blame for Japan's reluctance to surrender, even
after the atomic bomb had been dropped?
Nor
does the unconditional surrender issue -- detailed here
as an example of spin and bias remaining in the script
-- end there. Undersecretary of State Joseph Grew, who
argued for moderation of demands placed on Japan, is
obviously a hero to the curators. They say that "Grew
understood the mentality of the Japanese leadership and
wanted to end the war early. . . " (200 26)
Implying that others did not want to end the war early?
The curators put the least charitable construction
possible on President Truman's action: "Truman did not
accept Grew's arguments because he foresaw much
resistance, at home at abroad, to modifying the policy
of unconditional surrender." (200 25) That gives
Truman no credit for actually believing in the policy --
or any credence to the policy itself being right.
By
contrast, as seen in the line cited above (500
10), the curators are always ready to explain away
anything that questions the sincerity of Japan's quest
for peace. The Emperor is depicted as especially devoted
to peace. Should anything make it appear otherwise, that
is no doubt because "he hoped that one final victory
would force the Allies to offer better peace terms." (200
24.)
7.
As measured by the factors on
the chart on the next page, the emphasis on Japanese
suffering is about the same as it has been all along --
28 percent of the total text pages in the January
script, 28 percent in the latest revision. The changes
in the script, while commendable, are not as sweeping or
as comprehensive as some may believe.
|
May |
|
Aug |
|
|
|
Text |
Photo |
Text |
Photo |
Emphasis on
Japanese Suffering |
|
58 pg |
64 |
54 pg |
51 |
Hiroshima/Nagasaki "Ground Zero" |
|
21 pg |
28 |
23* pg |
28 |
Previous bombing
of Japan |
|
5 pg |
5 |
5 pg |
5 |
Hardship/deprivation on Japanese home front |
*
Does not represent any
actual increase in text. Consequence of
line-in/line-out revisions in which some pages expand
and others contract.
8.
It would be possible recite additional examples of why
the revisions so far fall short of making "The Last Act"
a balanced, fair story, told in the context of the
times. The Air Force Association and Air Force
Magazine, however, have said repeatedly that our content
analyses and examples are just that -- examples
of what's wrong -- and that the basis for judging the
overall exhibition must be the net effect it creates.
Taken
overall, the exhibition still lacks balance and context.
Unless visitors are wary or well informed, they are
likely to get a distorted understanding of history from
what they see here. Whether the National Air and Space
Museum is willing to make further changes -- or enough
changes -- remains to be seen. The August 31 script
shows movement in the right direction, but it isn't
there yet.
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