
	by John W. Dower
	April 7, 2008
	
	from
	
	MITWorld Website
	
	 
	
	About the Lecture
	
	
	The 
	Bush administration began its “great misuse 
	of history” shortly after 9/11, says John Dower, when it seized upon 
	Japan’s 1941 Pearl Harbor attack as a useful analogy, a way to promote its 
	own invasion of Iraq and subsequent occupation. 
	
	 
	
	Dower views as simplistic these “popular hooks 
	to history” and mercilessly slashes away at the Bush administration’s 
	continuing efforts to manipulate the public with historical imagery and 
	example. 
	
	 
	
	Yet, with his more refined historical lens, Dower finds some 
	unsettling areas of congruence between those days and our own times.
	
	Reflecting on popular associations between 9/11 and Iraq, and Pearl Harbor 
	and Japan, Dower offers two lines of analysis (and suggests he’s got a few 
	more up his sleeve): what he calls “a Pearl Harbor code,” and “Ground Zero 
	2001 and Ground Zero 1945.” 
	
	 
	
	The first area involves comparing explanations 
	of failures of intelligence that might have anticipated the attacks. 
	Congressional and other investigations of the 1941 and 2001 attacks reveal 
	that despite lots of “noise and chatter,” intelligence agencies grossly 
	miscalculated and missed enemy intentions. 
	
	 
	
	This represents, 
	
		
		“not just system 
	breakdown, but a stunning failure of the imagination,” says Dower. 
		
	
	
	In both cases, the U.S. was caught unawares 
	because it misjudged the enemy in a manner typical of “white supremacists,” 
	simultaneously diminishing the other side’s capabilities and casting it as 
	irrational or illogical. 
	
	 
	
	In an ironic aside, Dower notes that the 
	Japanese launched their war on, 
	
		
		“a wish and a prayer, with no contingency 
		planning and no serious contemplation of worst case scenarios.” 
		
	
	
	How like the “U.S. strategic imbecility in the 
	Iraqi invasion,” he says.
	
	Dower’s second analytical line describes how a “clash of civilizations” 
	argument has emerged powerfully since 9/11. Americans believe that Ground 
	Zero 2001 marked the start of a new era - the West opposing an Islamic 
	culture that devalues human life. 
	
	 
	
	But Dower shows that a war machine targeting 
	civilians and noncombatants went into high gear during World War II, with 
	the U.S. and British air wars against Germany, then Japan. Airborne 
	slaughter of innocents became standard operating procedure, part of an 
	“ideological group think we associate with cultures of war.” 
	
	 
	
	Victims are no longer individual civilians, but 
	entire nations. 
	
	 
	
	Hiroshima and Pearl Harbor became, 
	
		
		“codes for mass destruction and 
		psychological warfare,” adopted by both bin Laden and the U.S. - “one 
		side using this as a model for the horrors of 9/11, the other finding 
		inspiration in what we call the cutting edge of shock and awe, tactics 
		that were presumably to ensure victory in the invasion of Iraq.”
		
		 
	
	
	 
	 
	 
	
	
	
	John Dower on...
	
	
	
	"Cultures of War Pearl Harbor/Hiroshima/9-11/Iraq"
	
	
	...and now Afghanistan & Pakistan
	December 7, 2009
	
	from
	
	TenThousandThingsFromKyoto Website
	 
	
	In this hour and a half talk, historian John 
	Dower discusses how 
	the Bush administration began its “great 
	misuse of history” shortly after 9/11, "when it seized upon Japan’s 1941 
	Pearl Harbor attack as a useful analogy, a way to promote its own invasion 
	of Iraq and subsequent occupation."
	
	Likewise, the Obama administration has also seized upon 9/11 in its attempt 
	to justify US military violence in Afghanistan. 
	 
	
	And today we're seeing news stories invoking 
	Pearl Harbor to sanction Obama's war in Afghanistan just as the US corporate 
	media did to support Bush's war in Iraq.
	
	Videotaped in April 2008, this lecture focuses Iraq, but Dower's insights 
	may also now be applied to Afghanistan:
	
		
		Dower views as simplistic these “popular 
		hooks to history” and mercilessly slashes away at the Bush 
		administration’s continuing efforts to manipulate the public with 
		historical imagery and example. Yet, with his more refined historical 
		lens, Dower finds some unsettling areas of congruence between those days 
		and our own times.
		
		Reflecting on popular associations between 9/11 and Iraq, and Pearl 
		Harbor and Japan, Dower offers two lines of analysis (and suggests he’s 
		got a few more up his sleeve): what he calls “a Pearl Harbor code,” and 
		“Ground Zero 2001 and Ground Zero 1945.” 
		 
		
		The first area involves comparing 
		explanations of failures of intelligence that might have anticipated the 
		attacks. Congressional and other investigations of the 1941 and 2001 
		attacks reveal that despite lots of “noise and chatter,” intelligence 
		agencies grossly miscalculated and missed enemy intentions. 
		 
		
		This represents “not just system breakdown, 
		but a stunning failure of the imagination,” says Dower.
		
		In both cases, the U.S. was caught unawares because it misjudged the 
		enemy in a manner typical of “white supremacists,” simultaneously 
		diminishing the other side’s capabilities and casting it as irrational 
		or illogical. In an ironic aside, Dower notes that the Japanese launched 
		their war on “a wish and a prayer, with no contingency planning and no 
		serious contemplation of worst case scenarios.” 
		 
		
		How like the “U.S. strategic imbecility in 
		the Iraqi invasion,” he says.
		
		Dower’s second analytical line describes how a “clash of civilizations” 
		argument has emerged powerfully since 9/11. Americans believe that 
		Ground Zero 2001 marked the start of a new era - the West opposing an 
		Islamic culture that devalues human life.
		
		But Dower shows that a war machine targeting civilians and noncombatants 
		went into high gear during World War II, with the U.S. and British air 
		wars against Germany, then Japan. Airborne slaughter of innocents became 
		standard operating procedure, part of an “ideological group think we 
		associate with cultures of war.” 
		 
		
		Victims are no longer individual civilians, 
		but entire nations.
		
		Hiroshima and Pearl Harbor became, 
		
			
			“codes for mass destruction and 
			psychological warfare,” adopted by both bin Laden and the U.S. - 
			“one side using this as a model for the horrors of 9/11, the other 
			finding inspiration in what we call the cutting edge of shock and 
			awe, tactics that were presumably to ensure victory in the invasion 
			of Iraq.”
		
	
	
	And now airborne drone attacks raining down on 
	the Afghanistan/Pakistan border and Pakistan are killing the newest 
	generation of civilian victims of military violence. 
	 
	 
	 
	
	The Video