Monday, August 24, 2015

What I Learned from The Conquering Tide by Ian Toll

The easiest way to tell who was going to win the war in the Pacific was to look at a map. Japan a tiny island with few natural resources. The United States of America, one of the largest countries in the world with what, at the time, seemed like an endless supply of industrial resources. There were only two possible ways Japan had a chance: the first was to maintain, throughout the entire war, their hold on resource-rich conquered territory and the logistics to transport those resources great distances through contested waters, and the second was to deal the United States some kind of early defeat that would convince them to avoid war all together. And so the fundamental idea of Pearl Harbor was that the attack would so psychologically devastating the Americans that they would sign a treaty right away. When the US didn't, the war was essentially over.

That said, there were points in the war, especially early on, where Japan might have been able to create a stronger position for themselves at the negotiating table. A different outcome at Midway for example, or a series of strategic or tactical successes that slowed island-hopping. Or even establishing a strong enough final defense line to discourage an assault on Japan itself. (Of course, that strategy would be rendered obsolete.) Since the U.S was far from perfect in its execution of the war and Japan did enjoy early, and sometimes overwhelming success, why were they unable to create this stronger position? According to The Conquering Tide, the second volume in Ian Toll's definitive history of the war in the Pacific, a key factor was racism.

Those who favored a war with the United States believed that Americans were too soft to handle war. We were too decadent, too rich, and too lazy. We wouldn't put in the effort and we couldn't handle the hardship of war. We were fat. We were weak. We could not withstand the Japanese fighting spirit. The most definitive demonstration of just how ingrained this belief was and how destructive it was to the Japanese war effort was their response to U.S. submarine warfare.

They didn't have one. Despite relying on supplies from overseas territories, the Japanese never developed any kind of anti-submarine tactics or technologies besides depth charges. For a while, U.S. submarine technology, especially the torpedoes, were ineffective, but once those mechanical problems were solved, submarines crippled Japanese shipping, greatly limiting Japan's ability to wage war. Oil tanker after oil tanker was sunk and yet Japan did nothing. Why? They simply didn't believe Americans had the fortitude to endure the privations of submarine warfare.

Nor did the Japanese believe Americans were brave enough to withstand an aggressive frontal assault, no matter how entrenched their defenses were. They assumed, Americans would run from charging Japanese warriors. So in battle after battle, the Japanese wasted thousands of lives on frontal assaults on entrenched defensive positions. They could never seem to learn that Americans with machine guns in trenches and bunkers don't flee. No soldiers with machine guns in trenches and bunkers flee.

What made Pacific Crucible, the first volume in Toll's trilogy, so brilliant was Toll's ability to move back and forth from the most powerful to the least powerful actors. He could tell the story of an enlisted soldier, with as much respect and dignity as he told the story of Roosevelt and Churchill. He was able to give the board rooms and intelligence offices the same weight as the battlefield and the aircraft carrier. He was able to show how the old ways of thinking about war changed or didn't in response to the new technologies of war.

But the story in the Pacific changed after Midway. If the war wasn't over at Pearl Harbor it was certainly over after Midway and it was just a matter of the United States rolling through the rest of the Pacific, like a, well, I guess you'd say like a “conquering tide.” Sometimes this can give the book a plodding, almost punching-the-clock tone and pace. Pick an island, bomb the every-loving fuck out of it, send in the Marines, ease and navigate inter-branch conflict and rivalry, rinse and repeat. But Toll is an historian, not a novelist, and so it feels plodding because it was plodding. But there was always something in that rinse and repeat, always risk and conflict, always death and suffering, and so, as we're punching the clock, Toll never lets us forget we are punching the clock in war.

In some ways, works of history shouldn't have a lot of suspense. I mean, we know how the war in the Pacific ends. But knowing the war ends doesn't mean agreeing on everything about the war. I have long believed the use of nuclear weapons on Japan was unnecessary, that it was far less about achieving victory over Japan as it was waving our dick at Russia. But I'm a lefty-commie-pinko-hippy whatever. But, given how lopsided the victories for the U.S. were after Midway and especially after Guadalacanal, and given how depleted Japanese military resources were, and how clear Toll is in this volume about the state of Japan's ability to wage war, I can't imagine Toll coming to anything other than the same conclusion. It's one thing to read this idea in Howard Zinn, who intentionally set out to offer a different perspective on American history but to see it in a definitive history, especially as so many politicians rabidly cling to the idea of American exceptionalism. would be significant. I was going to read the third volume regardless, because Toll is a fantastic historian, but this odd sense of political suspense makes me downright impatient.

3 comments:

  1. I just finished the second volume of Toll's trilogy and generally agree with your comments and praise. But I highly doubt his concluding volume will adopt your "lefty-commie-pinko-hippy" views on the atomic bombs. Yes, the Japanese military was a shell of itself. Nonetheless, as Toll has already shown, they fought to the death. I think Toll will echo Paul Fussell's "Thank God for the Atom Bomb."

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  2. I've read both Pacific Crucible and The Conquering Tide. I thoroughly enjoy both and look forward to the last of his trilogy. Some people pity the Japanese for the pitiable state of their people at the end of the war, and the devastation of their homeland by nuclear weapons and incendiary bombs, but I view this in a a larger light. What does Howard Zinn have to say about the 10 million Chinese who were Japan's Asian holocaust? I can only imagine how many more would have been killed by the racist genocidal actions of the Japanese Army who had no compunctions with experimenting on humans with chemical and biological weapons if the United States had abandoned Asia to their predations. The Japanese bit off far more than they could chew when they attacked China. They were in a war of attrition they could never finish, in a conflict where they could never achieve victory beyond nibbling at the very edge of that country. Such wars breed frustration and destroy man's humanity. Couple that with the contrasting victories elsewhere and the inherent racial superiority that the Japanese felt over their Asian brothers, and you have a recipe for total war and little respect for human life, the cauldron from whence holocausts come. The Japanese waged total war, and they got a heavy dose of it in return, in my opinion, deservedly so.

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  3. I've read both Pacific Crucible and The Conquering Tide. I thoroughly enjoy both and look forward to the last of his trilogy. Some people pity the Japanese for the pitiable state of their people at the end of the war, and the devastation of their homeland by nuclear weapons and incendiary bombs, but I view this in a a larger light. What does Howard Zinn have to say about the 10 million Chinese who were Japan's Asian holocaust? I can only imagine how many more would have been killed by the racist genocidal actions of the Japanese Army who had no compunctions with experimenting on humans with chemical and biological weapons if the United States had abandoned Asia to their predations. The Japanese bit off far more than they could chew when they attacked China. They were in a war of attrition they could never finish, in a conflict where they could never achieve victory beyond nibbling at the very edge of that country. Such wars breed frustration and destroy man's humanity. Couple that with the contrasting victories elsewhere and the inherent racial superiority that the Japanese felt over their Asian brothers, and you have a recipe for total war and little respect for human life, the cauldron from whence holocausts come. The Japanese waged total war, and they got a heavy dose of it in return, in my opinion, deservedly so.

    ReplyDelete