From the Los Angeles Times
BOOK REVIEW
'Human Smoke' by Nicholson Baker
An inside look at the inexorable march of
Britain and the United States toward World War II.
By Mark Kurlansky
March 9, 2008
Human Smoke
The Beginnings of World War II, the End of Civilization
Nicholson Baker
Simon & Schuster: 576 pp., $30
Not long ago, because there is no winter baseball in this country, I
was channel surfing in search of amusement and ended up watching a
debate of Republican presidential candidates. Sen. John McCain was attacking Rep. Ron Paul
for opposing the Iraq war. He called Paul an "isolationist" and said it
was that kind of thinking that had caused World War II. How old, I
asked myself, is John McCain, that he is keeping alive this ancient
World War II canard? Is it going to pass down to subsequent
generations? All wars have to be sold, but World War II, within the
memory of the pointless carnage that then became known as World War I,
was a particularly hard sell. Roosevelt and Churchill did it well, and
their lies have been with us ever since.
Nicholson Baker's "Human Smoke" is a meticulously researched and
well-constructed book demonstrating that World War II was one of the
biggest, most carefully plotted lies in modern history. According to
the myth, British and American statesmen naively thought they could
reason with such brutal fascists as Germany's Hitler
and Japan's Tojo. Faced with this weakness, Hitler and Tojo tried to
take over the world, and the United States and Britain were forced to
use military might to stop them.
Because Baker is primarily a novelist, it might be expected that,
having taken on this weighty subject, he would write about it with
great flare and drama. Readers may initially be disappointed, yet one
of this book's great strengths is that it avoids flourishes in favor of
the kind of lean prose employed by journalists. "Human Smoke" is a
series of well-written, brilliantly ordered snapshots, the length of
news dispatches. Baker states that he wanted to raise these questions
about World War II: "Was it a 'good war'? Did waging it help anyone who
needed help?" His very effective style is to offer the facts and leave
readers to draw their own conclusions.
The facts are powerful. Baker shows, step by step, how an alliance
dominated by leaders who were bigoted, far more opposed to communism
than to fascism, obsessed with arms sales and itching for a fight
coerced the world into war.
Anti-Semitism was rife among the Allies. Of Franklin Roosevelt,
Baker notes that in 1922, when he was a New York attorney, he "noticed
that Jews made up one-third of the freshman class at Harvard" and used
his influence to establish a Jewish quota there. For years he
obstructed help for European Jewry, and as late as 1939 he discouraged
passage of the Wagner-Rogers bill, an attempt by Congress to save
Jewish children. British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain said in
1939 of German treatment of Jews that "no doubt Jews aren't a lovable
people. I don't care about them myself." Once the war began, Winston Churchill
wanted to imprison German Jewish refugees because they were Germans.
What a comfort such leadership must have been to the Nazis, who,
according to the New York Times
of Dec. 3, 1931, were trying to figure out a way to rid Germany of Jews
without "arousing foreign opinion."
Churchill is a dominant figure in "Human Smoke," depicted as a
bloodthirsty warmonger who, in 1922, was still bemoaning the fact that
World War I hadn't lasted a little longer so that Britain could have
had its air force in place to bomb Berlin and "the heart of Germany."
But no, he whined, it had to stop, "owing to our having run short of
Germans and enemies."
Churchill was not driven by anti-fascism. In his 1937 book "Great
Contemporaries," he described Hitler as "a highly competent, cool,
well-informed functionary with an agreeable manner." The same book
savagely attacked Leon Trotsky.
(What was wrong with Trotsky? "He was still a Jew. Nothing could get
over that.") Churchill repeatedly praised Mussolini for his "gentle and
simple bearing." In 1927, he told a Roman audience, "If I had been an
Italian, I am sure that I should have been entirely with you from the
beginning to the end of your victorious struggle against the bestial
appetites and passions of Leninism." Churchill considered fascism "a
necessary antidote to the Russian virus," Baker writes. In 1938, he
remarked to the press that if England were ever defeated in war, he
hoped "we should find a Hitler to lead us back to our rightful position
among nations."
As Baker's book makes clear, between the two World Wars communism, not
fascism, was the enemy. David Lloyd
George, who had been Britain's prime minister during World War I,
cautioned in 1933, the year Hitler came to power, that if the Allies
managed to overthrow Nazism, "what would take its place? Extreme
communism. Surely that cannot be our objective." But even more than the
communists, Churchill's enemy No. 1 in the 1920s and early '30s was
Mohandas Gandhi and his doctrine of nonviolence, which Churchill warned
"will, sooner or later, have to be grappled with and finally crushed."
In the 1930s, U.S. industry was free to sell the Germans and the
Japanese whatever they'd buy, including weapons. Not to lose out, the
British and French sold tanks and bombers to Hitler. Calls by Joseph
Tenenbaum of the American Jewish Congress to boycott Germany were
ignored. There was no attempt to contain, isolate, hinder or overthrow
Hitler -- not because of naiveté but because of commerce. It was
the
Depression. There were Germans trying to overthrow Hitler, but the U.S.
and Britain and their industries were obstructing that effort.
Baker shows that the Japanese, as early as 1934, were complaining that
Roosevelt was deliberately provoking them. In January 1941, Japan
protested the U.S. military buildup in Hawaii. Joseph Grew, our
ambassador to Japan, reported rumors that the Japanese response would
be a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor. Yet according to World War II
mythology, America was blissfully sleeping, unprepared for war, when
caught by surprise by the dastardly "sneak attack." (Isn't it curious
that Asians carry out "sneak attacks," whereas Westerners launch
"preemptive strikes"?) A year earlier, Baker shows, Roosevelt began
planning the bombing of Japan -- which had invaded China, but with
which we were not at war -- from Chinese air bases with American planes
and, when necessary, American pilots. Pearl Harbor was a purely
military target, but Roosevelt wanted to bomb Japanese cities with
incendiary bombs; he'd been assured that their cities would burn fast,
being made largely of wood and paper.
Roosevelt evinced no desire to negotiate. In fact, Baker writes, in
October he "began leaking the news of his new war plan," with $100
billion earmarked for airplanes alone. Grew again warned Roosevelt that
he was pushing Japan toward armed conflict with the United States, but
the president continued his war preparations. Finally, the night before
the Japanese attack, Roosevelt sent a message to Emperor Hirohito
calling for talks. He read it to the Chinese ambassador, remarking that
he thought the message would "be fine for the record."
People are going to get really angry at Baker for criticizing their
favorite war. But he hasn't fashioned his tale from gossip. It is
documented, with copious notes and attributions. The grace of these
well-ordered snapshots is that there is no diatribe; you are left to
put things together yourself. Read "Human Smoke." It may be one of the
most important books you will ever read. It could help the world to
understand that there is no Just War, there is just war -- and that
wars are not caused by isolationists and peaceniks but by the promoters
of warfare. *
Mark Kurlansky is a journalist and the author, most recently, of
"Nonviolence: 25 Lessons From the History of a Dangerous Idea."
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times