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Contributors
Daniel Pipes- Contributor
Daniel
Pipes is director of the Middle
East Forum, a member of the
presidentially-appointed board of the U.S.
Institute of Peace,
and a prize-winning columnist for the New York Sun and The
Jerusalem Post. His most recent book, Miniatures:
Views of Islamic and Middle Eastern Politics (Transaction
Publishers) appeared in late 2003. His website, DanielPipes.org,
the single most accessed source of information specifically
on
the Middle East and Islam, offers an archive and a chance
to sign-up to receive his new materials as they appear. [go
to Pipes index]
Why
the Japanese Internment Still Matters
Profile the threat...
[Daniel Pipes] 12/2904
For years,
it has been my
position that the threat of radical Islam implies an imperative
to focus security measures on Muslims. If searching for rapists,
one looks only at the male population. Similarly, if searching
for Islamists (adherents of radical Islam), one looks at the
Muslim population.
And so, I
was encouraged by a just-released Cornell
University opinion survey that finds nearly half the U.S.
population agreeing with this proposition. Specifically, 44
percent of Americans believe that government authorities should
direct special attention toward Muslims living in America,
either by registering their whereabouts, profiling them, monitoring
their mosques, or infiltrating their organizations.
Also encouraging,
the survey finds the more people follow TV news, the more likely
they are to support these common-sense steps. Those who are
best informed about current issues, in other words, are also
the most sensible about adopting self-evident defensive measures.
That's the
good news; the bad news is the near-universal disapproval of
this realism. Leftist and Islamist organizations have so successfully
intimidated public opinion that polite society shies away from
endorsing a focus on Muslims.
In America,
this intimidation results in large part from a revisionist
interpretation of the evacuation, relocation, and internment
of ethnic Japanese during World War II. Although more than
60 years past, these events matter yet deeply today, permitting
the victimization lobby, in compensation for the supposed horrors
of internment, to condemn in advance any use of ethnicity,
nationality, race, or religion in formulating domestic security
policy.
Denying that
the treatment of ethnic Japanese resulted from legitimate national
security concerns, this lobby has established that it resulted solely
from a combination of "wartime hysteria" and "racial prejudice." As
radical groups like the American Civil Liberties Union wield
this interpretation, in the words of Michelle
Malkin, "like a bludgeon over the War on Terror debate," they
pre-empt efforts to build an effective defense against today's
Islamist enemy.
Fortunately,
the intrepid Ms. Malkin, a columnist and specialist on immigration
issues, has re-opened the internment file. Her recently published
book, bearing the provocative title In
Defense of Internment: The Case for Racial Profiling in World
War II and the War on Terror (Regnery), starts with
the unarguable premise that in time of war, "the survival of
the nation comes first." From there, she draws the corollary
that "Civil liberties are not sacrosanct."
She then
reviews the historical record of the early 1940s and finds
that:
-
Within
hours of the attacks on Pearl Harbor, two American citizens
of Japanese ancestry, with no prior history of anti-Americanism,
shockingly collaborated with a Japanese soldier against
their fellow Hawaiians.
-
The Japanese
government established "an extensive espionage network
within the United States" believed to include hundreds
of agents.
-
In contrast
to loose talk about "American
concentration camps," the relocation camps for Japanese
were "spartan facilities that were for the most part administered
humanely." As proof, she notes that over 200 individuals
voluntarily chose to move into the camps.
-
The relocation
process itself won praise from Carey McWilliams, a contemporary
leftist critic (and future editor of the Nation), for taking
place "without a hitch."
-
A federal
panel that reviewed these issues in 1981-83, the Commission
on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians, was,
Ms. Malkin explains, "Stacked with left-leaning lawyers,
politicians, and civil rights activists but not a single
military officer or intelligence expert."
-
The apology
for internment by Ronald Reagan in 1988, in addition to
the nearly $1.65 billion in reparations paid to former
internees was premised on faulty scholarship. In particular,
it largely ignored the top-secret decoding of Japanese
diplomatic traffic, codenamed the MAGIC messages, which
revealed Tokyo's plans to exploit Japanese-Americans.
Ms. Malkin
has done the singular service of breaking the academic single-note
scholarship on a critical subject, cutting through a shabby,
stultifying consensus to reveal how, "given what was known
and not known at the time," President Roosevelt and his staff
did the right thing.
She correctly
concludes that, especially in time of war, governments should
take into account nationality, ethnicity, and religious affiliation
in their homeland security policies and engage in what she
calls "threat profiling." These steps may entail bothersome
or offensive measures but, she argues, they are preferable
to "being incinerated at your office desk by a flaming hijacked
plane." tRO
This
piece first appeared in the New
York Sun
copyright
2004 Daniel Pipes
§
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