About Contact Archives RSS Columns Photos

Remembering Pearl Harbor

By Michelle Malkin  •  December 7, 2006 09:06 AM

Sixty-five years ago today:

ph.jpg

phnews.jpg

VDH:

[I]n those days, peace and reconstruction followed rather than preceded victory. In tough-minded fashion, we offered ample aid to, and imposed democracy on, war-torn nations only after the enemy was utterly defeated and humiliated. Today, to avoid such carnage, we try to help and reform countries before our enemies have been vanquished —putting the cart of aid before the horse of victory.

Our efforts today are further complicated by conflicting Internet fatwas, terrorist militias and shifting tribal alliances; in short, we are not always sure who the enemy cadre really is — or will be.

So paradoxes follow:

A stronger, far more affluent United States believes it can use less of its power against the terrorists than a much poorer America did against the formidable Japanese and Germans.

World War II, which saw more than 400,000 Americans killed, was not nearly as controversial or frustrating as one that has so far taken less than one-hundredth of that terrible toll.

And after Pearl Harbor, Americans believed they had no margin of error in an elemental war for survival. Today, we are apparently convinced that we can lose ground, whether in Afghanistan or Iraq, and still not lose either the war or our civilization.

Of course, by 1945, Americans no longer feared another Pearl Harbor. Yet, we, in a far stronger and larger United States, are still not sure we won’t see another Sept. 11.

Dan Riehl: We Have No Claim To Pearl Harbor Day

Pearl Harbor survivors gather for final reunion:

In the decades since the bombing of Pearl Harbor, countless survivors have made the long journey back to Hawaii every five years to remember comrades who were lost and to catch up with those who lived but later went their separate ways. They drink Scotch and tell war stories; they brag and weep. They often just sit together and say nothing at all.

But this year’s reunion holds an urgency that hasn’t been part of gatherings past: Most Pearl Harbor survivors, nearing their 90s or even older, say it will be their final trip back to this place that changed the course of their lives and their nation forever. Event organizers–many of them children of survivors who are ailing or already have died–pragmatically are calling this the “final reunion.” And survivors’ extended families, including children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren, are coming along to the reunion in unprecedented numbers to glimpse history firsthand through their loved one’s eyes before the opportunity is gone.

“This is their last swan song,” said Sue Marks, an event volunteer whose father, a Pearl Harbor survivor, died a decade ago. “They know that a lot of them either won’t be around in five years or won’t be able to make the long trip.”

Rick Moran revisits the familiar-sounding debate over Pearl Harbor intelligence and pays tribute to the dwindling number of survivors:

Every year, the ranks of veterans who lived through that horrific day when the water caught fire and the harbor was choked with the bodies of the living and the dead, grows thinner. They are old men now. Their memories are still tinged with the sadness that comes from the realization that soon, they will all be gone and, like other landmarks in American history such as Gettysburg and Antietam, it will be up to the rest of us to keep the remembrances alive and never, ever forget what happened on that impossibly beautiful Sunday morning when the world turned upside down and changed all of us forever.

Dave Logan links to archival resources and a nice video tribute:

Flashback: Patriotism and Pearl Harbor

Previous:

Pearl Harbor - 64 years
Remembering Pearl Harbor
An overlooked great American

Posted in: War

See what others have said

Note from Michelle: This section is for comments from michellemalkin.com's community of registered readers. Please don't assume that I agree with or endorse any particular comment just because I let it stand. A reminder: Anyone who fails to comply with my terms of use may lose his or her posting privilege.

Trackbacks

  1. Blogs of War
  2. Chronicles of War
  3. Stuck On Stupid
  4. Below The Beltway
  5. American Pugilist Citizen
  6. The Political Pit Bull
  7. Leaning Straight Up
  8. Vox
  9. Slapstick Politics
  10. InstaPunk
  11. It Shines For All
  12. A Blog For All
  13. Bill's Bites
  14. Captain's Quarters
  15. TacJammer
  16. California Conservative
  17. The Max Factor
  18. Mike's Noise
  19. Sand In The Hourglass
  20. Webloggin
  21. The Cassandra Page
  22. reverse_vampyr
  23. Babalu Blog
  24. ThreadingWater
  25. Google Blog
  26. Google Blog
  27. Google Blog
  28. Google Blog

Trackback URL

You must be logged in to post a comment.

The next MSM brouhaha: McCain’s joke about cigarette exports to Iran

July 8, 2008 09:41 PM by Michelle Malkin

36 Comments | 0 Trackbacks

“Maybe that’s a way of killing ‘em.”

Hunger-striking Gitmo inmate returns to his job with Al-Jazeera

July 5, 2008 10:35 PM by see-dubya

90 Comments | 3 Trackbacks

The Green, Green Grass of Home

Narcoterrorists. I hate these guys.

July 5, 2008 02:34 PM by see-dubya

23 Comments | 0 Trackbacks

Precursors to terror. Plus a similar case in Mexico.

Free Iraqis Pimp Their Rides

July 3, 2008 12:53 PM by see-dubya

45 Comments | 3 Trackbacks

Gearheads set free.

America is losing its fear of terrorist attacks

July 2, 2008 02:03 PM by see-dubya

165 Comments | 0 Trackbacks

Thanks, George W. Bush!

Interview with a Hollywood patriot

July 2, 2008 11:37 AM by Michelle Malkin

53 Comments | 2 Trackbacks

A Jeremiah Wright impersonator at the Philly Inquirer

July 2, 2008 11:12 AM by Michelle Malkin

111 Comments | 3 Trackbacks

Have an unhappy Independence Day! (Photo: Protest Shooter)

Picture worth a thousand words

July 1, 2008 04:02 PM by Michelle Malkin

81 Comments | 5 Trackbacks

“Trust.”


Categories: War


Marginal Revolution

» What is mystery ingredient X?