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SUNDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1941

As a US Army Captain, I was stationed on Oahu, Hawaii, in the mid-1970s. Our house in Pearl City overlooked Pearl Harbor. In the military and later as a civilian working for the Department of Defense, I visited Hawaii dozens of times until I retired from government service in 2007.

 

Living there and visiting so often, I had a different perspective, of course, than the tourist who only visits Hawaii once or twice. Still, I couldn't drive by the USS Arizona Memorial or, after 1998, the battleship USS Missouri without remembering the events of December 7, 1941. And I couldn't stand on either and look down at the sunken hulk of the USS Arizona with oil still seeping from it and where bodies of 1102 of the 1177 sailors remain entombed without thinking about what it must have been like that day.

 

I was only a few hundred yards from  from the Pentagon on September, 11, 2001. I heard the plane crash into the building, saw the column of smoke, and smelled the burning jet fuel. A few months later when I visited Hawaii, I went again to the Arizona Memorial. This time I had an even deeper understanding of the shock and surprise the men of the Arizona must have experienced.

 

With each passing year, the memory of that "day of infamy" fades further in the American consciousness. For many, it's becomes just another tourist attraction. A nation at war, America would do well to keep the memories of the attacks of December 7, 1941 and September 11, 2001 alive.

 

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9/11 CONSPIRACY THEORIES - The Disservice They Do

The resignation of White House “green-jobs czar” Van Jones because he signed a “truther” petition calling for an investigation of US government involvement in the attacks on 9/11 reminds us of the prevalence of 9/11 conspiracy theories. Large numbers of Americans believe them. In doing so, wittingly and unwittingly, they do a great disservice to the millions of dedicated men and women who serve them.
 
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COVERING UP IS HARD TO DO

The following post is the sidebar from my September 14, 2009, column on 9/11 conspiracy theories.
 
The belief that President Roosevelt knew in advance about Pearl Harbor has long been put to rest for all but the most die-hard conspiracy theorists. By late 1941 Military Intelligence officers and Roosevelt administration officials expected that Japan would ultimately attack US forces somewhere in the Pacific. They just didn't know where, and they didn't expect an attack while discussions with the Japanese were ongoing. The world has now long known that we had broken the Japanese codes and that even the last message decoded on December 7 did not reveal the target of their attack.
 
The Warren Commission did not have all the facts when it published its 1964 report on the Kennedy assassination. Since then, however, numerous independent groups, including CBS News, have studied them and have agreed with the commission's findings. No credible inside information has ever corroborated accusations that the US government covered up involvement of anyone else complicit in Kennedy's assassination other than Oswald.
 

In order for hundreds or even a few living American servicemen to have been knowingly left behind in Vietnam after 1975 by the US government hundreds, if not thousands, of US military personnel and government employees would have had to have been complicit in the cover up. That's how many people had access to the most sensitive classified information on POWs and MIAs. At the Direction of President George H.W. Bush, all information dealing with the Vietnam POWs and MIAs was declassified. Despite claims to the contrary, no credible evidence exists to prove any living American remained in captivity after the war.

 
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