HISTORICAL NOTES: MacArthur & Yalta
When the State Department made public the Yalta record (TIME, March 28), Senate Democrats hastened to defend Franklin D. Roosevelt's secret concessions to the U.S.S.R. by blaming his military advisersnotably General Douglas MacArthur. The fact that U.S. strategists urged Soviet entry into the Pacific war was taken to justify the Roosevelt deal made at Yalta. Senator Herbert Lehman attacked MacArthur, directly on the ground that he "urgently recommended that Soviet Russia be involved in the war against Japan." The two sides of the argument were talking about different questions: 1) Was it desirable that Russia enter the war? 2) Were the concessions justified? Last week, in a 40,000-word postscript to the 500,000-word Yalta record, the Defense Department released the supposed gist of all "major official military advice given on the question of Soviet participation in the war against Japan." It turned out that MacArthur sent his opinions on the subject to Washington only twice during the war:
¶In December 1941, right after Pearl Harbor, he cabled that "entry of Russia is enemy greatest fear" and called for "immediate attack on Japan from the North."
¶In June 1945, three-and-a-half years later, when President Truman was considering the projected U.S. invasion of Japan, MacArthur's advice was requested. He noted, among other favorable factors: "The hazard and loss will be greatly lessened if an attack is launched from Siberia sufficiently ahead of our target date to commit the enemy to major combat."
"Essential." The report contained no recommendations or statements of any kind from MacArthur relating to Yalta. But the New York Times and much of the U.S. press headlined reports filed by two War Department staff officers who discussed Pacific strategy with MacArthur in the Philippines in February 1945. Both reported that he considered a Soviet attack against the Japanese forces in Manchuria "essential." One said: "He emphatically stated that we must not invade Japan proper unless the Russian army is previously committed to action in Manchuria." The other quoted him as saying, "We should make every effort to get Russia into the Japanese war." The talks had no effect on Yalta, because the Yalta conference was already over.
Some leading Democrats, after reading the record last week, declared that the report vindicated Roosevelt's conduct at Yalta. New York's Lehman said: "General MacArthur's views were represented to President Roosevelt as being exactly what I said. I am satisfied."
"Fantastic." In a public statement, MacArthur himself said: "The report of the Department of Defense fully confirms that I was never consulted concerning the Yalta conference, that I exercised no influence whatsoever thereon and knew nothing about its secret agreements until after they had been consummated and communicated to me. The report furthermore clearly demonstrates that the basis of such agreements lay in decisions taken by the State Department on political policy and the Joint Chiefs of Staff on military policy long before Yalta.
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