cover image Cultures of War: Pearl Harbor, Hiroshima, 9-11, Iraq

Cultures of War: Pearl Harbor, Hiroshima, 9-11, Iraq

John W. Dower, Norton, $29.95 (640p) ISBN 9780393061505

In this fascinating study, Pulitzer prize-wining historian Dower (Embracing Defeat) draws parallels between the illusion-ridden Japanese top leadership prior to December 7, 1941 and the fecklessness and over-confidence of the Bush Administration after September 11, 2001. The author compares the post-war occupations as well, stating that “Wishful thinking trumped rational analysis in Tokyo in 1941 and Washington in the run-up to war with Iraq.” Exploring “the similar rationales and rhetoric of Japan's war of choice in 1941 and America's [invasion of Iraq] in 2003,” he looks at the way in which emotion-laden terms like “Pearl Harbor” and “ground zero” have been co-opted for the War against Terror. And similarly mistaken, in Dower's view, were the beliefs of both commands in the efficacy of bombings targeting civilian populations. Equally telling is his comparison between the occupation of Japan (and to a lesser extent, Germany) and the occupation of Iraq. After Japan's surrender, the U.S. military formulated a set of pre-determined goals based upon New Deal principles that laid the groundwork for Japan's extraordinary economic recovery. In Dower's view, the U.S. not only abdicated responsibility for the Iraqi occupation, but ignored the potential of the sectarian divisions that have erupted there. (Sept.)