The
telephone call came early in the morning on Saturday, November 15, 1941, in the
Washington, D.C., home of Robert L. Sherrod. He had been expecting a busy day, as
he needed to pack for a trip to cover U.S. Army maneuvers in North Carolina as
part of his work as Time magazine’s
military reporter. The 295,000 members of infantry and mechanized units set to
clash in the region between the Catawba and Dee Rivers needed to train all they
could that fall. Nazi Germany soldiers had already overrun much of Europe and
were closing in on Moscow, the capital of the Soviet Union. Closer to America’s
own shores, German U-boats ruled the Atlantic Ocean, daring even to sink ships
from the U.S. Navy.
Sherrod
had been in Washington, D.C., as correspondent for Time Inc.’s office in the
nation’s capital since 1936 and had seen the staff grow from two people to
twelve for the three publications in Henry Luce’s empire—Time, Life, and Fortune. Since June 1941, however,
Sherrod had switched from the political beat to covering the slow buildup of American
military forces. It had been a long, uphill fight to respectability for an
American army that ranked seventeenth in size and combat ability, just behind
Romania, when Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939.
In the
summer of 1941 Sherrod had traveled to the swamps of Louisiana to report on how
approximately 400,000 U.S. troops fared in maneuvers—then the largest the army
had ever held—that ranged over an area of 3,400 square miles under the
direction of General Lesley J. McNair, chief of staff, General Headquarters,
U.S. Army.
The reporters
covering the maneuvers, including Sherrod, had been impressed with what they
had observed of the soldiers, some of whom were equipped not with the modern weapons
needed for battle, but ersatz substitutes (wooden signs marked where machine
guns, antiaircraft guns, and foxholes should have been situated on the
battlefield). “These maneuvers have been very good for the army,” said Sherrod.
“There have been a lot of mistakes, but they have learned a lot. It’s a good
thing. . . . Their morale is much better than it was two or three months ago.
For one thing, they have to work so hard during maneuvers they dont have time
to think about morale. Morale among the Armored Forces and Air Forces and among
all the Southern troops, who are busting to get into war, is especially high.”
At his
house in Washington in December preparing to cover additional army maneuvers,
these in North Carolina, Sherrod was surprised to have his packing interrupted
by a telephone call from Lieutenant Colonel Stanley Grogan, the War
Department’s deputy chief of public relations. “Can you come to a secret conference
with General [George] Marshall at 10:15?” Grogan asked. Sherrod agreed, and
Grogan promptly hung up the phone, as he had calls to place to other
journalists.
Including Sherrod, seven Washington
correspondents—Ernest Lindley of Newsweek,
Charles Hurd of the New York Times,
Bert Andrews of the New York Herald
Tribune, Eddie Bomar of the Associated Press, Lyle Wilson of United Press,
and Harold Slater of the International News Service—gathered in Marshall’s
office at the Munitions Building for what Sherrod remembered as “the most
astonishing press conference” he ever attended in a journalism career that
spanned more than three decades.
Filing
into Marshall’s office, Sherrod observed that the general stood before a
massive map of the Pacific, embellished with, as Sherrod noted, “connecting
semicircles and quarter circles.” Marshall, the army’s chief of staff since
1939, impressed the Time reporter,
who described him as exuding “the same sort of integrity one finds in a
[Gilbert] Stuart portrait of [George] Washington.” Marshall started off by saying
he was embarrassed at calling a press conference that would not produce any
news, as what he had to say had to be considered top secret. Dressed in
civilian clothes, as he customarily did in peacetime, the sixty-year-old
Marshall told the assembled reporters that there were some things he wanted to
tell them, Sherrod recalled, “in order that our interpretations of current and
forthcoming events did not upset essential military strategy of the United States.
In other words: Be careful what you print.”
Without
raising his voice, the general said, “The United States is on the brink of war
with Japan.” Sherrod was not surprised by this statement, as anyone who had
been reading the newspapers knew that relations between the two countries “had
gone from bad to terrible, particularly since President Roosevelt had frozen
Japanese assets four months earlier, which effectually cut off Japan’s oil
supply.” If war did break out, Marshall said the United States had an asset the
Japanese did not know about, as the American military had “access to a leak in
all the information the Japanese are receiving concerning our military
preparations, especially in the Philippines,” where General Douglas MacArthur
had been called back to active duty as commander of army forces in the Far
East.
“In
other words,” Sherrod quoted Marshall as saying, “we know what they know about
us, and they don’t know that we know it.” The reporters did not know it at the
time, but they had been given a hint at one of the government’s most closely
guarded secrets—American cryptographers had been able to decipher Japan’s
diplomatic code, an operation codenamed MAGIC, and could intercept and decode
the messages sent from Tokyo to Japan’s overseas embassies (U.S. Navy
cryptographers later broke the Japanese Imperial Fleet’s code, helping win the
crucial Battle of Midway).
Marshall
told the reporters that counter to what the Japanese believed, the United
States was not only prepared to defend the Philippines, but that the American
military also expected to undertake the offensive against Japan. In addition to
sending a large number of advanced B-17 Flying Fortresses to MacArthur,
Marshall said shipments were headed to the general that included the military’s
new 75-mm gun, as well as tanks and dive-bombing units that had participated in
the recent maneuvers in Louisiana.
“This
information will be allowed to leak to the Japanese (it is miraculous that they
haven’t learned about the Flying Fortresses, but the two attempts that have
been made to publish the fact have been thwarted),” Sherrod wrote in a
confidential memorandum about the meeting to his Time editor, David Hulburd. “But it must be allowed to leak
privately, from the White House or the State Department directly to Japanese
officials. . . . If it got out publicly, the Army fanatics in Japan would be in
a position to demand war immediately, before we were better fortified.” If the
leak went only to the right officials, they could, Sherrod added, say to top
members of the Japanese government that the Americans meant to bomb their
cities and possessed the means to do so. “In that way,” Sherrod wrote, “no
public face-saving would be necessary, and war might be averted. The last thing
the U.S. wants is a war with Japan which would divide our strength. The Germans
are pushing the Japanese from 19 directions to get them into war with the U.S.,
as everybody knows.”
Marshall
told the assembled reporters that if war did break out with Japan, the United
States would “fight mercilessly,” intending to send B-17s on missions to set
the country’s paper cities ablaze, and the Flying Fortresses would soon be
joined by the new, long-range B-24 Liberator bombers. “Nothing that I am
telling you today is publishable, even in hinted form,” Marshall warned the
journalists.
One
aspect of a war with Japan had gone without mention by the army chief of
staff—the role the American navy would play in the Pacific. Given that a number
of the country’s fighting ships had been diverted to the Atlantic to meet the
U-boat threat, Marshall, in a comment that seems incredible in light of what
was to come, stated, according to Sherrod’s account: “The grand strategy
doesn’t include the use of much naval force.” (Navy men
to whom Sherrod talked to expressed confidence they could “polish off the
little bastards” in a matter of three or maybe six months, he recalled.) Marshall
believed that U.S. bombers would be sufficient to deter Japanese naval
strength, with America’s “high flying big bombers” able to wreak havoc on the
enemy. Sherrod noted that army air corps officers were enthusiastic about their
bombers’ ability to drop their loads “into a pickle barrel from 15,000 feet”
with the aid of the top-secret Norden bombsight. The bombers did display
considerable accuracy, he added, at least “on a clear day with no enemy to
harass them.”
Gasoline
and bombs were already in place at landing fields in Australia, New Zealand,
and Borneo, Sherrod reported, as well as a half dozen other spots, and supplies
were being sent to India, where the British were not yet prepared to protect
shipping in the Indian Ocean. Marshall warned the reporters that the “danger
period” for the United States was the first ten days of December. “If we get by
that, we’re OK until February,” Sherrod wrote. “By then MacArthur will have
plenty in the Philippines.”
(Unfortunately, the dive bombers never made it
to the Philippines, nor did the additional B-17s. A few weeks after the December 7 Japanese attack on
the American fleet at Pearl Harbor in the Hawaiian Islands, and its subsequent
quick dispatch of U.S. aircraft in the Philippines, Sherrod was part of another
media conference with Marshall in Washington. His only recollection of that
meeting is the general “shaking his head and saying: ‘It’s all clear to me now
except one thing. I just don’t know how MacArthur happened to let his planes
get caught on the ground.’”)
In spite
of admonitions from Marshall that his remarks should be kept in confidence, news
reports about the general’s assessment of the coming conflict with Japan slowly
began to make their way into print. On November 19, just a few days after
Marshall’s media conference, the New York
Times ran an article by Arthur Krock that outlined how the long-accepted
view that the United States would not defend the Philippines in case of an
attack by Japan had been altered and now America had the ability “to attack any
far Eastern power that strikes at the island.”
Sherrod
also played a role in passing along what he had learned from Marshall,
confiding in a friend, fellow reporter Ralph McGill. The two men had worked
together at the Atlanta Constitution—McGill,
at first, in the newspaper’s sports department and Sherrod as the “greenest cub
reporter.” After finishing his assignment covering the army maneuvers in the
Carolinas in early December, Sherrod had lunch in Atlanta with McGill, now
editorial page editor for the Constitution.
Sounding off in all of his Washington wisdom, Sherrod relayed to his friend
that the United States was soon “bound to be at war with the Japs.”
On
December 2, in his column “One Word More,” McGill passed along to his readers
an “interesting story” he had heard—the Japanese had been told by the American
government that it was determined to defend the Philippines and could launch a
counter-attack on any foe in the Pacific from its bases on the archipelago. “This
country is ready to go to war with Japan,” McGill wrote. “Japan now knows it.
She knows what some of our plans are. She reportedly knows what we have
[militarily] in the Philippines.” McGill went on to write that the Roosevelt
administration preferred a course of peace, and saw “no reason to fight Japan
so long as Japan does not encroach on our interests.” Still, the columnist
concluded, because the Japanese government was firmly “in the grip of a
military clique which must fight to survive,” Japan would likely “go to war
even though the people do not want it. It looks like war and that soon.”
After
his meeting with McGill, Sherrod flew to U.S. Army Air Corps command
headquarters in Tampa, Florida, staying there a day or two during a bout of miserable
weather waiting for the skies to clear for a flight home to Washington. He
arrived in Washington about noon on December 7, immediately going to bed with a
cold. “My wife woke me about 3:30 [p.m.], and announced calmly: ‘The Japs are
bombing Pearl Harbor.’ I knew then I wouldn’t be in the U.S. much longer.”
He was
correct. By February 1942 Sherrod, joined by thirteen other correspondents and
photographers from a variety of news agencies, was on his way to Australia on a
convoy with army troops sent to bolster the meager defenses against a possible
Japanese attack—a situation that correspondent John Lardner of the North
American News Alliance grimly recalled as “the unready and peace-loving [the
United States] against the swift, hungry, and prepared [Japan].”
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