Monday 15 February 2010

The Fall of Singapore

World War Two: 68 years ago on February 15, Britain suffered the worst humiliation in its military history - the surrender of Singapore.

The photograph sums it up: General Arthur Percival, the British commander in Malaya, and fellow officers, walking forlornly towards the Japanese commanders to sign the dismal surrender. With their baggy shorts, knee-length socks and tin helmets, one carries the Union Jack, another - the white flag of surrender. Escorting them, three Japanese soldiers, or 'little men' as the British military elite referred to them.

The 'Gibraltar of the East'.
British Malaya was considered a strategic stronghold within the eastern Empire, and the island of Singapore, on the southern tip of Malaya, the 'Gibraltar of the East'. A huge naval defence system had been built during the 1920s facing south out to sea. To the north of the island lay 500 miles of dense Malayan jungle considered by the British to be impenetrable.

"I never received a more direct shock."
But on December 8, 1941, the day after their attack on Pearl Habor, the Japanese landed on the north-west tip of Malaya and from there headed south. Two days later, on December 10, the Japanese sunk two British warships off the east coast of Malaya – the HMS Prince of Wales and Repulse. Years later, Churchill wrote, “In all the war, I never received a more direct shock.”

Bad for morale
However on the mainland, the British were not, at this stage, overly concerned, overestimating the defensive nature of the jungle and underestimating the character of the Japanese soldier. Until early January Percival prohibited the building of defences on Singapore's north coast, believing that to do so would be bad for morale.

But within six weeks of landing in Malaya the Japanese were within striking distance of Singapore. Unaware of how numerically inferior the enemy, an impressive bluff perpetuated by the Japanese, the British and Commonwealth troops panicked at the speed of the Japanese advance, and retreated to Singapore, destroying the causeway between the mainland and the island. The Japanese merely built a new causeway and poured onto the island.

"The honour of the British Army is at stake."
On February 10, Churchill ordered: "The battle must be fought to the bitter end at all costs… Commanders and senior officers should die with their troops. The honour of the British Empire and the British Army is at stake."

But despite Churchill's unusually severe missive, British discipline broke, panic set in, and the cause was lost. On February 15, 1942, the British surrendered.

The myth of the invincibility of the European soldier was shattered and over 80,000 British and Commonwealth troops were to spend the rest of the war in captivity.

Rupert Colley
Read all about World War Two in just sixty minutes at historyinanhour.com

Tuesday 9 February 2010

McCarthy and McCarthyism - Reds Under the Beds

Aggressive, intimidating, and unfazed by the truth, Joe McCarthy single-handedly whipped 1950s USA into a frenzy of anti-communist fear and paranoia.

It was near the beginning of the Cold War: the Soviet Union had surged ahead of America in the arms race, Chairman Mao had not long come to power in China, and Americans everywhere feared the presence of 'Reds Under the Beds' within their own communities. In stepped Joseph McCarthy to shock the nation with a sensational announcement that confirmed their worst fears.

McCarthy exposes the Reds
On this evening, sixty years ago, February 9, 1950, at a Republican Women's Club meeting in West Virginia, when 41-year-old McCarthy declared that he had in his hand a list of 205 names of State Department employees known to be members of the American Communist Party. (A month later, McCarthy had reduced the figure to fifty-seven.)

These informants, said McCarthy, were passing on information to the Soviet Union: "The reason why we find ourselves in a position of impotency is not because the enemy has sent men to invade our shores, but rather because of the traitorous actions of those who have had all the benefits that the wealthiest nation on earth has had to offer."

And so began the era of the Communist witch-hunts. The eruption of the Korean War four months later with the Communist North invading the democratic South Korea, merely confirmed the aggressiveness of global communism.

McCarthy's rise
A Republican, Joseph McCarthy slandered his opponents on his way up the political pole, accusing them in turn of senility, financial irregularity, draft-dodging, and war profiteering. But when his own political career came under threat with claims that he had lied about his role during the war, McCarthy played on American's fear of Communism, and overnight became the most talked about politician in America.

Red Hollywood
Hollywood, already under suspicion, became the target of McCarthy's intense scrutiny. From the struggling novice to the stars, actors were interrogated. Those who confessed could wipe the slate clean by repenting and providing names of others. One screenwriter named 162 Hollywood actors, writers or directors who were Communist, ex-Commie, or sympathetic to the socialist cause. Many were purged, not to work again for years. Others fled abroad rather than face their turn in the McCarthy spotlight.

The studios, desperate to claw back the trust of the American people, turned out a series of propagandist films, I Married a Communist, or I Was A communist for the FBI (which won the 1951 Oscar for Best Documentary).

Next in McCarthy's glare came the universities, the "Reducators" of the impressionable American youth. Libraries were targeted and 30,000 anti-American titles banned from the shelves.

Joe and Ilk
Republican President candidate, Dwight Eisenhower, disliked McCarthy but needed his support to win the 1952 election. McCarthy had the gall to accuse George C. Marshall, originator of the post-Second World War Marshall Plan, of having communist leanings and being “part of a conspiracy so immense, an infamy so black, as to dwarf any in the history of man.” Eisenhower planned to defend Marshall but, concerned at losing McCarthy's support at such a vital time, failed to do so.

Once in power Eisenhower still felt reluctant to pull in the increasing excesses of McCarthyism, which by now were targeting members of Eisenhower's administration. "Attacking him," said one purged victim, "is regarded as a certain method of committing suicide.”

In 1953 a young New York couple, the Rosenbergs, were executed for passing atomic secrets to the Soviets. The case intensified still further the paranoia of mid-50s America. McCarthyism was rampant.

McCarthy takes on the US Army
In 1954 McCarthy decided to take on the US Army, right up to the Secretary of the Army, Robert Stevens. The army, according to McCarthy, was full of "dangerous spies". The Republican Party tried to stop their renegade senator but too late - the subsequent investigations based on McCarthy's allegations were televised throughout a 36-day hearing.

The nation watched aghast as McCarthy shouted, heckled and bullied his way through the hearing, with little regard for etiquette or procedure and failing to back up his wild claims with any substantial evidence.

Fall from grace
This time he had gone too far. The media, for so long in awe of McCarthy, attacked him for his "degrading travesty of the democratic process". The Republican Party finally brought his misadventures to an end and in December 1954 stripped him of office, asking of McCarthy on live television: "You have done enough. Have you no sense of decency sir, at long last? Have you left no sense of decency?"

McCarthy faded into obscurity. "McCarthyism," said Eisenhower, "was now "McCarthywasm."

Already an alcoholic, McCarthy drank himself into hospital and on May 2, 1957, aged only 48, died of an inflammation of the liver.

Rupert Colley
To learn more about the Cold War, see the History In An Hour ebook The Cold War In An Hour