Racing the Enemy: Stalin, Truman, and the Surrender of Japan.
Allison, William Thomas
Racing the Enemy: Stalin, Truman, and the Surrender of Japan, by
Tsuyoshi Hasegawa. Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press,
2005. ix, 382 pp. $29.95 US (cloth), $18.95 US (paper).
Racing the Enemy is a compelling work of scholarship on the end of
the Pacific war. This provocative book challenges current paradigms
explaining the use of the atomic bombs and Japan's decision to
surrender in August 1945. Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, a Professor of History and
Director of the Center for Cold War Studies at the University of
California at Santa Barbara, offers a new and intriguing framework to
reconsider the final months of the Pacific war from the viewpoints of
the United States, Russia, and Japan. This is a very significant book
and should be read by all specialists in international relations and
diplomatic history.
Rather than massive destruction of the two atomic bombs, Hasegawa
argues that the looming threat of the Soviet Union's entry into the
war instead forced Japan to capitulate. Further, Hasegawa suggests that
Soviet leader Joseph Stalin intentionally misled members of Japan's
"peace" faction, who put out feelers for a Soviet-brokered
peace, in order to buy time to deploy military forces to ensure rewards
promised at Yalta. Fearing the Pacific war might end too soon, Stalin
manoeuvered to maximize his spoils, while the United States hastened to
end the war as soon as possible to deny Stalin his Yalta rewards and a
role in post-war Japan. For Japan, the massing of Soviet forces in the
East, according to Hasegawa, ended all hope of a negotiated end to the
war. For the United States, the atomic bombs served much less to
intimidate Stalin than to simply limit Soviet influence in the East by
ending the war sooner rather than later, when Soviet forces would have
made such advances as to warrant a greater role in the post-war
settlement. Such conclusions place the impact of the atomic bombs in an
entirely different light.
Hasegawa convincingly outlines the Truman administration's
internal discussions about how to end the war against Japan. The
principal catalysts for debate were the desire to avoid an invasion of
the Japanese home islands and the question of whether to allow the
emperor of Japan to retain his throne. Intensive discussion about these
two issues were further complicated by the imminent Soviet entry into
the war. Likewise, Hasegawa reveals the deep divisions within the
Japanese government during 1945 over how to end the war and details how
the "peace" and "military" factions within the
Japanese government argued over how to ensure the best end in a war both
factions conceded was more or less lost.
Hasegawa's most significant contribution, however, may be his
discussion of the inner workings of the Soviet government during the
last weeks of the war. Stalin played both ends at once by simultaneously
keeping the door for mediation just open enough for Japanese diplomats
to maintain hope for peace. In the meantime, Stalin swiftly moved
military forces from west to east in preparation for offensive
operations against Japanese forces in Manchuria. In many ways, the
Soviet Union, the United States, and the Empire of Japan were indeed
"racing" each other to end the war on the best terms possible.
Hasegawa masterfully uses primary material from American, Soviet,
and Japanese archives. Much of the material from Japanese and Soviet
archives is new and enlightening. This is the first major work to
effectively bring together such research from the three languages--this
alone is a significant achievement. Hasegawa ably weaves together this
complex story in a cogent, lucid manner that illuminates the many
perspectives, as well as personalities, represented in the Japanese,
Soviet, and American governments.
Make no mistake, this is revisionist history, but it is
well-grounded revisionist history with sound interpretation based upon
solid research. Hasegawa's conclusions will certainly stir debate
among historians, as already evidenced on online discussion lists such
as H-DIPLO, and this may have been an underlying purpose. Whether or not
Hasegawa's ideas are completely acceptable, his work will force
reconsideration of the end of the Pacific war. Along with Richard B.
Frank's Downfall: The End of the Imperial Japanese Empire (New
York, 1999), Racing the Enemy is essential reading on the end of the
Pacific war. Hasegawa has offered a major contribution that sers a new
benchmark, not only for scholarship on the end of the Pacific war, but
also in the research of and approach to international history. Read this
book.
William Thomas Allison
Weber State University