Life Magazine, Dec 1 1941 and Onwards. Things that strike me Odd or Interesting (1 Viewer)

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Journalists have always pushed their luck and did cross a few lines during WWII - it's just back in the 1940's, the Government was more "hands on" when it came to dealing with censorship those who broke the rules.
 
LIFE: 1 May 1944. The title of the article is "Air Group Nine Comes Home". They come home after almost a year of combat. The first flyer they showcase is PHILIP H. TORREY, JR., CDR, USN. The first photo shows him running up the stairs of his home and the second photo shows him in the living room surrounding by his wife and two children, age 2 and 4. A Google search shows he was KIA over Tokyo nine months later.
 
We have an invasion people. Life: 12 Jun 1944. Reports are already filtering in and they posted a pretty spiffy drawing of P-51's taking out German tanks

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LIFE: 1 May 1944. The title of the article is "Air Group Nine Comes Home". They come home after almost a year of combat. The first flyer they showcase is PHILIP H. TORREY, JR., CDR, USN. The first photo shows him running up the stairs of his home and the second photo shows him in the living room surrounding by his wife and two children, age 2 and 4. A Google search shows he was KIA over Tokyo nine months later.
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They weren't so fearful to have already sent Kido Butai on its mission. Clearly Kurusa wasn't in the loop ... or he was disambiguating.

I personally believe the former.
It is pretty clear from historical Japanese documentation that Ambassador Kurusu not only was NOT informed of the planned attack date, but he was not even given specific warning of possible military action until his aides decoded the final message the morning of 7 Dec. 1941.

Even then nothing was clearly stated (the last part, received that morning by the Japanese embassy, simply declared "negotiations are useless, and are now ended"), but the language, and the instruction "deliver before xxx time' was (to a diplomat) obviously an indicator of the commencement of military operations.
 

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