When was the last time aircraft dropped bombs on the United States? When was the last time Americans at home were targeted and killed by attacking aircraft?
Certainly, thousands of Americans were killed by aircraft on September 11, 2001, but that is not what I am talking about. When was the last time military aircraft attacked Americans at work or in their homes with bombs?
Pearl Harbor immediately comes to mind. On December 7, 1941, 353 Japanese planes attacked American military targets on Hawaii, propelling the United States into World War II. Less well known is that shortly after the Pearl Harbor attack, the Japanese attacked the Aleutian Islands, bombing Dutch Harbor before invading Kiska.
In September, 1942, in the Lookout Air Raids, a Japanese submarine with a watertight hangar, the I-25, launched a single floatplane off the coast of Oregon, that dropped two incendiary bombs near the town of Brookings. One caused a small fire that was spotted by fire watchers in a lookout tower and was quickly extinguished; no trace of the second bomb was ever discovered. The following day, the plane dropped two more bombs, neither of which ignited any forest fires.Far less well known is the Japanese Fu-Go balloon attacks of World War II. The Japanese launched 9,300 paper balloons that were filled with hydrogen; each carried four incendiary bombs and a single anti-personnel bomb. After traveling in the jet-stream from Japan across the Pacific Ocean, a timer was set to release the bombs over the Pacific Northwest, with the intent of starting large forest fires that would divert manpower from the war effort. The Fu-Go was the first intercontinental weapon ever deployed.
The program was a failure, however: No forest fires were started by the bombing program, in part because the bombs were falling during the rainy season. Out of 9,300 bombs launched, approximately 300 were later located. These were not exactly “smart bombs”, since the remains of the balloons were found in Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, North Dakota, Oregon, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming, Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, the Northwest and Yukon Territories, and at sea. One of the balloon bombs did kill six civilians in Oregon—a party that included a pregnant woman and five children on a Sunday School picnic, who were the only civilian casualties of World War II in the contiguous United States.
This, however, was not the last time that aircraft bombed targets in the United States. That occurred in October, 1950, in Puerto Rico, which was an American protectorate. Though the targets were American citizens on American soil, the bombs were dropped by American planes flown by American pilots. In other words: We bombed us.
Puerto Rico became an American territory in 1898 when Spain ceded the island in the Treaty of Paris. (If you are ever on a game show and asked to name the treaty that ended a specific war, just say the Treaty of Paris, there are more than a dozen such treaties so chances are you’ll get lucky.). By 1917, Puerto Ricans officially became US citizens—mostly so they could be drafted to serve in World War I. They can vote for president, if they are residing in one of the fifty states at the time of the election. (Since only 40% of Puerto Ricans still live on the island, this isn’t much of a problem.)
Though technically part of the United States, we haven’t always treated the islanders fairly, nor have the Puerto Ricans always enjoyed the protections promised them by our constitution. While many of the islanders wanted independence—a desire that is perfectly legal under our laws providing that such desire is expressed peacefully—our government has usually reacted to such expressions in a draconian fashion.
The problems started back in the 1930’s. The Puerto Rican Nationalist Party advocated for the island to become independent, much as Cuba had done. Though this advocacy was legal, the US-appointed governor of the island began cracking down on the organization, arresting the leaders under the charge of sedition. After two farcical trials—the first was declared a mistrial after the jury refused to convict and the second had a hand-picked jury—the leaders were sent to federal prison for ten years. A few years later, the police opened fire on a Nationalist parade, killing 19 in what became known as the Ponce Massacre. Though the police started the shooting and killed unarmed civilians, the President of the Nationalist Party was tried and sentenced to ten years in a federal prison for conspiracy to commit murder.
In 1948, the governor signed a law that became known as the Ley de la Mordaza (gag law) that made it a crime to “print, publish, sell, or exhibit any material intended to paralyze or destroy the insular government; or to organize any society, group or assembly of people with a similar destructive intent.” You could be fined $10,000 and sentenced to ten years in a federal prison for singing a patriotic song or displaying the Puerto Rican flag. (And remember, those were 1948 dollars, back when a new Cadillac was $2,900.)
Needless to say, this law is a complete violation of the US Constitution, particularly the First Amendment. Feeling that they had no recourse left, the Nationalist Party called for an armed revolution, for independence to begin in 1952, on the date that the United States was going to legally change Puerto Rico from a territory to a commonwealth. Before the uprising was set to start, the Puerto Rican police began surrounding the homes of the party’s leadership, opening fire without warning, killing several people, and arresting anyone inside the homes, charging them with ambushing the police.
The uprising started on October 28, 1950, in San Juan and seven small towns and villages. Other than holding a few small villages, cutting a few telephone lines and burning down a post office, the revolution was a total failure. The heavily armed police had several days’ advance warning of the revolution and were not at all hesitant to use overwhelming force to put down the revolution, usually before the Nationalist Party even acted. Those who were not killed were prosecuted. Typical of the results was one party leader’s being sentenced to 20 years in federal jail for the possession of a Puerto Rican flag.
The governor declared martial law. The United States sent ten P-47 fighter planes to drop 500 lb. bombs on the town of Jayuya, a small town with a population of 9,000. While the planes then strafed the town, hitting almost every building, the Puerto Rican National Guard moved in, attacking with artillery, mortars, and grenades. The town was destroyed. There were 28 deaths in Jayuya, but there would have been much more if the townspeople had not fled.
The revolution was over almost before it was started. A few years later, the remaining revolutionaries attempted to assassinate President Truman followed by an attack in the House of Representatives, both attacks were unsuccessful. President Truman later reduced the lengthy prison sentences for those revolutionaries still in jail, at least one of whom had been sent to Alcatraz. The last of those still in prison were pardoned by President Carter.
Today, over 85% of Puerto Ricans prefers that the island remain part of the United States, perhaps because the island residents participate in Medicare and Social Security but do not pay federal income tax.
Give a person a tax free income and they'll follow you anywhere.
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