Expresses deepest gratitude to the brave Japanese-Americans (Nisei) who constituted the Military Intelligence Service and the invaluable contribution they provided during and after World War II.
Recognizes and appreciates the hardships that the Nisei experienced while serving the United States with honor and distinction.
[Congressional Bills 111th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 1387 Introduced in House (IH)]
111th CONGRESS
2d Session
H. RES. 1387
Recognizing the heroic contributions of Japanese-Americans who served
in the Military Intelligence Service during and after World War II.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
May 24, 2010
Mr. Farr (for himself, Mr. Honda, Mr. Fattah, Mr. Moran of Virginia,
Mr. Kennedy, Ms. Hirono, Ms. Watson, Mr. Thompson of Mississippi, Ms.
Edwards of Maryland, Ms. Chu, Ms. Harman, Ms. Matsui, Mr. Thompson of
California, Mr. Stark, Mr. Filner, Ms. Giffords, Mr. Carter, Mr. Upton,
Mr. Thornberry, Mr. Gallegly, Mr. McClintock, Mr. Calvert, Mr. Lewis of
California, Mr. Cole, Mr. Young of Alaska, Mr. Frelinghuysen, Mr. Young
of Florida, Mr. Kucinich, Mr. Capuano, Mr. Tierney, Mr. George Miller
of California, Mr. Cardoza, Mr. Peterson, Mrs. Capps, Mr. Reyes, Mr.
Garamendi, Mr. Costa, Mr. Snyder, Mr. Holt, Mr. Sherman, and Mr.
McDermott) submitted the following resolution; which was referred to
the Committee on Armed Services
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Recognizing the heroic contributions of Japanese-Americans who served
in the Military Intelligence Service during and after World War II.
Whereas the approximately 6,000 troops, mostly second generation Japanese-
Americans (Nisei), volunteered for the Military Intelligence Service
(M.I.S.) to learn the Japanese language and use their knowledge of
Japanese culture in order to help the United States win the war in the
Pacific;
Whereas the Nisei volunteering for this service became the nucleus of the
Military Intelligence School established on November 1, 1941, with 4
Nisei as the instructors and 58 Nisei among the 60 students;
Whereas the Military Intelligence School later came to be known as the Defense
Language Institute Foreign Language Center, located in Monterey,
California;
Whereas in 1969, the Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center
dedicated Nisei Hall and several buildings in honor of the outstanding
Japanese-Americans who served in the M.I.S.;
Whereas many of these founding members who volunteered for the M.I.S. had been
incarcerated, along with their families, in one of 10 ``camps'';
Whereas this duty was determined so essential to the war effort that the M.I.S.
agents served in all units of the United States Army, Navy, and Marines
stationed in the Pacific, participated in all theaters of the Pacific
War, and were embedded with other Allied Forces fighting in the Pacific;
Whereas members of the M.I.S. served with distinction by translating acquired
Japanese plans, personal interpretation, POW interrogation, monitoring
Japanese radio broadcasts, intercepting enemy radio messages, and
preparing surrender leaflets, while requiring body guards to avoid
mistaken identity by their fellow soldiers;
Whereas the greatest contributions of M.I.S. agents, among many, included the
discovery of ``Operation Z'', a plan to conduct an all-out counterattack
by the Japanese Combined Fleet in the Central Pacific that allowed the
United States Navy to defend against and weaken the Japanese military,
and the discovery of the plane that Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto arrived in
to visit front line troops, thereby allowing the Allies to intercept and
destroy the leader who orchestrated Pearl Harbor;
Whereas these M.I.S. linguists were instrumental in the occupation and
rebuilding of Japan, cultivating cooperation between the occupational
forces and the Japanese people as cultural ambassadors, helping to draft
the new Japanese Constitution, and building the foundation of current
United States relations with Japan; and
Whereas M.I.S. agents were heralded by President Harry S Truman as the ``human
secret weapon for the U.S. Armed Forces'' against the Japanese in the
Pacific and by Major General Charles A. Willoughby, MacArthur's
intelligence chief, who said, ``The Nisei shortened the Pacific War by
two years and saved possibly a million American lives and saved probably
billions of dollars'', yet, due to the national security implications,
they only received recognition for their valor, a Presidential Unit
Citation, the highest honor given to a United States military unit, in
2000: Now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the House of Representatives--
(1) expresses its deepest gratitude to the brave Japanese-
Americans who constituted the Military Intelligence Service and
the invaluable contribution they provided during and after
World War II; and
(2) recognizes and appreciates the hardships that the Nisei
experienced while serving the United States with honor and
distinction.
<all>
Introduced in House
Introduced in House
Referred to the House Committee on Armed Services.
Referred to the Subcommittee on Military Personnel.
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