iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Featuring fresh takes and real-time analysis from HuffPost's signature lineup of contributors
Rep. Mike Honda

GET UPDATES FROM Rep. Mike Honda
 

Rep. Peter King's "Homegrown Terrorism" Hearing Risks Repeating History

Posted: 12/07/11 11:02 AM ET

Today, December 7, 2011, is the 70th anniversary of Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor. As communities across America remember that day, Representative Peter King (R-N.Y.) seeks the spotlight once again with a Congressional hearing claiming to explore "homegrown terrorism's threat to military communities inside the United States."

I hope real American values and vision drive today's hearing, not prejudice, hysteria and a failure of leadership. I hope King honors his position as Chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee with a comprehensive review of real dangers to our military communities.

That's what the American people deserve.

Based on King's past hearings, however, the American people are justified to fear that King will rely on insidious discrimination targeting Muslim Americans. If the hearing's date (Pearl Harbor's Anniversary) and its subject matter, the 2009 attack at Ft. Hood Texas, are any indication, today's hearing will go too far by singling out Muslim-American service members as the danger to our military communities. Whatever happens today, let us be clear: Any blanket suggestion that all Muslim American soldiers are the threat is morally and strategically wrong.

The Anniversary of Pearl Harbor must not be used to suggest that 2011 America faces a religious "enemy within." Instead, the anniversary serves as a powerful rationale for an informed, precise and moral approach to combating homegrown terrorism, not hyped-up discrimination.

In the wake of Pearl Harbor, America declared war on the Empire of Japan and on Japanese Americans. On Feb 19, 1942, President Franklin Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, forcing more than 120,000 Japanese Americans, my family included, to evacuate the West Coast. My family and I were soon imprisoned at the Amache internment camp in Colorado. I was less than a year old.

Men of Japanese ancestry were originally prohibited from enlisting in the armed forces. Despite their willingness to fight for freedom and democracy, countless Japanese-American men were classified "4C" -- enemy aliens. But when the military needed servicemen who could read and write Japanese, 6,000 men, including my father, quickly joined the Military Intelligence Service (MIS). In 1943, my Dad left Amache to teach Japanese to the Navy Intelligence Service, while his family remained behind barbed wire in an internment camp.

The internment of Japanese Americans was the result of prejudice, war hysteria and a failure of political leadership.

We must not repeat the mistakes of the past.

Yet, this past Veteran's Day, Rick Womick, a Republican representative in the Tennessee Assembly, declared that Muslims should be purged from the military and that Muslims pray to a false God. Rep. King has refused comment on the Womick situation. Today's hearing is the perfect venue for King to condemn Womick's words as detrimental to homeland security and antithetical to the American values of religious freedom and regard for ethnic diversity.

Womick's words, and King's silence, ignore the expert service of over 4,000 Muslim Americans in today's military -- a record of service that traces back to World War I. Muslim Americans add a huge value in today's military. Since that other day of infamy, September 11, 2001, the military has actively recruited Muslim-Americans -- keen to find soldiers, sailors and Marines with linguistic skills and a cultural understanding of strategic communities.

Womick's words and King's silence ignore the sacrifice of Kareem Khan, an Army soldier eulogized by General Colin Powell in 2008. Kareem was 14 years old on September 11, 2001. In a response to the terror of that day, Kareem enlisted after graduating high school in 2005. After two years of decorated service in Iraq, Kareem gave the ultimate sacrifice in defense of his nation.

Kareem Khan's story is a testament to the best our nation can produce. Kareem Khan's story is a testament to how American diversity is a foremost strength, not a source of peril. Rep. King's previous hearings, however, did nothing to keep our homeland secure and did plenty to stoke prejudice, discrimination and hate. King's previous hearings made millions of hard-working Muslim Americans the new enemy, with no cause and no crime.

I hope today's hearing offers something different. I hope it does not undermine the brave service of Muslim Americans in the military and convince a new generation of budding heroes not to enlist to protect their homeland.

I hope Rep. King understands the lessons of my community's internment camp experience and of my father's service in MIS. I hope King understands the lesson of Kareem Khan's sacrifice. That's how King can best display American leadership, honor American sacrifice, and promote American security.

This piece was originally published on The Hill's Congress Blog, 12/7/11

Honda has represented the 15th Congressional District of California in the U.S. House of Representatives for a decade. He serves on the House Appropriations and Budget Committees and is Chair Emeritus of the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus.

Follow Rep. Honda on Twitter
Follow Rep. Honda on Facebook

 

Follow Rep. Mike Honda on Twitter: www.twitter.com/repmikehonda

 
 
  • Comments
  • 11
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
05:13 PM on 12/08/2011
The shameful legacy of the internment of Japanese-Americans is even more shameful when one discovers that most of the California property seized from Japanese-Americans was sold off, at extremely low prices, by a corrupt government official to people connected with organized crime. LA's Staples Center is located on one of those real estate parcels.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
02:17 AM on 12/08/2011
Representative Honda's comments are an overreaction. Rep. King is simply conducting very informative hearings about the enemy we face.
12:01 AM on 12/08/2011
Congressman Honda... what happened to you and your family (and 120,000 other Japanese-Americans) was wrong... and yet it gives you a unique perspective on the witch hunts led by Mr. King and his ilk in Congress. And the sad thing is that most of the rest of us have forgotten the internment camps that you grew up in...
ByAndForThePeople
and corporations aren't people!
08:24 PM on 12/07/2011
King's primary interest is in keeping American distracted by circuses hoping that we won't notice who the real enemies of America are.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
05:45 PM on 12/07/2011
I'm sure little details like the Niʻihau Incident and the enormous number of Japanese who renounced American citizenship in the camps and went back home to the Glorious Empire of the Rising Sun had nothing to do with "prejudice, war hysteria" and the "failure of political leadership."
11:45 PM on 12/07/2011
OK, 2083, let's try a thought experiment... let's say that a terrorist attack is commited by someone of your ethnicity... and a President of another ethnicity decides to put everyone who looks like you into an internment camp. Would you, perhaps, not be really happy with being an American citizen at that point?

And yet, maybe 5% of the total population of the Japanese internment camps renounced their citizenship, most of whom were in one camp. That's about 6000 people, or about 1/3 of the number of Japanese-Americans who served with honor in WW2.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
05:17 PM on 12/08/2011
Only one side of the story is being told here. That's my only issue with it. Burying our heads in the sand and pretending every Japanese-American during WWII was a loyal citizen would have been naive, just as pretending every Muslim in America is a loyal citizen today is.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
Tom Pumroy
practical dreamer-artist Man Ray
05:21 PM on 12/07/2011
Sadly Mr. King and those of the same mind in this country are the real betrayers of the spirit behind this nation, they are the rotten apples spreading their cancerous “we are the true Americans” hogwash. Atop their soapboxes they harangue the simple souls who believe them with the talk of American exceptionalism. With a blatant superiority complex they wrap themselves in the clothing of false patriotism while representing the lowest and meanest of human nature.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
O K Ali
Wash your hands, seriously.
02:08 PM on 12/07/2011
Thank you for sharing history, Rep. Honda.
01:41 PM on 12/07/2011
Politicians of the far right have a ploy which they have used successfully over several generations to hoodwink the American populace, that of a conspiracy of some kind to destroy our freedom. When they evoke Pearl Harbor to foment their very special kind of hatred, we should react by remembering someone dear to their hearts: Senator Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin, whose committee terrorized thousands of honest, patriotic Americans. Those not familiar with him would be well advised to read about him, and about the darkness he and his supporters brought over the country. The irony of course is that those who see an enemy behind every tree are themselves the greatest enemies of freedom, and the most deserving of our profound mistrust.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
garoth
12:12 PM on 12/07/2011
Representative Honda reminds us of some dark days in American history, and of our penchant for scapegoating vulnerable minorities. He and his family are owed an apology, along with other victims of discrimination throughout our history. Unfortunately, we never seem to learn the lesson, and are, therefore, doomed to repeat the mistakes of the past. Those who raise the fear of "takeover" and destruction of the "American way of life" by minority groups, have found that fear is a powerful motivator - and an easy way to get themselves reelected. Rather than being censured for their bigotry, people like Mr. King are too often rewarded by the media, who refuse to call them out, and by constituents, who keep returning them to office. Thank you, Representative Honda, for your thoughtful article.