Such Splendid Prisons
Diplomatic Detainment in America During World War II
In the chaotic days after Pearl Harbor, with America still reeling from Japan's surprise attack and Germany's subsequent declaration
of war, the Roosevelt administration makes a hasty decision about the hundreds of Axis power diplomats remaining in the nation's capital. Les mer
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In the chaotic days after Pearl Harbor, with America still reeling from Japan's surprise attack and Germany's subsequent declaration
of war, the Roosevelt administration makes a hasty decision about the hundreds of Axis power diplomats remaining in the nation's
capital. To encourage reciprocal treatment of U.S. diplomats held abroad, the President's administration sends them to remote
luxury hotels-a decision that enrages Americans stunned by the attack. This cause celebre rocks America and drives a fascinating
yet forgotten story: the roundup, detention, and eventual repatriation of more than a thousand German, Japanese, Italian,
Bulgarian and Hungarian diplomats, families, staff, servants, journalists, students, businessmen, and spies. Such Splendid
Prisons follows five internees whose privileged worlds came crashing down after December 7, 1941: the suave, calculating Nazi
ambassador and his charming but conflicted wife; a wily veteran Japanese journalist; the beleaguered American wife of a Japanese
spy posing as a diplomat; and the spirited but naive college-aged daughter of the German military attache. The close proximity
in which the Axis power emissaries were forced to live with their counterparts stripped away the veneer of false diplomatic
bonhomie inspiring antagonism to erupt between delegations. Author Harvey Solomon has unearthed over 1,500 pages of memoranda,
letters, cables, interviews, and unpublished memoirs that recreate this period of luxury detention, public outrage, hidden
agendas, and political machinations.