In the chaotic days after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, the
Roosevelt administration made a dubious decision affecting hundreds
of Axis diplomats remaining in the nation's capital. To encourage
reciprocal treatment of U.S. diplomats trapped abroad, Roosevelt
sent Axis diplomats to remote luxury hotels—a move that enraged
Americans stunned by the attack. This cause célèbre drove 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 of these internees
whose privileged worlds came crashing down after December 7, 1941:
a suave, calculating Nazi ambassador and his charming but
conflicted wife; a wily veteran Japanese journalist; a beleaguered
American wife of a Japanese spy posing as a diplomat; and a
spirited but naive college-aged daughter of a German military
attaché. The close, albeit luxurious, proximity in which these Axis
power emissaries were forced to live with each other stripped away
the veneer of false prewar diplomatic bonhomie. Conflicts ran deep
not only among the captives but also among the rival U.S. agencies
overseeing a detainment fraught with uncertainty, duplicity, lust,
and romance. Harvey Solomon re-creates this wartime American period
of deluxe detention, public outrage, hidden agendas, rancor and
racism, and political machinations in a fascinating but forgotten
story.