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Unit 731 - Research and Bump List. Gets Disturbing, Read at Your Own Risk
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Posted on 11/12/2005 7:48:51 PM PST by Calpernia

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1949 - Japan's Ishii shares work with US and German George Merck

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http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-backroom/1521072/posts?page=58#58
Decades later, in an interview, Sanders said, "Anthrax is a tough bug. It's sturdy. It's cheap to produce, and [the Japanese had] used it in China." In a 1985 interview with the Miami Herald, Sanders revealed that he was "duped" by the Japanese during his nine-week investigation of Unit 731 and that had he known about torturous experiments on innocent human beings conducted by bacteriologist Dr. Shiro Ishii, "I would have been very happy to be part of the firing squad."

Unable to interview Ishii because the scientist was in hiding in Japan's mountains, Sanders spent two weeks in Japan questioning Dr. Ryoichi Naito, a high-ranking Unit 731 bacteriologist who oversaw many of Ishii's horrific anthrax experiments. At the time, Sanders was unaware that in 1939, Naito had visited New York's Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in an attempt to obtain samples of lethal viruses. Refused, Naito unsuccessfully attempted to bribe employees of the Institute only to be again turned away.

When Sanders arrived back at Camp Detrick he discovered that he had contracted a severe case of tuberculosis, and he was bedridden for months. He told his replacement on the investigation, Lt. Col. Arvo T. Thompson, executive assistant to Dr. Ira Baldwin and George Merck, that he "strongly suspected" that the Japanese had conducted extensive human experiments but had been unable to obtain any definitive evidence.

81 posted on 02/24/2006 6:20:15 AM PST by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: DollyCali
I wonder why Tojo was classified as a war criminial for Pearl Harbor -- ok, granted it was a horrific act, but it was a. brilliant military tactics (hit the giant when he's sleeping
b. not directed against civilians who couldn't fight back and
c. the most stupidest action Japan could have done -- walking the giant and p***ing him off REAL BAD.
82 posted on 04/12/2006 1:04:40 AM PDT by Cronos (Remember 9/11. Restore Hagia Sophia! Sola Scriptura leads to solo scriptura.)
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To: DollyCali
I wonder why Tojo was classified as a war criminial for Pearl Harbor -- ok, granted it was a horrific act, but it was a. brilliant military tactics (hit the giant when he's sleeping
b. not directed against civilians who couldn't fight back and
c. the most stupidest action Japan could have done -- waking the giant and p***ing him off REAL BAD.
83 posted on 04/12/2006 1:04:47 AM PDT by Cronos (Remember 9/11. Restore Hagia Sophia! Sola Scriptura leads to solo scriptura.)
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To: Cronos

good point. Pearl Harbor was brilliant & stupid at the same stroke for the Japanese. The beginning of our look at national pride & Identity in a very different way from the past.


84 posted on 04/12/2006 3:45:57 AM PDT by DollyCali (Don't tell GOD how big your storm is -- Tell the storm how B-I-G your God is!)
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To: Calpernia

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1644650/posts
Ex-Soldier Fights To Make Japan Remember Its Past


85 posted on 06/06/2006 7:11:03 PM PDT by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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Read this timeline:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-backroom/1521072/posts?page=80#80

Then read this:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/935830/posts?page=58#58

>>>This brings us to Senator McCarthy's death. He was in his 40s when he died on May 2, 1957. He died at Bethesda Naval Hospital, the same hospital from which that other great Patriot, Secretary of the Navy, Forrestal, fell or was thrown to his death. Senator McCarthy's death certificate reads "Hepatitis Unknown." There were so many conflicting reports concerning his death that it is very confusing. Medford Evans, the man who wrote "The Assassination of Joseph R. McCarthy" was convinced that the Senator had been murdered, and I'm inclined to agree with him. But I hope his life will encourage others to learn the truth, and I pray that the truth will lead America back to a Christian government.<<<<


86 posted on 06/07/2006 8:20:22 PM PDT by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: nw_arizona_granny

Thanks for the mail. I am pasting it here:

http://www.inteldaily.com/
Declassified CIA records reveal American hand in birth of Japan's right wing
Sun, 25 Feb 2007 10:26:00
A 1959 file photo of Col. Masanobu Tsuji. (AP Photo)
http://mdn.mainichi-msn.co.jp/features/news/20070223p2g00m0fe006000c.html
Col. Masanobu Tsuji was a fanatical Japanese militarist and brutal warrior, hunted after World War II for massacres of Chinese civilians and complicity in the Bataan Death March.

And then he became a U.S. spy.

Newly declassified CIA records, released by the U.S. National Archives and examined by The Associated Press, document more fully than ever how Tsuji and other suspected Japanese war criminals were recruited by U.S. intelligence in the early days of the Cold War.

The documents also show how ineffective the effort was, in the CIA's view.

The records, declassified in 2005 and 2006 under an act of Congress in tandem with Nazi war crime-related files, fill in many of the blanks in the previously spotty documentation of the occupation authority's intelligence arm and its involvement with Japanese ultra-nationalists and war criminals, historians say.

In addition to Tsuji, who escaped Allied prosecution and was elected to parliament in the 1950s, conspicuous figures in U.S.-funded operations included mob boss and war profiteer Yoshio Kodama, and Takushiro Hattori, former private secretary to Hideki Tojo, the wartime prime minister hanged as a war criminal in 1948.

The CIA also cast a harsh eye on its counterparts -- and institutional rivals -- at G-2, the occupation's intelligence arm, providing evidence for the first time that the Japanese operatives often bilked gullible American patrons, passing on useless intelligence and using their U.S. ties to boost smuggling operations and further their efforts to resurrect a militarist Japan.

The assessments in the files are far from uniform. They show evidence that other U.S. agencies, such as the Air Force, were also looking into using some of the same people as spies, and that the CIA itself had contacts with former Japanese war criminals. Some CIA reports gave passing grades to the G-2 contacts' intelligence potential.

But on balance, the reports were negative, and historians say there is scant documentary evidence from occupation authorities to contradict the CIA assessment.

The files, hundreds of pages of which were obtained last month by the AP, depict operations that were deeply flawed by agents' lack of expertise, rivalries and shifting alliances between competing groups, and Japanese operatives' overriding interest in right-wing activities and money rather than U.S. security aims.

"Frequently they resorted to padding or outright fabrication of information for the purposes of prestige or profit," a 1951 CIA assessment said of the agents. "The postwar era in Japan ... produced a phenomenal increase in the number of these worthless information brokers, intelligence informants and agents."

The contacts in Japan mirror similar efforts in postwar Germany by the Americans to glean intelligence on the Soviet Union from ex-Nazis. But historians say a major contrast is the ineffectiveness of the Japanese operations.

The main aims were to spy on Communists inside Japan, place agents in Soviet and North Korean territory, and use Japanese mercenaries to bolster Taiwanese defenses against the triumphant Communist forces in mainland China.

Some of the missions detailed by the CIA papers, however, bordered on the comical.

The Americans, for instance, provided money for a boat to infiltrate Japanese agents into the Soviet island of Sakhalin -- but the money, boat and agents apparently disappeared, one report said. In Taiwan, the Japanese traded recruits for shiploads of bananas to sell on the black market back home.

The operatives also were suspected of having murky links with the Communists they were assigned to undermine, the documents say. The CIA also said some agents sold the same information to different U.S. contacts, increasing their earnings, and funneled information on the American military back into the Japanese nationalist underground.

The files and historians strongly suggest that American lack of knowledge about Japan or interest in war crimes committed in Asia, and a reliance on operatives' own assessment of their intelligence skills, made U.S. officials, in the words of one CIA report, "easy to fool for a time."

"This was a bunch of Japanese nationalists taking the G-2 for a ride," said Carol Gluck, a specialist in Japanese history at Columbia University and adviser to the archives working group administering the papers. "One thing that was interesting was how absolutely nonsensical it was, of no use to anybody but the people involved. Almost funny in a way."

The informants, many of whom were held as war criminals after Tokyo's surrender and subsequently released, operated under the patronage of Maj. Gen. Charles Willoughby, a German-born, monocle-wearing admirer of Mussolini, a staunch anti-Communist and, as the chief of G-2 in the occupation government, second in power only to his boss, Gen. Douglas MacArthur.

Some of Willoughby's proteges were seen as prime war trial material by Allied prosecutors.

But even as the occupation authorities were recrafting Japan into a democracy, their focus was shifting to containing the Soviets. Willoughby saw the military men as key to making Japan an anti-Communist bulwark in Asia -- and ensuring that Tokyo would rapidly rearm, this time as a U.S. ally.

Historians long ago concluded that the Allies turned a blind eye to many Japanese war crimes, particularly those committed against other Asians, as fighting communism became the West's priority.

Chief among the Japanese operatives was Seizo Arisue, Japan's intelligence chief at the end of the war. Arisue had been a key figure in the pro-war camp and in forging Japan's alliance with Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy in the 1930s.

According to the files, Arisue was soon ensconced in G-2, working with former Lt. Gen. Yorashiro Kawabe, who was a military intelligence officer in China in 1938 -- to organize groups of veterans and others for underground operations.

These groups consisted of former war buddies and often retained the same chains of command and militarist ideology of the war machine that ground much of Asia into submission in the 1930s and '40s.

"It shows how we acquiesced to the Japanese ... in order to continue to build up Japan as our ally," said Linda Goetz Holmes, author of "Unjust Enrichment: How Japan's Companies Built Postwar Fortunes Using American POWs."

"The whole thing was Cold War fear and an awful lot of postwar compensation issues ... all of that was subservient to our total fear of Russia," said Holmes, also a historical adviser to the National Archives.

Indeed, that new focus brought some of Japan's most notorious wartime killers under U.S. sponsorship.

Tsuji, for instance, was wanted for involvement in the Bataan Death March of early 1942, in which thousands of Americans and Filipinos perished, and for allegedly co-signing an order to massacre anti-Japanese Chinese merchants in Malaya.

Yet none of that seemed to matter much to American intelligence. The U.S. Air Force attempted unsuccessfully to recruit him after he was taken off the war crimes list in 1949 and came out of hiding, and CIA and U.S. Army files show him working for G-2. In the 1950s he was elected to Japan's parliament. He vanished in Laos in 1961 and was never seen again.

The Army considered him a potentially valuable source, but the CIA was not impressed with Tsuji's skills as an agent. The files show he was far more concerned with furthering various right-wing causes and basking in publicity generated by controversial political statements.

"In either politics or intelligence work, he is hopelessly lost both by reason of personality and lack of experience," said a CIA assessment from 1954. Another 1954 file says: "Tsuji is the type of man who, given the chance, would start World War III without any misgivings."

Kodama was another unsavory player. A virulent anti-communist and superbly connected smuggler and political fixer, Kodama commanded a vast network of black marketeers and former Japanese secret police agents in East Asia.

The CIA, however, concluded he was much more concerned about making money than furthering U.S. interests. A gangland boss, he later played a major role in the Lockheed Scandal, one of the country's biggest post-World War II bribery cases. He died in 1984.

"Kodama Yoshio's value as an intelligence operative is virtually nil," says a particularly harsh 1953 CIA report. "He is a professional liar, gangster, charlatan and outright thief... Kodama is completely incapable of intelligence operations, and has no interest in anything but the profits."

Nowadays, the most powerful legacy of the U.S. occupation is the democratic freedoms and pacifism built into Japan's 1947 constitution. But the U.S. association with Japanese war criminals illustrates how Washington embraced nationalist and conservative forces after World War II, helping them reassert their grip on the government once the occupation ended in 1952.

"Its hard to imagine back in those days how intent the U.S. was on rapid remilitarization of Japan," said John Dower, historian and author of "Embracing Defeat: Japan in the Wake of World War II."

"When we talk about the emergence of neo-nationalism or a strong right wing in Japan today, this has very deep roots and it involves a very strong element of American support," he said.

Yet the ex-war criminals failed to rebuild a militarist Japan. "Prewar right-wing activists who escaped war crime charges in fact did not have much influence in the postwar period," said Eiji Takemae, historian and author of The Allied Occupation of Japan.

To the Americans, he said, "they were in fact not very useful." (AP)

February 23, 2007


87 posted on 03/05/2007 7:50:38 AM PST by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: Calpernia

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1797775/posts
Ruling party plans sex slave study


88 posted on 03/08/2007 6:38:08 PM PST by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: Calpernia

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1852984/posts
‘No massacre in Nanking,’ Japanese lawmakers say


89 posted on 06/19/2007 3:02:22 PM PDT by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: DAVEY CROCKETT; milford421; FARS; Founding Father; CarolinaGOP

Calpernia has pulled many reports on the hidden facts that we do not often see, into one thread that she keeps adding to.

Check it out.


90 posted on 08/22/2007 2:18:14 AM PDT by nw_arizona_granny ( God loaned us many of the Brave people, those who keep us free and safe and for balance liberals..)
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To: Calpernia

bump for later


91 posted on 09/03/2007 8:46:51 PM PDT by Centurion2000 (“Jesus Saves. Moses Delivers. Cthulu Reposesses...”)
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To: Calpernia

Picture #11 was taken between 1910-1911 of dead and frozen victims of the Manchurian Plague. Here is the same picture from a Russian photo album:

http://hahn.zenfolio.com/p933515793/h2e4b7519#h2e4b7519

The IJA did indeed do some very terrible things in China. Unfortunately picture #11 cannot be attributed to them.

Ralph


92 posted on 06/03/2009 7:17:56 AM PDT by ralphrepo (1910-1911 Manchurian Plague Victim photo, not torture.)
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To: ralphrepo

You could be right; but, nothing personal, I trust my source more than yours.

Photo source:

http://www.aiipowmia.com/731/bodiesimg.html


93 posted on 06/03/2009 10:38:35 AM PDT by Calpernia (DefendOurFreedoms.Org)
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To: Calpernia

Nothing personal taken. This is purely academically motivated.

If you just happen to look at the picture there at the link that I’d provided, you’ll find that it is actually much higher resolution than the one from your source, and you can actually make out better details, along with text in Russian.

You’re free to trust any source that you choose; however, by posting images with attributions that can be questioned, you’re undercutting the position that the IJA did some very terrible things. This is exactly the type of “errors” that Japanese nationalists pounce on and use as examples of “fabrications” by anti-Japan foes. This is what Iris Chang’s otherwise great work fell victim to, that is, room for doubt.

Honesty cannot be refuted. I suggest you examine your source’s photo with mine side by side. You’ll see that they’re the same, only the site I’d found it on had a much clearer image.

[IMG]http://i184.photobucket.com/albums/x73/ralphrepo/PopularAsians/ManchurianPlagueChinaBodiesOfFrozen.jpg[/IMG]

Regards.

Ralph


94 posted on 06/05/2009 5:14:35 AM PDT by ralphrepo (1910-1911 Manchurian Plague Victim photo, not torture.)
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To: ralphrepo

I understand your point. That is why I cite my source when I make posts. That way, if there are questions, the source can be researched.

Like I said, I’m not disputing you. And your links should stand for people to look at.


95 posted on 06/05/2009 6:13:38 AM PDT by Calpernia (DefendOurFreedoms.Org)
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To: Calpernia

Understood.

Regards

Ralph


96 posted on 06/05/2009 3:43:37 PM PDT by ralphrepo (1910-1911 Manchurian Plague Victim photo, not torture.)
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To: Calpernia

BTTT ... as a way to placemark this important data for future reference. Thanks, m’Lady.


97 posted on 04/21/2010 9:28:46 AM PDT by MHGinTN (Obots, believing they cannot be deceived, it is impossible to convince them when they are deceived.)
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