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M’ARTHUR OPENS HEADQUARTERS IN YOKOHAMA; FREED PRISONERS CHARGE BRUTALITY BY FOE (8/31/45)
Microfilm-New York Times archives, Monterey Public Library | 8/31/45 | Frank L. Kluckhohn, George E. Jones, W.H. Lawrence, Julius Ochs Adler, Leslie Nakashima, more

Posted on 08/31/2015 4:58:02 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson

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TOPICS: Extended News
KEYWORDS: history; milhist; realtime; worldwarii
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Selections from West Point Atlas for the Second World War
The Far East and the Pacific, 1941: Areas under Allied and Japanese Control, 15 August 1945
The Western Pacific: Japanese Homeland Dispositions August 1945 and Allied Plans for the Invasion of Japan (Operation Downfall)
1 posted on 08/31/2015 4:58:03 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson
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To: Homer_J_Simpson
Free Republic University, Department of History presents World War II Plus 70 Years: Seminar and Discussion Forum
First session: September 1, 2009. Last date to add: September 2, 2015.
Reading assignment: New York Times articles and the occasional radio broadcast delivered daily to students on the 70th anniversary of original publication date. (Previously posted articles can be found by searching on keyword “realtime” Or view Homer’s posting history .)
To add this class to or drop it from your schedule notify Admissions and Records (Attn: Homer_J_Simpson) by freepmail. Those on the Realtime +/- 70 Years ping list are automatically enrolled. Also visit our general discussion thread.
2 posted on 08/31/2015 4:58:37 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson
This is the final Graybook entry.

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The Nimitz Graybook

3 posted on 08/31/2015 4:59:18 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson
Continued from August 25.

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Major General H.W. Blakeley, USA, Ret., 32d Infantry Division World War II

4 posted on 08/31/2015 5:02:33 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: r9etb; PzLdr; dfwgator; Paisan; From many - one.; rockinqsranch; 2banana; henkster; meandog; ...
Troops Spread Out – 2-3
Japan’s War Scars Are Dim at Atsugi (Kluckhohn) – 3
Tokyo Presents Battered Aspect, but Americans Find People Polite (Jones, Lawrence) – 4-5
Mrs. Wainwright Receives a Treasure for Her Album (w/photo) – 5
Horrors in Japanese Prisons Like Those of Nazi Camps (Adler) – 6-7
100,000 Yugoslavs Reported Captives – 7
Fourth Marines, First to Sail for Japan, Disappointed as Others Head for Tokyo – 7
Hiroshima Gone, Newsman Finds (by Leslie Nakashima, first-time contributor) – 8
World News Summarized – 8
The New Houston in Epic Survival (by Robert Trumbull) – 9
Hong Kong Harbor in Hands of British – 9
Truman Says Public Must Share Blame for Pearl Harbor (by Felix Belair Jr.) – 11
Views of Nation’s Newspapers on Pearl Harbor Data – 12
69 More Ships Sunk by U.S. Submarines – 13
Latest War Casualties – 13
Communiques – 13
5 posted on 08/31/2015 5:03:37 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

http://www.etherit.co.uk/month/7/31.htm

August 31st, 1945 (FRIDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM: Minesweepers HMS Graylag and Harlequin commissioned.

GERMANY: Allied troops arrest Field Marshal von Brauchitsch and von Manstein.

Europe is full of the flotsam of war, millions of people without food, homes or countries, migrating in search of safety. Some are trying to get back to villages from which they were transported thousands of miles. Others are fleeing from countries overrun by conquering armies.

There are Germans driven out of Poland and Silesia. There are five million Russian prisoners of war and forced labourers making their way home to an uncertain reception. There are eastern Europeans fleeing from the Red Army. There are Jews who, somehow, survived the death camps making their way to ports in the hope of reaching Palestine.

Germans who fled the bombing of their cities are going home to stake their claims in the rubble of their homes. One person in five in the western zone of Germany is a refugee. There are even leftovers from a previous conflict: 200,000 refugees from the Spanish civil war living in southern France.

It is estimated that there are as many as 20 million people on the move in Europe. The care of these “displaced persons” has fallen primarily to the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA), first set up in 1943 to help refugees from the nations fighting the Axis powers. Financed in the main by the United States, it is trying to bring order to the chaos left behind by the war.

Some, mistrustful of all authority, are making their own way across Europe, begging in a ravaged countryside and risking violence as old scores are settled; retribution is rampant and often brutally indiscriminate. Others have settled into camp life, unwilling to forgo their tents and regular rations. Meagre as they are, these comforts are all-important in a world where a woman can be bought for a bar of soap.

U.S.S.R.: Moscow: The USSR restores diplomatic relations with Finland.

ITALY: HQ US Twelfth Air Force is inactivated.

HONG KONG: The RCN armed merchant cruiser HMCS Prince Robert enters the Crown Colony where her commanding officer represents Canada at the surrender ceremonies of Japanese forces.

JAPAN: In the Kurile Islands, Soviet forces occupy Utruppu Island after fierce fighting with Japanese troops.

Marines of Company “L,” Third Battalion, Fourth Marines, land at Tateyama Naval Base, Honshu, on the northeast shore of Sagami Wan, and accept its surrender. They will reconnoitre the beach approaches and cover the landing of Army’s 112th Cavalry Regiment.

Meanwhile, the Japanese submarine HIJMS I 401 surrenders to submarine USN submarine USS Segundo (SS-398) at the entrance to Tokyo Bay.

Tokyo: The greatest and most destructive conflict that the Pacific has known is now ended. Fanatical resistance by the Japanese military had not availed. Japan is to be occupied, disarmed and treated as a potentially dangerous enemy. The victors are making sure that there will be no repetition of the mistakes which in Germany after the First World War allowed a revival of militarism under Hitler. A great victory has been won, but suppressed antagonisms are now emerging among the Allies. China will succeed Japan as the dominant east Asian nation, and the struggle for control is escalating with the USSR backing the Communist Chinese of Mao Tse-tung against Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalists. In Korea only the USSR and the US have troops available to disarm the Japanese. By agreement, the Russians will occupy the north and the Americans the south.

In the Dutch East Indies a revolutionary Indonesian nationalist movement is preparing for independence, and British troops could be caught up in the inevitable disorders. And in French Indochina the revolutionary leader Ho Chi Minh plans to declare independence.

Japan: Harrowing tales of cruelty, filth and malnutrition are being told by Allied PoWs who have just been released from Japanese camps following the surrender. An official report on the main camp in the Tokyo Bay area states: “There has never been such a hell-hole.”

Commodore Joe Boone, a doctor who has been involved in the evacuation of PoWs from the camp and the nearby Shinagawa hospital said: “Our prisoners were ill from having to eat rice and grass. Many of the men had dysentery as a result of the filthy conditions in which they were housed.”

Major Maurice Ditton told of his slave labour in Thailand where prisoners were forced to work building the Bangkok to Moulmein railway: “Many men died daily ... The survivors, working in the steaming jungle, became weak. Brutal Korean guards kept the sick working for 18 hours a day.”

So far only 1,000 Allied PoWs have been evacuated to freedom. At least another 36,000 are believed to be awaiting liberation from camps across Japan.

Yokohama: General MacArthur today established supreme Allied command in Yokohama, Tokyo’s main port, as the first foreigner to take charge of Japan in 1,000 years.

Mac Arthur is working on Japan’s formal surrender, which will be signed in two days’ time aboard the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay. He said “The surrender plan has been going splendidly. There is every indication that the occupation will continue without bloodshed or friction.” In Tokyo quiet has returned, although the corpses of 30 civilians who committed hara-kiri after the initial surrender still lie outside the palace. Since the first wave of 7,500 US airborne troops landed three days ago, the US occupation has continued at a rate of 300 troop planes a day. Yokosuka, on Tokyo Bay, has become Pacific Fleet HQ after its surrender by two Japanese admirals to Admiral Halsey. The main landings at Yokohama and on the southern island of Kyushu will begin after the formal surrender.

MacArthur will accept Japan’s surrender with the foreign minister, Mamoru Shigemitsu, and the army chief of staff, Yoshijiro Umezu, signing for Japan’s new caretaker government. Representatives of each of the 12 Allied nations will sign the surrender. Britain will be represented by General Percival, the former commander of Singapore, who spent the war in captivity after its fall.

Tokyo: Horrific details of atrocities carried out by Japanese doctors are emerging as Allied PoWs are released. Prisoners have been subjected to vivisection. Others have been used as human guinea-pigs and injected with acid, inoculated with fatal diseases or frozen at -20°C.

Eight US airmen shot down after B-29 raids in May died in vivisection experiments carried out by Professor Fukujiro at Kyushu university. One PoW’s stomach was removed, and an artery cut to see how long before he died.

Many of the atrocities have been at Japan’s top-secret bacteriological warfare Unit 731 at Harbin, in Manchuria. Prisoners were inoculated with anthrax, typhoid and cholera to test germ potency. Others have been boiled or dehydrated to death. Experiments included prolonged exposure to X-rays and prisoners subjected to a pressure chamber where the blood was forced out of their skin as they died in agony.

PoWs fear that 731’s commander, Shiro Ishii, will escape prosecution in return for turning over germ warfare data to the US. Two released US doctors also revealed today how they were made to prepare lethal acid-based solutions for Japanese doctors to inject into US PoWs at a Tokyo hospital.

COMMONWEALTH OF THE PHILIPPINES: Manila: Japanese troops in the Philippines formally surrender.

PACIFIC OCEAN: The Japanese garrison on Marcus Island surrenders to the US.

CANADA: Minesweepers HMCS Suderoy IV and Suderoy VI (ex Norwegian whalers) paid off.

U.S.A.: In baseball, the Washington Senators again muff a chance to go into first place, dropping a pair to the New York Yankees, 3–2 and 3–1, in Griffith Stadium in Washington, D.C. In between games, Washington pitcher Bert Shepard receives the Distinguished Flying Cross for his service in WWII. When Bert Shepard, a journeyman minor league pitcher, had his right leg amputated after his fighter plane crashed in Germany, he was the only person that believed he would ever play professional baseball again. But through sheer self-belief and determination, the gutsy left-hander from Dana, Indiana, taught himself to walk and then to pitch with an artificial leg — all within the confines of a POW camp in Germany. By February 1945, Shepard was back in the U.S. and determined to pitch in organized baseball. Senators’ owner Clark Griffith took a look at the amputee’s pitching form in spring training and offered Shepard a job as a pitching coach. On 4 August 1945, Shepard became an inspiration to all wartime amputees when he pitched five innings for the Senators against the Boston Red Sox, fulfilling a dream that few could have imagined possible. That was the only major league game he pitched in. Shepard continued playing in the minor leagues until 1954 and later worked for IBM and Hughes Aircraft as a safety engineer.

USAAF”>USAAF 477th Bombardment Group (Medium) is designated combat ready. It will be the first bomber group manned entirely by African-Americans.

Destroyer USS Wiltsie launched.


6 posted on 08/31/2015 5:04:47 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

MacArthur for President!


7 posted on 08/31/2015 5:17:27 AM PDT by Impy (They pull a knife, you pull a gun. That's the CHICAGO WAY, and that's how you beat the rats!)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

My father was an 18 year old Fireman aboard the USS Block Island when they picked up American POWs from Japanese camps and transported them to islands with established bases and hospitals. They gave them each a pair of boxers and a t shirt and burned the clothes they brought with them on the flight deck.

He wouldn’t talk about it until late in life and was still saddened while discussing men who’d been prisoners for years dying on an American ship after being freed.


8 posted on 08/31/2015 5:29:16 AM PDT by Pan_Yan
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To: Homer_J_Simpson; All

The story on page 8..left hand side..”Hiroshima gone, Newsman finds..” is a must read


9 posted on 08/31/2015 5:49:01 AM PDT by ken5050 ("Hillary Clinton is the NY Jets of American politics"......Salena Zito)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

Entering the service after only 18 years since the end of W.W. 2, I was privileged to serve with a few former prisoners of war. Those held by the Japs all had the same story. Horrendous treatment.


10 posted on 08/31/2015 5:51:58 AM PDT by Graybeard58 (Hillary not only brings old baggage wherever she goes, she picks up new baggage when she gets there)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

bookmark


11 posted on 08/31/2015 5:52:19 AM PDT by DFG ("Dumb, Dependent, and Democrat is no way to go through life" - Louie Gohmert (R-TX))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

Tokyo: Horrific details of atrocities carried out by Japanese doctors are emerging as Allied PoWs are released. Prisoners have been subjected to vivisection. Others have been used as human guinea-pigs and injected with acid, inoculated with fatal diseases or frozen at -20°C.

Eight US airmen shot down after B-29 raids in May died in vivisection experiments carried out by Professor Fukujiro at Kyushu university. One PoW’s stomach was removed, and an artery cut to see how long before he died.

Many of the atrocities have been at Japan’s top-secret bacteriological warfare Unit 731 at Harbin, in Manchuria. Prisoners were inoculated with anthrax, typhoid and cholera to test germ potency. Others have been boiled or dehydrated to death. Experiments included prolonged exposure to X-rays and prisoners subjected to a pressure chamber where the blood was forced out of their skin as they died in agony.

PoWs fear that 731’s commander, Shiro Ishii, will escape prosecution in return for turning over germ warfare data to the US. Two released US doctors also revealed today how they were made to prepare lethal acid-based solutions for Japanese doctors to inject into US PoWs at a Tokyo hospital.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shir%C5%8D_Ishii
Arrested by the US occupation authorities at the end of World War II, Ishii and other Unit 731 leaders were to be thoroughly interrogated by the Soviet authorities.[9] Instead Ishii and his team managed to negotiate and receive immunity in 1946 from war-crimes prosecution before the Tokyo tribunal in exchange for their full disclosure of germ warfare data based on human experimentation. Although the Soviet Russian authorities wished the prosecutions to take place, the United States objected after the reports of the investigating US microbiologists. Among these was Dr. Edwin Hill (Chief of Fort Detrick), whose report stated that the information was “absolutely invaluable”, it “could never have been obtained in the United States because of scruples attached to experiments on humans”, and “the information was obtained fairly cheaply”.[9] On 6 May 1947, Douglas MacArthur wrote to Washington that “additional data, possibly some statements from Ishii probably can be obtained by informing Japanese involved that information will be retained in intelligence channels and will not be employed as ‘War Crimes’ evidence.”[10] The deal was concluded in 1948.[citation needed] In this way Ishii was never prosecuted for any war crimes.


12 posted on 08/31/2015 7:23:46 AM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson
4TH Marines didn't make it to Tokyo?

Didn't know it was formed and disbanded overseas. Remember that marines were reassigned divisions with those being discharged moved to divisions that were disbanded.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/6th_Marine_Division_(United_States)
The 6th Marine Division was a United States Marine Corps World War II infantry division formed in September 1944. During the invasion of Okinawa it saw combat at Yae-Take and Sugar Loaf Hill and was awarded a Presidential Unit Citation. The 6th Division had also prepared for the invasion of Japan before the war ended. After the war it served in Tsingtao, China where the division was disbanded on April 1, 1946, being the only Marine division to be formed and disbanded overseas and never set foot in the United States.[4] In July 1945, the 6th division was withdrawn from Okinawa to the island of Guam to prepare for Operation Coronet, the planned invasion of Honshū, Japan that was supposed to occur in April 1946 but the Japanese surrenderd in August 1945. While the 4th Marines were sent for brief occupation duty in Japan,[22] the rest of the 6th spent September in Guam preparing for duty in China[23] The division arrived in Tsingtao, China on 11 October 1945[23] where it remained until it was disbanded on April 1, 1946,[24][25][26] being replaced by the 3d Marine Brigade.[27] In its time at Tsingtao the division not only accepted the surrender of local Japanese forces (on Oct 25[24][25]) but also oversaw their subsequent repatriation to Japan; prevented the communists from attacking the surrendered Japanese forces and dissuaded communist forces from advancing on the city,[28] restored and maintained order,[29] and came to be seen as the protector of minority groups in the former German concession.[25]
13 posted on 08/31/2015 7:37:19 AM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

Britain pays of 1945 war debt:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/fr/1757989/posts


14 posted on 08/31/2015 7:39:48 AM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: PeterPrinciple

There is lend lease and there are loans after the war:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-American_loan

Britain needed to retain some of this equipment in the immediate post war period. As a result the Anglo-American loan came about. Lend-lease items retained were sold to Britain at the knockdown price of about 10 cents on the dollar giving an initial value of £1,075 million.[5]

“Under the Agreement, the loans would be repaid in 50 annual instalments commencing in 1950. However the Agreement allowed deferral of annual payments of both principal and interest if necessary because of prevailing international exchange rate conditions and the level of the United Kingdom’s foreign currency and gold reserves. The United Kingdom has deferred payments on six occasions. Repayment of the war loans to the United States Government should therefore be completed on 31 December 2006, subject to the United Kingdom not choosing to exercise its option to defer payment.


15 posted on 08/31/2015 7:48:21 AM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

figures...

DEMOCRAT President Truman says “PUBLIC must share blame for Pearl Harbor”


16 posted on 08/31/2015 8:22:06 AM PDT by Mr. K (If it is HilLIARy -vs- Jeb! then I am writing-in Palin/Cruz)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

I still think Yamashita got a bum deal by being hanged.


17 posted on 08/31/2015 11:23:52 AM PDT by henkster (Ms. Clinton, are you a criminal or just really stupid?)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson
Those held by the Japs all had the same story. Horrendous treatment.

It's a truism because it's true: the Japanese couldn't fathom the idea of honorable surrender. When it came to their surrendering, they would only do it because their Emperor had ordered it, and even then a fair percentage chose suicide over surrender. When at the beginning of the war Americans, British, and Dutch chose surrender over annihilation, the Japanese considered it a demonstration of our lack of honor, and treated us accordingly.

Whether any Romans ever made it to Japan is highly speculative (Roman coins have been found in Japan, but anyone using the Silk Road could have brought them), but from the earliest times that Europeans arrived on Japan's shores in the mid-1500s, all Westerners have been nambam 南蛮, barbarians 蛮 from the south 南 (since they sailed up the Asian coast towards Japan). Incidentally, the "barbarian" character was originally 蠻, which is a snake on the bottom, out of the mouth of which comes words wrapped up in threads--very much like the Greek concept of barbarioi, or people who were too stupid to speak Greek and therefore sounded like "bar-bar-bar-bar" when they spoke. There was a Japanese nobleman during the war (I'd have to spend half a day digging through my books to find him) who said that he couldn't stand to hear Westerners speaking Japanese, something along the lines of how it sounded like a defilement of the language. Just as the Nazis treated non-Aryans as subhuman, the Japanese treated non-Japanese as subhuman, and Westerners as doubly so, simply because of how haughty we seemed to be towards them.

None of this should be construed as providing any justification for the horrendous treatment of POWs by the Japanese--they thought they were justified, and we had to place them in the position of annihilation or surrender to disabuse them of the notion.

Which leads to something I wanted to write yesterday and couldn't because of the Sunday schedule. James F. Byrnes should have been President at this time, since he was the one FDR wanted to replace Wallace on the 1944 ticket: he had been a Senator from SC, a Supreme Court Justice, and was instrumental in the FDR administration--FDR take Byrnes to Yalta. Truman became the Veep because the unions wanted him, and also because Byrnes had a racist streak a mile wide. Byrnes got his ideas about Japan from Grew, who wasn't blind to the atrocities the Japanese had committed but who probably, for want of a better way to put it, felt for the Japanese who had suffered in the atomic bombings. Byrnes already was beginning his falling out with Truman, and he was convinced that he was better at foreign policy than HST, though he was wrong about Japan, and later on he would be wrong about Iran, eventually leading to all the events in the last 70 years--the 1953 CIA coup because that was the only way to keep the Soviets out of Iran, which helped foment the 1979 revolution that we're still living with today, in part because of someone else who is convinced that he is smarter at foreign policy than the rest of us.

But that is for another time. The issue of whether Japan would have surrendered without the bomb is a fool's discussion. Of course Japan would have surrendered, but not on August 15, maybe on August 31 after the Soviets had taken over Hokkaido and all of Korea, killing 100,000 in the process, and then killing at least another half million during what would have been a 45-year occupation, just as in Eastern Europe--and that would have been better? Remember the Momotaro movie: as late as April 1945 the Japanese people were being prepared to invade the US, as silly as that would have been, so it took a REAL wake-up call to get the Japanese to surrender. My cynical side thinks that Byrnes just didn't like the idea of Truman being right.

18 posted on 08/31/2015 12:01:44 PM PDT by chajin ("There is no other name under heaven given among people by which we must be saved." Acts 4:12)
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To: chajin

If this was some kind of cultural trait, then why didn’t the Japanese mistreat the Russian POWs they seized at Port Arthur in 1904 or the Germans at Tsingtao in 1914? What little information I’ve seen about the 80,000 Russian POWs from 1904 is that they were held in camps in Japan, were adequately fed, clothed and housed, had access to reasonable medical care, corresponded with family, had religious services and recreation, and those that worked were paid for it. This was all before the Geneva Convention. After World War 2 Japan became a nation I would not suspect of mistreating POWs.

I still think there was something far more virulent and malignant at work in Japan during this generation.


19 posted on 08/31/2015 1:47:29 PM PDT by henkster (Ms. Clinton, are you a criminal or just really stupid?)
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To: henkster

Japanese soldiers fared no better than POW’s much of the time. They were emulating what happened and was happening to them.


20 posted on 08/31/2015 1:52:48 PM PDT by AppyPappy (If you really want to irritate someone, point out something obvious they are trying hard to ignore.)
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