Edit: I guess not.has America ever apologised for Hiroshima and Nagasaki?
Edit: I guess not.has America ever apologised for Hiroshima and Nagasaki?
Japan wasn't stupid, they knew it was lost. I hope everyone knows that by now, I didn't learn the proper background until I was in college. They never had any intention of sacrificing all of Japan, they would never do that. Some wanted to risk the surrender, others wanted to have a "decisive battle" (that they had little intention of winning) and force the United States into a conditional surrender. Undoubtedly it would have been pretty fucking horrific, but I feel like it's difficult (impossible?) for this "bomb good or bad" argument not to be distilled down into the internet's hobby of Atrocity Olympics. Except that one atrocity didn't happen, so it seems a little more ridiculous to try to compare them.
Nothing is as simple as "nukes saved lives," and there was nothing "merciful" about the nukes if you've read stories of what happened afterwards.
People didnt really know that the bombs would have long lasting effects as clearly outline in Operation Downfall, where the allied invasion troops were supposed to move to take cities that were nuked 48 hours after they dropped.
People didnt really know that the bombs would have long lasting effects as clearly outline in Operation Downfall, where the allied invasion troops were supposed to move to take cities that were nuked 48 hours after they dropped.
Japan wasn't stupid, they knew it was lost. I hope everyone knows that by now, I didn't learn the proper background until I was in college. They never had any intention of sacrificing all of Japan, they would never do that. Some wanted to risk the surrender, others wanted to have a "decisive battle" (that they had little intention of winning) and force the United States into a conditional surrender. Undoubtedly it would have been pretty fucking horrific, but I feel like it's difficult (impossible?) for this "bomb good or bad" argument not to be distilled down into the internet's hobby of Atrocity Olympics. Except that one atrocity didn't happen, so it seems a little more ridiculous to try to compare them.
Nothing is as simple as "nukes saved lives," and there was nothing "merciful" about the nukes if you've read stories of what happened afterwards.
so learning something in college automatically makes you correct/expert? We have heard all this before; the fact is, japan had already lost the war, it wasn't their decision how they would surrender, they were told to surrender and they didn't.
So the allies should have had some major battle and get their noses blooded to satisfy japanese conditions of their own surrender? ridiculous. If they knew they were beat and ready to surrender, then they should have.
I've been watching some of the TV shows about the war here in Japan and it is bizarre. Not a single mention of the Chinese, Koreans, Filipinos or Allied POWs who were killed during the war. It is all about how Japan suffered. There was one show where a half American girl talked to a Japanese man and asked him if his views had changed and he said he still hated the Americans for what they did during the war, bringing her to tears. I was astounded at the audacity. I felt like shouting at him what about all those millions of people who died at the hands of the Japanese military you stupid fuck.
I've been watching some of the TV shows about the war here in Japan and it is bizarre. Not a single mention of the Chinese, Koreans, Filipinos or Allied POWs who were killed during the war. It is all about how Japan suffered. There was one show where a half American girl talked to a Japanese man and asked him if his views had changed and he said he still hated the Americans for what they did during the war, bringing her to tears. I was astounded at the audacity. I felt like shouting at him what about all those millions of people who died at the hands of the Japanese military you stupid fuck.
Bush and Vietnam? Wtf?
I'm consistently surprised by the amount of uninformed posters here who just blatanly ignore the facts about imperial Japan and the necessity of those bombs.
But hey, everyone loves a reason to bash America.
We didn't need to nuke Germany to beat them in WW2?
We didn't need to nuke Germany to beat them in WW2?
We didn't need to nuke Germany to beat them in WW2?
That was the original plan for Little Boy and Fat Man IIRC...
I've been watching some of the TV shows about the war here in Japan and it is bizarre. Not a single mention of the Chinese, Koreans, Filipinos or Allied POWs who were killed during the war. It is all about how Japan suffered. There was one show where a half American girl talked to a Japanese man and asked him if his views had changed and he said he still hated the Americans for what they did during the war, bringing her to tears. I was astounded at the audacity. I felt like shouting at him what about all those millions of people who died at the hands of the Japanese military you stupid fuck.
"Us" being Europe (UK). I'm not American, that's on them guy's.
We didn't need to nuke Germany to beat them in WW2?
UK and the US were in both theaters, TBF.
The US apologized to Native Americans and native Hawaiians.
Because 30 million Russians gave their lives to defeat the Nazis.
U.S. involvement in WWII is heavily over-glorified and romanticized, but the Eastern Front was where the war was won, and it was a bloodbath the likes of which had never been seen.
Likewise, there is an argument to be made that it wasn't even the bomb that made Japan surrender, but rather the Soviet Union declaring war on them.
Let's not downplay the arrival of an strong and furthermore rather undamaged army and economy in mainland Europe. Everyone was hanging in the ropes, the Reich just a lot less than France and Britain. You can of course argue that the war would've been won without the USA (I would argue against that), but there is no doubt that their active war contribution was a heavy impact that broke the Reich definitly and without saving.Because 30 million Russians gave their lives to defeat the Nazis.
U.S. involvement in WWII is heavily over-glorified and romanticized, but the Eastern Front was where the war was won, and it was a bloodbath the likes of which had never been seen.
Likewise, there is an argument to be made that it wasn't even the bomb that made Japan surrender, but rather the Soviet Union declaring war on them.
Let's not downplay the arrival of an strong and furthermore rather undamaged army and economy in mainland Europe. Everyone was hanging in the ropes, the Reich just a lot less than France and Britain. You can of course argue that the war would've been won without the USA (I would argue against that), but there is no doubt that their active war contribution was a heavy impact that broke the Reich definitly and without saving.
It was a messy war. I believe we would have won eventually against them and despite my earlier comments, I do think the war was won sooner thanks to the combined efforts of the Russians and the US helping out tremendously. In the end though, the Russians suffered the greatest casualties on the Allies side and frankly didn't receive enough thanks/help or sympathy for it, sadly.
Let's not downplay the arrival of an strong and furthermore rather undamaged army and economy in mainland Europe. Everyone was hanging in the ropes, the Reich just a lot less than France and Britain. You can of course argue that the war would've been won without the USA (I would argue against that), but there is no doubt that their active war contribution was a heavy impact that broke the Reich definitly and without saving.
Also Japan resused to surrender even after the first bomb. It took a second one for them to do it.
Wasnt this a thread about Japan's crimes? Not America's?
FFS there's a reason. They were allied with the Nazis until Germany invaded the Soviet Union.
Wasnt this a thread about Japan's crimes? Not America's?
Japan's emperor expressing remorse for Japan's war crimes apparently has nothing to do with Japan's war crimes.Actually it was a thread about Japan's emperor expressing remorse until people tuned it into a thread about Japan's war crimes (again)
I think some people get off on it
Japan's emperor expressing remorse for Japan's war crimes apparently has nothing to do with Japan's war crimes.
Yes, that's because the first post was about the atomic bombs.Don't be cute. The direction the thread took is obviously different from the original topic
Wasnt this a thread about Japan's crimes? Not America's?
I think it's pretty reasonable to say Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan weren't justified in the slightest, being genocidal aggressors in the bloodiest war in human history.None of the big players in WW2 came out without blood on their hands.
Germany, Japan, and the United States all committed horrible atrocities. At this point, it is just a circular argument where we measure them and try to say that one was worse than the other or that one was more justified.
has America ever apologised for Hiroshima and Nagasaki?
Don't be cute. The direction the thread took is obviously different from the original topic
Japan has apologized for the war and colonial rule for dozens of times. While there is certainly more they could make Korea and especially China would still use the Japan card as with it they can divert attention from internal problems. Not to mention it's not just because of WWII. These three nations have been hostile against each other since forever and one apology would not change that. For example highest grossing movie of all time in Korea is The Admiral that revolves around Battle of Myeongnyang circa 1597 against Japan. That is how far it goes.
Still insanely disadvantaged in modern though. Verbal apologies and all are fine yet very little else done other than -shrug- sorry about that.
Either way Akihito has been on the remorse side of the fence publically for years now. He's been pretty openly opposite Abe's peeps message for a good while.
The Death Railway: June 1942October 1943
As their cargo ships were vulnerable to Allied raids, the Japanese sought an alternative supply line to maintain their forces in Burma. This culminated in the construction of a 415-kilometer (300 mi) railway between Burma and Thailand. The railway used 60,000 Allied POWs and 200,000 Asian conscripts for slave labor. During the year-long construction, thousands died from the grueling working conditions and inhumane treatment. A total of 13,000 POWS along with approximately 80,000100,000 Asian laborers died constructing the railway. The plight of the surviving workers did not end with the railways completion. While the Japanese relocated some of the prisoners, they continued to keep a contingent to maintain and repair the railway in the face of Allied attacks.
The Massacre Of Manila: FebruaryMarch 1945
Early in 1945, General Yamashita planned for his men to evacuate Manila and fight in the countryside. However, two Japanese admirals ignored his order and committed their men to a final stand inside the city. When the Americans arrived, the Japanese forces realized that they faced certain death and vented their rage on the hapless civilians trapped inside their lines. For weeks, the Japanese raped, pillaged, and murdered. Aside from the bayonets and beheadings, they machine-gunned captives and set fire to buildings with people trapped inside. The Americans ceased artillery strikes so the Japanese could surrender, but the Japanese instead continued their rampage. After the dust settled, all Japanese defenders of the city had died, taking with them 100,000 civilian casualties. The incident left Manila as one of the Allies most damaged capital cities, second only to Warsaw.
Sook Ching Massacre: FebruaryMarch 1942
Following the Fall of Singapore, the Japanese wanted to mop up all remaining resistance, especially among the Chinese living in the region. To accomplish this, the notorious Japanese secret police Kempetai initiated Operation Sook Ching (purge through cleansing) in February 1942. Singapore was the first to be purged. After interning and interrogating the citys entire Chinese population, the Kempetai herded those they deemed as dangerous into military vehicles. They then transported them to the citys outskirts and executed them all. This purging operation soon found its way into other parts of Malaya as well. The manpower shortage and rush made the Kempetai especially merciless toward those in rural areas. They eliminated entire villages on mere suspicion of subversive activity. Although we have no official casualty figures, estimates range from 5,0006,000 (Japanese sources) to a high of 30,000100,000 (Singaporean and Chinese sources).
Palawan Massacre: December 14, 1944
In another case of POW massacre, the Japanese stationed in Palawan Island, Philippines tried to kill all their American prisoners after wrongly assuming Allied forces had invaded. After driving the prisoners into makeshift air raid shelters, the Japanese burned them alive. Those who fled the burning structures were bayoneted, shot, or bludgeoned to death. A few dozen managed to make it as far as the shoreline and hide there; the Japanese caught, tortured, and executed almost all of them. Of the 150 prisoners, less than a dozen survived to tell the tale, the lucky few somehow finding the strength to swim across a bay to safety. News of this grisly massacre prompted Allied forces to embark on a series of raids to liberate prisons and camps held by the Japanese across the archipelago.
Alexandra Hospital Massacre: February 1415, 1942
Just a day before the British surrendered Singapore, Japanese soldiers stormed Alexandra Military Hospital and slaughtered its occupants, including the medical staff and patients. Even those undergoing surgery were not spared. Following the massacre, the Japanese forced those left to clean up the mess and then herded them into cramped rooms. When morning came, the Japanese rounded up the 200 survivors (some died during the night) and bayoneted them in the courtyard. Only five survived the second massacreby hiding in a storm drain. General Yamashita, upon learning the incident, had the offending soldiers apprehended and executed.
Mostly I am surprised to hear Japan still has a living Emperor.
It doesnt help if one apologizes and then later visits the shrine of "war heroes".
It doesnt help if someone tries to play it down ala "It wasnt that bad. It was war. And look what the american did to us."
It doesnt help if "they" always see themselves in a victim role.
I know what you mean, but as long as politicians "dont believe" it was really that bad, nothing happens.
It also isnt important, whether China or Korea use "the Japan card" for whatever reason.
I think if Abe would build a museum about the atrocoties they commited during WW2 (like the thousands of museums we have here in Germany), deeply apologizes and not just because of reactions from China or Japan, but because they really think it was wrong, it would be a huge step towards acknowledging they did shitty things.
http://listverse.com/2014/05/06/10-japanese-atrocities-from-world-war-ii/
But yes, all sides committed atrocities, more false equivalency crap, blah blah
It doesn't help what? The apology is a political gesture, there will never be any substance behind apologies from heads of state, other than an acknowledgement that war crimes were committed. You want them to stop visiting the memorials of their fallen soldiers? Why?
1. "Imagine if the Westboro Baptist Church happened to own Arlington." From Noboru Akimoto:
I've been watching your back and forth on Yasukuni with some interest, and I generally agree with the commentators that say the issue is more with the Yushukan than with the shrine itself. [JF note: Yushukan is the "historical" museum near the shrine, with a very tendentious view of Japan being forced into the war by Allied encirclement.]
I do think a part that's not been mentioned is that Yasukuni Jinja [Shrine], because of the separation of religion and state of the post-war constitution, is NOT a part of the Japanese government, nor does any of the Imperial family have control over its actions.
We know from the Tomita Memorandum that the Showa Emperor [aka Hirohito] was furious about the chief priest's decision to include the Class A 14 into the shrine in 1979, but that as a matter of politics, neither the Emperor nor the government can actually compel Yasukuni, a private religious institution, from acknowledging the 14 Class A criminals nor force it to disinter their spirits.
As a Japanese individual and Shintoist, I would like to see the priests separate the class A war criminals from the others, but I also understand that as a practical, constitutional matter, having the government force the issue would be a step in the wrong direction.
If we had to have some sort of strange analogy, I would ask American readers to imagine if the Westboro Baptist Church happened to own Arlington.
Yasukuni Shrine operates a war museum of the history of Japan (the Yūshūkan), which some observers[who?] have criticized as presenting a revisionist interpretation. A documentary-style video shown to museum visitors portrays Japan's conquest of East Asia during the pre-World War II period as an effort to save the region from the imperial advances of the colonial Western powers called the "Greater East Asia Co-prosperity Sphere". Displays portray Japan as a victim of foreign influence, especially Western undermining of trade.[citation needed] The museum fails to portray any atrocities committed by the Japanese Imperial Army. On the invasion of Nanking, the museum omits any mention of the massacre.[8]
We nuked civilians, who were just as complicit in those crimes as you or I.
It doesn't help what? The apology is a political gesture, there will never be any substance behind apologies from heads of state, other than an acknowledgement that war crimes were committed. You want them to stop visiting the memorials of their fallen soldiers? Why?
It doesnt help if one apologizes and then later visits the shrine of "war heroes".
It doesnt help if someone tries to play it down ala "It wasnt that bad. It was war. And look what the american did to us."
It doesnt help if "they" always see themselves in a victim role.
I know what you mean, but as long as politicians "dont believe" it was really that bad, nothing happens.
It also isnt important, whether China or Korea use "the Japan card" for whatever reason.
I think if Abe would build a museum about the atrocoties they commited during WW2 (like the thousands of museums we have here in Germany), deeply apologizes and not just because of reactions from China or Japan, but because they really think it was wrong, it would be a huge step towards acknowledging they did shitty things.
He serves no purpose. The British royal family at least have people loving or hating them. The Japanese imperial family? No one cares.
Well, the real sticking point isn't whether or not it happened, but rather to what extent. Japan overwhelmingly admits that killings and rapes happened. The problem is the Chinese govt demands that they accept responsibility for ludicrously high numbers that are most assuredly inflated for the purpose of propaganda. The truth is that photographic evidence of the Rape of Nanking is very limited. In fact, the vast majority of it has been argued by some historians to be of questionable origin and repute. I'm pretty pro-Allies when it comes to WW2, so it was a tough pill to swallow for me. However, the evidence presented of the photo manipulation and how it was present in virtually the totality of photographic evidence supporting the Chinese estimates was pretty convincing. Who knows.
The answer is likely somewhere in-between. I personally think it should have no bearing on the debate whether or not to remilitarize Japan, but as you know, some LDF politicians obviously feel like confronting the truth about the horrors of the Imperial Army would deter approval for their military goals. That was a different time and a different government, and Japan is in a totally different position than it was back then, so I think it's irrelevant in that discussion. However, outright denial of Japanese WW2 atrocities is not unheard-of, and it's pretty nefarious.