Posted on 03/09/2007 12:39:39 PM PST by Jedi Master Pikachu
Japanese emperor Hirohito expressed doubts about going to war with China in the 1930s and 40s, extracts from a diary of one of his advisers reveal.
They show Hirohito was afraid the Soviet Union would intervene. The diary by Kuraji Ogura, who worked as a chamberlain to Hirohito in World War II, was found recently and parts have been published in Japan's media. The full text may help solve the debate about how much responsibility the emperor had for Japan's wartime action. South Pacific visit The document is 600 pages long and includes an account of Ogura's experiences between 1939 and 1945. According to a diary entry in October 1940, Hirohito expressed concern that the Japanese army had underestimated China when it launched a full-scale invasion in 1937. A later extract quotes Hirohito as saying he had not wanted the war with China to begin, because he was afraid the Soviet Union would intervene. However, in another section of the diary - more of which is due to be published on Saturday - Hirohito appeared to be more optimistic.
He said he hoped to visit the South Pacific after the war, a region he believed would by then be part of Japanese territory. Hirohito never spoke to the public until the Japanese surrender in 1945, so his assistant's diary does shed some interesting light on his views. The full text may reveal whether he was carried along by his advisers and the military or played an active part in the planning and conduct of the war.
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Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939. France and Great Britain, via treaty obligations, declared war on Germany on September 3, 1939 ... World War Two starts ...
USSR invades Poland ... September 17, 1939 ... so Uncle Joe "joined" in AFTER the war had started two weeks earlier.
But the agreement to invade was made before the Nazis rolled, so the Soviets are jointly responsible.
He was given a free hand, and turned out to have been far more generous and conciliatory that anyone thought would be the case. In August 1945, 90% of the American people wouldn't have objected to mass sterilization of the Japanese people, if not outright elimination. That we two nations have overcome all that in sixty years' time is largely attributable to MacArthur's occupation policies, which he mostly devised himself.
Appreciated.
Manners.
Nope. That would be Japan, when it invaded Manchuria.
It was not the signing of the said non-aggression pact, nor Japanese actions, but rather German troops crossing the Polish frontier.
Too bad Mac wasn't in charge of dealing with Germany post-WW1. Hitler would quite likely have never risen to power.
The same could be said of the USSR invasion of Finland.
Why do I think Paul Bremer never read much about MacArthur, or Maxwell Taylor and the other American military proconsuls in Germany?
OK, you've picked that nit to death.
The Winter War did not extend into WWII.
In the case of the Japanese in China, here you had one of the world's top militaries invading the world's most populous country, in a massive effort that dwarfs what the Soviets did in Finnland. Attempting to equate the two is just borderline absurd.
Yes, it wasn't considered "WWII" in 1937. But yes, it became part of WWII, and was part of what led Japan to defeat in 1945. And from the likely perspective of the Japanese, and not Western historians, the war started in 1937. It just got materially bigger in 1941, but was already in-progress.
Again, timing ... Japan invaded Manchuria in 1931, Manchuko resulting. So, extending your logic, for Japan WWII started then?
As to when World War II "officially" started. Insofar as this article is about *Japan's* involvement, one should bear in mind that MOST of Japan's war effort (at least as far as troop strength is concerned) was directed against CHINA, which it had been fighting since it had precipitated the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937.
By Japanese lights, then, when did WWII begin?
And, also, by "western" lights, when did WWII begin?
Perhaps better, what specific event(s) initiated those beginnings?
And, after these many decades since, are these questions considered settled? If yes, by whom? If, not, so what?
Yes, yes, jamaksin... I am aware that Japan's aggression against China didn't first start in 1937 - but that is generally agreed upon as the year in which Japan geared up its activities and moved against China *in earnest*. It is not my intention to instigate a dispute with anyone over the actual starting date of World War II - I just think it rather western-centric to focus so much on the European theatre of war and September of 1939 when the article was about *Japan* and its military aggressions in Eastern Asia.
"Origins of the Pacific War", Keiichiro Komatsu, St. Martin Press, New York, 1999, [ISBN 0-312-17385-7], (from his PhD dissertation taken at Oxford).
A Japanese perspective perhaps worth a quick scan.
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