The Basket
Senior Master Sergeant
- 3,712
- Jun 27, 2007
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Great read! Thanks for the link.An excellent read on the issues under discussion here:
The Fate of Emperor Hirohito | The National WWII Museum | New Orleans
Would Japanese Emperor Hirohito remain in power after his nation’s surrender? His fate rested in part on the attitude of General Douglas MacArthur.www.nationalww2museum.org
Good read, though a Occidental-centric one. I still think MacArthur did the right thing vis a vis Hirohito, while Richard Frank's solution would have generated unrest and resentment just when the US was fighting a war in Korea and needed support and cooperation from Japan.An excellent read on the issues under discussion here:
The Fate of Emperor Hirohito | The National WWII Museum | New Orleans
Would Japanese Emperor Hirohito remain in power after his nation’s surrender? His fate rested in part on the attitude of General Douglas MacArthur.www.nationalww2museum.org
Good read, though a Occidental-centric one. I still think MacArthur did the right thing vis a vis Hirohito, while Richard Frank's solution would have generated unrest and resentment just when the US was fighting a war in Korea and needed support and cooperation from Japan.
Not to mention that Japan had prepared for an invasion with stockpiled ammunition and fuel as well as retaining frontline fighters and attack aircraft.I have pointed out to friends who enter into this type conversation, considering what we now call post traumatic stress, imagine the mental problems after a land invasion of Japan. Remember, old men were taught to make single shot shotguns from pipe, teens were taught to fly the Ki-115, boys and girls as young as nine were being trained to use spears and knives. Most of the US troops on the way to Japan were 18 and 19. Think of the mental problems after having to kill boys and girls the age of their brothers and sisters back home. As an example, Audie Murphy had terrible nightmares and often could not sleep indoors, and he was fighting adults.
there is something else, I want to add to your post, and might be completely off topic! but it is this:Audie Murphy had terrible nightmares and often could not sleep indoors, and he was fighting adults.
So should Hirohito be hanged? Yes.
So should Hirohito be hanged? No.
I have pointed out to friends who enter into this type conversation, considering what we now call post traumatic stress, imagine the mental problems after a land invasion of Japan.
If you were to hang Hirohito, even if several years after VJ day, you would have a bloodbath on your hands, as after several years of trying to make nice-nice to the Japanese you will have spit in their eye. The outer fringe of communist-leaning Japanese would make hay out of such an event.It would have been a battle for every inch of ground.
Ever hear the expression "to conquer with kindness"? Sounds like idealistic liberal blather, doesn't it? I would submit that the Japanese were gently shown a better way and absorbed it wholesale, as they never would have if it were shoved down their throats with the same brutality that had been endemic to their culture. Remember, in only three quarters of a century they had come from an inherently brutal medieval warrior society to a pseudo modern industrial nation. Technological change and the societal adjustments to utilize it will happen much faster than the evolutionary changes in social mores and attitudes they enable. Just look at race relations in the USA over nearly twice as long. We still ain't there yet.All the revisionism in the world can't hide the kindness America showed to a merciless vanquished enemy who showed nothing but venom to the world. Japan deserved nothing. Zero. Nada. Zilch. The behavior of the Japanese was in marked contrast to the treatment Japan received.