masaman Wrote:Plumage,
Earlier, I said I know people like you. But you seem to be willing to listen a lot more than I thought you would. I apologize and take that word back. And even though I said that you would look like a racist (and I think it is still true) I know you are not one. I can see that you have a pretty balanced opinion as a citizen of US where some people are actually "proud" of nukes and more people consider 9/11 as second Pearl Harbor.
But do these people who consider 9/11 as Pearl Harbor "know" that Roosevelt imposed an oil embargo? that there were intense diplomatic efforts from Japanese side to lift it? that Roosevelt knew exactly what Japanese diplomats would say and how much they would compromise through espionage? that he quit the negotiation by sending Japan what is called Hull Note which made an Indian jurist at Tokyo trial say "the Principality of Monaco, the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, would have taken up arms against the United States on receipt of such a note"? And finally that the first shot at Pearl Harbor was from US battle ship which sunk a Japanese submarine 40 minutes before the Japanese air strike?
I don't think so. And if they knew, I think their "literal" wordings about Pearl Harbor might have been a little different.
Likewise, many US people who believe that nukes ended the war don't know that most decisions in Imperial Japan were made by the prime ministers and cabinet members who were lawmakers elected by Japanese citizens. They also don't know that the prime minister had changed several times through the course of the war, and the last prime minister was a kind of person who expressed his condolence on the death of President Roosevelt. And of course, asking an average American to know it was the Japanese army that strongly opposed surrender and only compromised after the Russian's invasion is far fetched.
You can say that the Emperor could surrender anytime on his own decision, and yes he could. But if you know all these back grounds (not just my words but the actual history), you might find such an act something only ended up with a coup d'etat by the army. And the army had never faltered by the nukes as they still kept a lot of power in Manchuria.
Now, I'm not trying to change your, or anyone's, opinion, but I wanted to provide some food for thought. I hope I did an OK job.
Some of this is worthy, some of it is not.
A bit that surely is not worthy is the attempt to put the "first shot" blame on the US. This is very, very pathetic, almost sick.
Japan sent an ARMADA to Hawaii. Its intent was clear. That the US *may* have fired first on a Japanese submarine that was *way* out of its normal patrolling area, and which certainly menaced the battleship that fired on it, is way, way, way beyond the point. Japan had picked up the gun, and intended to use it, because the US was going to refuse to sell it oil. (Oh dear!) And one might understand (even if you don't) that in those days before satellite communication, the Japanese navy was "over the horizon", and could not be called back -- IT WAS GOING TO ATTACK, no matter what.
When you pick up the gun first, you are responsible. ONE-HUNDRED PERCENT responsible, even if the other side sees you coming and decides that it needs to defend itself. JAPAN started the hostilities, and any attempt to paper this over is revisionist claptrap. Take it back or endure nothing but ridicule from me and others. It's up to you.
THERE IS NO EXCUSE. Japan was coming to kill, and they were the first out of the gate with that intention.
Nothing the US did threatened Japan's national survival. Yes, perhaps it threatened Japan's extra-territorial survival, but so what. Japan had zero right to any of China, even a sliver of it.
If Japan was "tricked" into starting the war, then it was a simpleton nation that shouldn't have been playing over its head in the first place. Once again, pick up the gun, and you are guilty.
So your story, while somewhat interesting, is largely revisionist BS.
Japan reached for the gun. Japan decided to kill, to defend the killing that it was already engaged in. Japan is guilty. Period. Japan overplayed its hand, and Japan decided that murder would solve its "problems", problems that only Japan envisioned that it had. Japan is GUILTY. Period.
Capice?
Edited: 2009-06-03, 11:06 pm