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- <text id=89TT2276>
- <link 93XP0166>
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- <link 93TO0065>
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- <title>
- Sep. 04, 1989: A Distant Mirror
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- The 50th Anniversary of World War II
- Sep. 04, 1989 Rock Rolls On:Rolling Stones
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD WAR II, Page 44
- A Distant Mirror
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As Berlin goes to war, Tokyo continues to march through Asia
- </p>
- <p>By Howard G. Chua-Eoan
- </p>
- <p> Deceit. Terror. The compulsion to perfect an impossible
- master plan. Nazi Germany's plunge into madness may have
- convulsed Europe, but Imperial Japan had set out on the same
- course eight years earlier in East Asia. The war there was
- already raging in September 1939, and no end was in sight.
- </p>
- <p> On Sept. 18, 1931, a Japanese army lieutenant meticulously
- wired 42 cubes of yellow blasting powder and buried the load in
- the earth 5 ft. from railroad tracks north of the Manchurian
- city of Mukden (now Shenyang). The explosives would throw a lot
- of dirt but cause little damage to the rail line. After all,
- the South Manchurian Railroad was Japanese-owned and linked the
- empire's economic outposts in predominantly Chinese Manchuria.
- All the army wanted was an "incident."
- </p>
- <p> At approximately 10:20 p.m., a plunger was depressed and the
- cache detonated. Soon after, a Japanese patrol checking the site
- reported that it had been fired upon by Chinese troops, even
- though the local warlord, an ally of China's Generalissimo
- Chiang Kai-shek, had kept his soldiers in their barracks to
- avoid clashes. At 11:30 p.m., Japan's Manchuria-based Kwantung
- army began attacking Chinese positions. By dawn they were
- joined by planes from the imperial colony of Korea. Quickly,
- Mukden was effectively under the empire's control. In the
- following months, the resource-rich region, more than thrice the
- size of prewar Poland, would be annexed. As for the railway, a
- train passing over the tracks 20 min. after the blast reported
- only a slight bump.
- </p>
- <p> Actually, the Mukden Incident of 1931 was not the first time
- Japan's Kwantung army had tried to seize Manchuria. In 1928 the
- army assassinated the Chinese warlord who ruled the region in
- hopes of grabbing the territory outright. But the Japanese
- government squashed any further moves and hushed up the army's
- involvement in the killing. In 1931, Tokyo again tried to stop
- the army. But renegade officers arranged for a geisha to
- distract and delay the envoy sent by the central government.
- Overtaken by events and well aware that the Manchurian
- offensive had won acclaim for the militarist factions in Tokyo,
- the Japanese government caved in to the army's visions of
- manifest destiny--and to its foolhardy insistence on heeding
- the lessons of World War I at any cost.
- </p>
- <p> Though the empire found itself on the winning side in 1918,
- its military planners were deeply worried about the consequences
- of total war. They had witnessed the collapse of the Kaiser's
- formidable forces and knew that large navies and armies were no
- longer enough. A country had to be able to involve all its
- economic forces in a protracted war--especially one against
- the Soviet Union, the foe Japan believed it was destined to
- battle for domination of northeast Asia. The military men knew
- that while the Japanese archipelago was woefully short of
- natural resources, neighboring territories were not. First
- Manchuria, then the rest of the old imperial Chinese realm
- became the focus of Japan's rush toward autarky. And that quest
- for security would lead deeper and deeper into war.
- </p>
- <p> The fall of Manchuria was followed by the Fake War, an
- extended period of posturing by the Chinese and Japanese. But in
- January 1932, as the League of Nations debated Tokyo's
- aggression, a Japanese cruiser, four destroyers and two
- aircraft carriers anchored in the Yangtze River off the
- international city of Shanghai. They had come on the pretext of
- protecting Japanese citizens from attacks by Chinese mobs. In
- response, Nationalist forces moved into the Chinese suburb of
- Chapei and skirmished with patrolling Japanese marines. With his
- men giving way to the larger Chinese forces, Admiral Koichi
- Shiozawa ordered planes from his carriers to drop 30-lb. bombs
- over densely populated Chapei. It was the first wholesale air
- attack on civilian targets in history. Thousands of people, many
- of them women and children, were maimed and killed.
- </p>
- <p> Condemned by the League, Japan quit the organization and
- found itself increasingly isolated. In its quest to prepare for a
- Soviet war, the empire continued to nibble at China and
- estranged itself from the U.S., Chiang's chief supporter and,
- embarrassingly for Tokyo, the source of most of Japan's
- strategic materials. National self-strengthening took on
- fanatical proportions. The state religion built around animist
- Shinto beliefs was transformed into full-fledged emperor
- worship. And despite shortages in food and electricity due to
- the military allocations, the Empire of the Rising Sun believed
- it was destined to shine over all of East Asia. "Manchuria
- alone is not enough," wrote navy Lieut. Commander Tota Ishimaru
- in 1936. "With it alone Japan cannot go on."
- </p>
- <p> To buttress its military strategy, Japan forged ties with
- another international outcast--Germany. In 1936 they signed a
- pact to oppose Communism that included secret protocols to come
- to the other's aid during a war with the Soviet Union. With
- Berlin balancing out Moscow, Tokyo accelerated its conquest of
- China with another "incident." On July 7, 1937, a Japanese
- soldier stationed near Beijing's Marco Polo Bridge left his
- post to urinate. His superiors announced that he had been
- abducted by a nearby Chinese garrison and began shelling the
- unit. Japanese forces soon overran eastern China.
- </p>
- <p> Plans were then drawn to carry the battle up the Yangtze
- from Shanghai, take the Nationalist capital of Nanking (now
- Nanjing) and force Chiang to surrender. In one month the
- Imperial forces had shattered Chinese defenses, trapping
- 300,000 Nationalist troops and forcing hundreds of thousands of
- the city's 1 million people to flee. On Dec. 12, 1937, Nanking
- fell. For the next six weeks, the area's remaining population
- would be subjected to the worst atrocities yet seen in modern
- warfare. More than 200,000 men, a fourth of them civilians,
- were immolated, bayoneted or tortured to death, and 20,000 women
- were raped.
- </p>
- <p> But the terror did not bring victory. Though forced to flee
- his capital, Chiang, in an uneasy alliance with Mao Zedong's
- Communist guerrillas, continued to resist from the southwestern
- hill city of Chungking (now Chongqing). The China Incident would
- drag on for years, sucking up much needed funds and prompting
- Japan to begin looking to Southeast Asia and the Pacific as
- alternative sources of material, which set it on a collision
- course with the U.S. The Imperial Navy's reckless attacks on
- neutral ships moored near Nanking during the siege (including
- the U.S. gunboat Panay, which sank with the loss of two American
- sailors), further isolated Japan from the West. Summing up his
- feelings about the Japanese, Colonel Joseph W. Stilwell, the
- U.S. military attache in Beijing, wrote in his diary in 1937,
- "The bastards."
- </p>
- <p> In May 1939 the Kwantung army began another adventure,
- clashing with troops of the People's Republic of Mongolia, a
- client of Moscow's. Quickly, the Soviet Union sent assistance,
- and in the next four months the Japanese army lost 17,450 men to
- the vastly superior mechanized units of Soviet General Georgi
- Zhukov. But just when Japan could have used Berlin's help,
- Hitler announced a nonaggression pact between Berlin and Moscow.
- </p>
- <p> Japan's leaders were furious, and for months the country's
- foreign policy wavered between an independent course and
- adherence to the alliance. When Berlin and Moscow swiftly began
- to carve up Poland on Sept. 1, Japan reacted coldly, simply
- stating, "The empire will not intervene in the war in Europe."
- Tokyo recalled its pro-German Ambassador to Berlin. A
- German-Japanese trade agreement scheduled to be signed in
- October 1939 was canceled, and Emperor Hirohito even announced
- that his country would "follow a conciliatory line with regard
- to Britain and America."
- </p>
- <p> But Tokyo's Asian and Pacific ambitions prevented any
- detente with Washington. And soon, Germany's crushing victories
- in Europe were earning Berlin great prestige in Japan. By the
- time Paris fell in June 1940, slogans like "Don't miss the bus"
- were popular. In fact, immediately after signing the Soviet
- pact, German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop was
- playing on Japanese anxieties, telling Tokyo's emissaries that
- turning away from Berlin and toward London and Washington would
- only hem in the empire. "The Western democracies," warned
- Ribbentrop, "would quickly form an extensive world coalition
- which would oppose any expansion by Japan and, in particular,
- would again wrest her from her position in China."
- </p>
- <p> Won over by emotion and ambition, the country formed an
- ultra-nationalist Cabinet, and on Sept. 27, 1940, the fiery
- Foreign Minister Yosuke Matsuoka forged the Tripartite
- Agreement with Berlin and Rome, thus creating the Axis. "Japan,"
- said Matsuoka, "should push boldly forward, hand in hand with
- Germany," not hesitating even to commit "double suicide" with
- Berlin if necessary. Warned that Japan's economy would collapse
- without severe cutbacks in the military budget, Army Minister
- Hideki Tojo, a former Kwantung commander who would become the
- empire's wartime Premier, was livid. Said he: "We simply have to
- sacrifice everything in the interest of strengthening our armed
- forces."
- </p>
- <p> Almost alone among the upper military echelon, Admiral
- Isoroku Yamamoto counseled against being dragged further into
- war, especially against the U.S. In the first months of such a
- conflict, he said, "I will run wild and win victory upon
- victory. But then, if the war continues, I have no expectation
- of success." But by September 1941 a decision had been made to
- prepare to fight America, and as commander of the Imperial
- Navy, Yamamoto dutifully drew up the plans. "I expect to die on
- the deck of my flagship," he said. "In those evil days you will
- see Tokyo burnt to the ground three times."
- </p>
- <p> By Nov. 26, 1941, Yamamoto's strike force of six aircraft
- carriers, two battleships and a host of cruisers, destroyers and
- submarines would set sail from Japan for the Kuriles, then deep
- into the Pacific toward Hawaii. Shortly after 6 a.m. on Dec. 7,
- dozens of Japanese Zeros would take off from the carriers, head
- south and within 90 minutes sight the coast of Oahu--and Pearl
- Harbor. Japan, its fortunes yoked with Germany's, was launched
- on the road to double suicide.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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