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- Newsgroups: soc.culture.korean
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!news.acns.nwu.edu!casbah.acns.nwu.edu!andrew
- From: andrew@casbah.acns.nwu.edu (Andrew Sung Hyun Kim)
- Subject: Re: questions of the Korean War
- Message-ID: <1992Nov22.222840.5368@news.acns.nwu.edu>
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- Organization: Northwestern University, Evanston Illinois.
- References: <1992Nov22.053822.8772@tc.cornell.edu> <1992Nov22.205411.3685@news.acns.nwu.edu> <1992Nov22.214349.27377@tc.cornell.edu>
- Date: Sun, 22 Nov 1992 22:28:40 GMT
- Lines: 61
-
- In article <1992Nov22.214349.27377@tc.cornell.edu> jfe@alchemy.tn.cornell.edu (Brian Chung) writes:
- >In article <1992Nov22.205411.3685@news.acns.nwu.edu> andrew@casbah.acns.nwu.edu (Andrew Sung Hyun Kim) writes:
- >>Please add following information to your analysis:
- >> [From "Modern Times", Paul Johnson ... pg 425]
- >>
- >> On 6 June (1945) the Japanese Supreme Council approved a document,
- >> 'Fundamental Policy to be Followed henceforth in the Conduct of
- >> the War', which assertd 'we shall ... prosecute the war to the
- >> bitter end'. THe final plan for the defense of Japan itself,
- >> 'Operation Decision', provided for 10,000 suicide plane (most
- >> converted trainers), fifty-three infantry troops would fight on the
- >> beaches, backed by 4 million army and navy civil employees and a
- >> civiliAan militia of 28 million. They were to have weapons which
- >> included bamboo spears and bows and arrows. Special legislation
- >> was passed by the Diet to form this army. The allied commanders
- >> assumed that their own forces must expect up to a million casulties
- >> if an invasion of Japan became necessary. How many Japanese lives
- >> would be lost? Assuming comparable ratios to these already
- >> experienced, it would be in the range of 10-20 million.
- >
- > However, this was in June. In August, the Soviets declared war.
- >"The Russians, meanwhile, declared war on August 8 and the Red Army moved
- >forward in Manchuria and southern Sakhalin. The Japanese Manchurian Army
- >surrendered." (Rise to Globalism by Stephen Ambrose.) I gave more
- >weight to the argument that said that the Japan may be ready to die by
- >inflicting a terrible damage to the United States, but she wasn't ready
- >to fight both the US and the Russians at the same time and from two
- >different directions.
- >>
- >PS-Welcome back, Andrew. Long time, no type. :)
-
- After the drop of the first atomic bomb the reactions by the
- Japanese governments lend credance to their willingness to fight
- even after the devastation of Hiroshima. See excerpts below:
-
- Publicly, the Japanese government reaction was to send a protest
- to the world through the Swiss embassy...
- Privately, they summoned Nishina [more about him later], head
- of their atomic program, to Tokyo to demand whether the Hiroshima
- bomb was a genuine nuclear weapon and, if so, whether he could
- duplicate it within six months.
- [from Modern Times... Paul Johnson]
-
- This was AFTER the first A-bomb was dropped.
-
- Nishina was an distinuished nuclear physicist. By 1940 they had
- first cyclotron, and by the time of the Russian invasion of North
- Korea they had "huge nuclear installation in HungNam (North Korea),
- later dismanteled by the Soviets..." [from "Hirohito" by Edward Behr]
-
- Same book also mention about possible nuclear explosion in HungNam
- on August 10th, 1945 [by Japanese eyewitness]. There are many other
- 'evidences' that Japan was working on A-bomb [ibid] , and I am
- sure that they would not have hesitated in using it.
-
- >T. H. Brian Chung
-
- Andrew Sung Hyun Kim " 'All truth is simple', is it not doubly a lie?"
- andrew@eecs.nwu.edu " The refinement of morality increase with the
- andrew@casbah.acns.nwu.edu refinement of fear " Friedrich Nietzsche
-
-