Dan Carlin's Hardcore History - Show 62 - Supernova in the East I
Episode Date: July 15, 2018The Asia-Pacific War of 1937-1945 has deep roots. It also involves a Japanese society that's been called one of the most distinctive on Earth. If there were a Japanese version of Captain America, this... would be his origin story.
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December 7th, 1941.
It's history.
A date which will live in infamy.
That's one small step for man.
One giant leap for mankind.
The events.
I take pride in the words the figures.
It's been I'm the Alina.
Mr. Wobachoff teared down this world.
The drama.
The deep question.
I welcome this kind of examination because people have got to know whether or not their
president's a crook.
But I'm not a crook.
If we dig deep in our history and our doctrine and remember that we are not descended from fearful man.
It's hardcore history.
In 1944, when the Second World War is raging, especially in the Pacific, especially around
the Philippines, a young Japanese soldier, a guy in his early twenties,
is dropped off on one of the innumerable, heavily jungled Philippine islands
and is told to do what he can to hamper allied activities in the area and to continue fighting
until he hears orders to the contrary by the commanding officer who sent him on the mission.
This soldier, Hero Onoda, Asian convention would switch that around and he'd be Onoda Hero
will follow his orders until his commanding officer tells him he can lay down his weapons.
And he will eventually come out of the jungle into a clearing,
hand over his sword, stand at attention while the guy who ordered him into that jungle in
the first place formally dismisses him with honor.
And this happened on the 9th of March, 1974, 1974, 29 years after the Second World War ended.
This guy had been fighting, shooting at, being shot at, killing and injuring the locals
for 30 years, 29 to be exact. When he came out of the jungle, he came out with hundreds of rounds
of ammunition, a well-maintained working rifle and hand grenades. The guy who dismissed him
his commanding officer from 29 years previously had to be flown in by the Japanese government.
He was apparently a bookseller or something in civilian life now. Imagine his surprise
when a government official shows up at his offices and says, yeah, you know one of those soldiers
you ordered into the Philippines 29 years ago? Yeah, he's still in there and he won't come out
unless you come and tell him it's okay. He was found officially by like a kid, a hippie kid is
what the soldier called him, Onoda called him a hippie kid who said he was looking for, I read
Summary City was looking for wild pandas, meaning the existence of pandas in the wild, the abominable
snowman and Lieutenant Onoda. Now, lest you think that this is a once in a lifetime Robinson Caruso
shipwreck kind of anomaly, Hero Onoda is not the only Japanese World War II soldier that surrenders
in 1974. There's another one. In 1972, there was one. There were two in the 1960s. There were a
bunch in the 1950s. And in the 1940s, after the war ended, sometimes whole units were still fighting.
I believe it was almost three years after the war ended, the unit of a couple of hundred of these
Japanese soldiers with their heavy weapons finally surrendered. What the hell is that?
What accounts for that? And it's not just the Philippines. I mean, it was happening on places
like Guam, for example, Saipan. I mean, there were people still running around the caves after
the war and Iwo Jima. I mean, it was fascinating that what you saw here didn't happen in the
other theaters of war because the other theaters of war did not include the Japanese. One of the
most fascinating, interesting cultures on the planet. And what Japanese expert R. Taggart Murphy
calls unquestionably the most distinctive of all modern industrial societies culture wise.
And he does a fascinating example of how we human beings can be molded and stretched and
trimmed and shaved like a bonsai tree by the cultural influences into many different diverse
versions of ourselves. Anyone who's a fan of National Geographic, for example, sees the many
different colorful cultures and subcultures all over the world, right? The extreme differences of
humankind and how wonderfully pliable we are to the cultural influences that determine how we
like to dress, what we think is attractive, little marks of status, all kinds of things.
Now magnify that by all the eras humankind's ever been around, right? So not just the diversity
of exotic different places all over the world, but all of those places all throughout history.
And you can see that we've, well, probably tried just about everything as a species,
wouldn't you think? And we've seen all kinds of different extreme versions of what we can become.
I mean, take the physical version. I'm a fan of the people of the Eurasian steppe and those tribes,
as many of you know. Some of those tribes from time to time used to like to practice
something known as head binding. It's sort of the counterpoint to foot binding in China,
which was popular in some circles at some times to keep the feet small and to have them develop a
certain way. Well, same thing with heads. You see this in other parts of the world too. And sometimes
cradles, for example, certain Native American tribes had cradles that would shape the head
a certain way too. The point is, is that when the skull is pliable, when the person is young,
you can shape that head sort of like a bonsai tree, if you will. And the Romans used to complain that
the Huns looked monstrous to them. And I remember growing up thinking, wow, these Romans are really
sensitive to seeing some people who maybe have slightly Asian features thinking that that's
monstrous. Well, now we have skulls that have come out of the ground, some of these tombs,
some of these kurgans where they buried some of these Huns. And some of these Huns have skulls
that look like they're taken right out of an alien movie, big elongated skulls that go way
far to the back. You wonder what they must have looked like with hair and skin. The point is,
is if you were a Roman looking at them, you might have thought that they looked monstrous.
However, if you were a young, comely, Hunnic noble woman, you might have thought that guy looked
hot. So it's all a question, right, of the cultural carrots and sticks and whatnot.
And sometimes it's not things that are so visible on the outside. I mean, I think we all recognize
that the vast majority of our makeup in terms of our attitudes and the way we think and the way we
organize realities probably going to be culturally determined. Now, I am a fan of extreme situations
in history. And the country that produced guys like Hiru Onoda were extreme. And the cultural
carrots and sticks were designed to take many of the, you know, civic attitudes that most societies
consider to be positives and turn them up to such a high level on the dial of intensity
that they took a bunch of things that might be considered good in another context and made them
dangerous. And how can your culture impact things like duty and honor and patriotism
and a willingness to sacrifice and lay down one's life for the greater good? I mean,
these are all things that most societies, you know, would figure out all sorts of cultural
ways to encourage. I mean, how about just recognizing it? I mean, take for example,
a medal ceremony that might happen in the United States or an award, a citation.
Somebody was extra brave or extra heroic or did something out of the ordinary and maybe you get
a medal. And when you get the medal, the person giving the award will say something like, you know,
for heroism or bravery or sacrifice above and beyond the call of duty, above and beyond the
call of duty, that right there is a recognition, right, that there are limits to what normal people
can be asked to do in normal times, right? And if you exceed those expectations, go above and
beyond the call of duty, you get a medal. But what if the cultural carrots and sticks in a given
society have evolved in such a way so that there's almost nothing that is above and beyond the call
of duty where the culture expects encourages and only approves of a level of sacrifice on the part
of every man, woman and child in that society that most other cultures reserve for their most
elite military units. Welcome to the world that famed Japanese holdout hero Onoda was raised in.
When Onoda got back to Japan in 1974, a ghostwritten book of his remembrances was created.
It's called No Surrender, My 30 Year War. And in it, he describes the Japan he was raised in. He
says, quote, at that time, if a soldier who had been taken prisoner later managed to return to
Japan, he was subject to a court martial and a possible death penalty. Even if the penalty was
not carried out, he was so thoroughly ostracized by others that he might as well have been dead.
Soldiers were supposed to give their lives for the cause, not grovel in enemy prison camps.
General Hideki Tojo's instructions for the military said explicitly,
he's now quoting the instructions, quote, he who would not disgrace himself must be strong.
He must remember always the honor of his family and his community,
and he must strive fervently to live up to their trust in him,
do not live in shame as a prisoner, die and leave no ignominious crime behind you, end quote.
When he leaves to go off to war, one of the things he takes with him is a family dagger that
his mother says, if you're captured, use this to kill yourself with. And I tried to think of any other
mother sending her son off to war in any other major power in the Second World War
with that kind of advice. It's interesting. Isn't it a very distinctive different culture?
Now, some might have a counter argument to this point that the reason these Japanese holdouts
were continuing to hold out was for duty on her country, the emperor, that sort of thing,
by pointing out that a bunch of these people said they didn't know the war was over.
So maybe it's more of a sense of being isolated and not getting the news.
But the counter argument to that has to do with the fact that these people were often
told explicitly in many different ways that the war was over, and they chose not to believe it,
and they chose not to believe it because it clashed with their mental indoctrination into
all this. I mean, for example, Hiru Onoda, he had family members flown in at high expense to the
Japanese government because Hiru Onoda was still killing people in the Philippines after the war.
He's not just sitting up there in the mountains by himself, not bothering anybody. He killed 20 to
30 Filipinos. So that makes you want to tell this person in no uncertain terms and spend a little
money to make it happen. Hey, you're killing people and the war is over. But Onoda didn't
believe it. They left him newspapers. Here's how he puts it in the book written with him.
The search party left behind newspapers and magazines. Most of them were recent,
and a lot of them contained articles about the crown prince's marriage. The newspapers,
which covered a period of about four months, made a stack nearly two feet high. We,
meaning the two other holdouts with him, we thought they were reprints of real Japanese
newspapers doctored up by the American Secret Service in such a way as to eliminate any news
that the Americans did not want us to see. This was all we could think so long as we believed
that the Greater East Asia War was still going on. And in a way, he writes,
the newspapers confirmed that the war was still going on because they told a lot about life in
Japan. If Japan had really lost the war, there should not be any life in Japan. Everybody should
be dead. When I arrived in the Philippines in 1944, the war was going badly for Japan, he writes.
And in the homeland, the phrase 100 million souls dying for honor was on everybody's lips.
This phrase meant literally that the population of Japan would die to a man before surrendering.
I took this at face value, and I am sure many other young Japanese men my age did.
He says, I sincerely believe that Japan would not surrender so long as any one Japanese remained
alive. Conversely, if one Japanese were left alive, Japan could not have surrendered.
He continues, After all, this is what we Japanese had all vowed to each other. We had sworn that we
would resist the American and English devils until the last single one of us was dead. If necessary,
the women and children would resist with bamboo sticks. Trying to kill as many enemy troops as
they could before being killed themselves. The wartime newspapers all played this idea up in
the strongest possible language. Now quoting some of the slogans, one was struggle to the end.
Another was the empire must be protected at any cost. Another one was 100 million dying for the
cause. He says, quote, I was virtually brought up on this kind of talk. End quote.
When Anoto got back to Japan, some of the things that I read and some of his later actions indicate
that he was less than happy with what had become of Japan after the war was over in terms of their
national values, their intensity level and whatnot. Now I can speak from experience that in the 1970s,
the rest of the world thought that Japan was still a very distinctive culture and very committed to,
shall we call it the above and beyond the call of duty ethic? They seemed very intense about that
always. It was something that they took very seriously. They were known for. In fact, other
people really liked things like Japanese products because you knew that they were going to be intense
about, you know, getting it done right. But to a guy raised by the standards of Anoto's era,
this was not good. They'd lost something. And let me tell you what they probably lost and the
rest of the world would consider this to be a good thing. And I think modern Japanese would,
for the most part, too. They weren't all prepared, every man, woman and child, to sacrifice themselves
anymore to the level of, you know, the world's greatest military units, right? In fact, like
Spartan hoplites die on command of the emperor like Spartan hoplites. These people in the modern
Japanese world were much more sensible. But in Hiro Anoto's world, there's a level of insanity
that's starting to happen. And it's, it's really complicated, but it kind of explains why the
Japanese are this very distinctive, different major power in the Second World War and why there's
certain unique elements to the Pacific War against Japan that just wasn't present in the other theaters.
Because as we said, the Japanese weren't. Quick little rundown might explain some important
things. And by the way, Japanese culture is much debated, as you would expect, extremely complicated
and definitely a place to be left to experts. But let's just say there were some pretty obvious
things that we should take note of that might help explain how you get such a distinctive people.
And let me use a word here that I like. I like the word intense. I will point out my stepfather's
generation and he fought in the Second World War. He believed that this regime and this
government and the society that turned out a guy like Hiro Anoto was turning out fanatics.
And that's a word that was much used amongst allied troops fanatics.
They are automatons, they're robots. And I should point out that
wartime propaganda played into this, but Americans kind of had this image of both the
German opponent in the Second World War and the Japanese opponent as robots,
but different kind of robots. The German robot was like the vision in the Avengers, cold,
robotic, mathematical, efficient, precise and deadly because of it, right? But there's a coldness
and a logical nature there. The Japanese is the other side of the robot spectrum. They're like
foaming at the mouth, crazy robots. They don't stop. Their little finger will come after you if
you leave that alone. I mean, they're ready to die for the emperor, excited to die for the emperor.
They're a cartoon character that's extremely dangerous. And the word fanatic is a wonderful
way to avoid having to look beneath the surface at any of the human motivations that might be
involved. Fanatic is just an A to B sort of knee jerk in terms of, you know, the depth that they
need to be examined. But real people that might be extremely motivated or feel extreme pressure and
societal and cultural coercion to do something, for example, fly an aircraft piloted by them
suicidally into an enemy ship. But those people might have some really interesting motivations too,
some interesting points of view. What do they think they're doing? What sort of a range of options
and choices do they think they have? This becomes a much more human story when we realize two things.
One, any of us could have been born there. There's a certain randomness, even if you believe in,
you know, a deity selecting everything about you, they could have selected that you end up in Japan
in the 1920s and go to school with Hiroonoda. Besides that, there's a certain understanding
that what happened in Japan can happen again. It will happen differently. It never looks the same.
But look at the elements involved and wonder if you can't imagine them being filtered instead
of through a Japanese cultural filter, the cultural filter of your society, but used the same way and
turned to the same kind of uses and maybe turning out the same kind of intensity that the Japanese
really seem to exude all throughout this story. Now, let me point out there's a wonderful phrase
that was used by a rabbi to describe the Jewish people once, but I love it because I think it's
a wonderful shorthand phrase that applies to a bunch of different, very distinctive people on
the planet. And the Japanese are certainly one of those. So I'm going to substitute the word
Jews with Japanese for this. But the rabbi said the Japanese are like anyone else, only more so.
Don't know if I got the exact wording correct, but the line is perfect because it denotes
a level of intensity, right? They have all the same human qualities as you do. They just have
them at a higher intensity level, right? You think you're a good gardener and your garden
looks dumb when you're done, you know, raking it and taking care of it. Well, go look at a Japanese
garden. You'll feel like you didn't do anything, right? The intensity with which they pay attention
even to the little lines in the dirt. I mean, what happens if you take this intensity too far?
Dial it up too high. Even if what we're talking about being intense about are things that you
normally consider to be positives in a less intense level. I mean, you got patriotism,
you got duty, you got love of country, sacrifice for the state and all these things that so many
people today would consider positives. How high do you have to turn the dial up on the intensity
level though before they backfire on you? I know we already have one superhero reference in this
conversation because it just happened, didn't it? But I got another one only because the Japanese
holdouts to me, isn't that sort of like a Japanese version of the Captain America backstory, right?
He goes, he's a second world war person from the 40s, gets put to sleep essentially, gets awakened
in the modern world and is continually contrasting, you know, the last thing he sort of remembered
in his mind, it was like last week, he was in the 40s with the world he finds now and the values
and all these modern different things. Well, aren't all these holdouts who are like gone for
decades, aren't they all like Captain Japan's in that sense? I mean, the Japan of the 1970s,
despite the rock music, the blue jeans and the longer hair that would have been on display
for this Japanese war veteran, but the Japanese of the 1970s were still like everyone else only
more so. But in the eyes of someone like Onoda, it seems his attitude was not more so enough.
Now let's acknowledge a few things right away. The first thing is it's one of the oldest
tropes in history that people look back and pine away for a golden age that they missed that really
never existed. And old people do this anyway. So you probably got some of that going on.
Let me also say that I know from personal experience because it's the era I grew up in
that in 1974, there were a lot of World War II veterans from the United States of America that
didn't look too fondly on the direction American culture was going or think that the intensity
level of devotion to ideas like duty and honor and patriotism and self-sacrifice was strong enough
in the American culture of those days. So in a funny way, these bitter opponents in the Second
World War, the Japanese Imperial Army and the U.S. military would have had something in common
if they were reminiscing about the kids today in the early to mid-1970s. And yet on the surface,
there does seem to be a little something different, doesn't there, from the Japanese
to the Allied perspective? If you're pining away for the golden age on the Allied side,
you're pining away for the things that brought you victory. If the kids today had more honor,
patriotism, love of country, we could do great things. Remember what we did in the war,
we won the war, but the Japanese didn't win the war. The war was a tragedy for them on so many
levels. So why would you look back on the values that kind of made you the kind of country you
were that you could fight a war like that fondly if that's what it led to? Well, perhaps the devil's
advocate counterargument here is that yes, while these specific values and the intensity of the
era, you know, on a scale of one to 10, 10 being most intense, the Japanese during the era hero
and others growing up in are at an 11. And yes, that got them into trouble eventually and led to,
you know, Japan's downfall is a great power. But the counterargument that could be made is Japan
never would have been a great power had it not been for the very specific distinctive nature
of the Japanese. And let's understand this is a people not quite unique, but darn near unique
in the period of colonial domination by the colonial powers of the Western world that managed to
avoid that. They did not avoid it because anybody was going soft on anyone else or because Japan
wasn't a tempting target to snap up. They avoided it because they created the kind of society and
military that made it impossible for somebody to snap them up. And they did this while coming from
way behind in the technological race in almost miracle like fashion that I think and remember
you are getting my little take on this whole thing for good or ill. But the intensity of the
Japanese character is in large part, I think, a factor in this. When you start talking about
like national characteristics, it gets very easily bleeds very easily into weird territory,
you know, racism type stuff, but it's not a Japanese racial thing that it counts for the
way they are. It's a cultural one, it's carrots and sticks. But by the way, full disclaimer here,
there's going to be a lot of race talk in this program, not because it matters to me or because
I think it's important, but because it matters to the people in this story and they think it's
important. The late 19th early 20th century is one of the high watermarks of let's call it global
racism and the pseudoscience of it. And it will impact this story to give you just one example
without going too deeply into it. There will be cases where and we'll just take white western
society and use the terms that are popular at the time period because that's going to keep us
grounded, right? We'll use the terms they used contemporaneously, but there will be white
military powers that will get badly hurt from misjudging the capabilities of a non white power
simply because in racial terms, they considered them kind of subhuman. We don't have to worry
about those people because I mean, listen, we're white and they're, I think the word they used
were monkeys. And the payback for that karmically is to get your rear end handed to you by a bunch
of people, you know, that you underrated because of some weird construct of racial superiority
that warped your perception of reality. And of course, you know, what perception of reality
eventually meets the real reality. And well, there was some payback there more on that in a
little bit. My point is we'll get to the racism thing and we'll talk about race because it matters
in a story that's very multiracial in an era that's very racist. In this case, though, how do
you figure out, you know, who the Japanese are and why they are the way they are? Well, first of all,
this is a subject for experts, obviously Japanese culture has been much debated even in the United
States. I remember as a kid when they started outselling us so much on cars, a fascination with
this Japanese corporate culture and the way they did things. So this is a much talked about thing.
For a person like yours truly, I can only hit the big points. There are some obvious things that you
can look at and go, wow, that must have affected the story. I don't know how I don't know to what
degree I don't know how it mixes with the other factors. But boy, you can't ignore that. There's
a couple of those I want to get into here because it helps explain how we get to where we are.
Every society in the world, right, is a blend of old and new. In the case of Japan, the proportion
of old to new includes a lot more old than most places. This is by design and their history
kind of consciously shows not just how they preserve this distinctive way of life, but how
trying to preserve their distinctive culture can get them in trouble where they then need those
qualities of intensity and everything we were talking about before to dig them out of a whole
of their own creation. There's this interesting dynamic between the Japanese wanting to remain
distinctive that that causes problems that then their distinctivity requires them to help them
get out of without going too deeply into that. Let me explain a little of the background here,
these big events that even reading Japan for dummies will help you understand. First of all,
we all get the idea that geographically speaking, Japan has the opportunity to be different just
because they're an island nation or a series of islands. Having that little bit of water that
cuts you off from the mainland allows you at times, sometimes depending on the situation,
and long times to keep the ebbs and flows and tides and sometimes storms raging on the big
continent away from your shores. Now, the fact that you're an island does not determine in any
way, shape, and form how you develop. There's lots of different ways you could go for lots of
different reasons. I mean, take a look at something on a map that theoretically should be pretty
similar. Take a look at Japan on a map and then take a look at the British Isles.
Theoretically, these places should be somewhat analogous, shouldn't they?
And yet, the Japanese will have periods in their history where they, as much as possible,
try to limit contact with the outside world. That's just the way they wanted to go for reasons
that are understandable once we get into them. And the English and British in a larger sense
are just the opposite. The very outgoing country might be a good way to put it, so outgoing
that by the time we're setting up this story we're getting into now,
they directly or indirectly control a huge chunk of the globe. The Japanese culture is,
of course, ancient, dates back to really early times. And the relationship that probably has
meant the most in Japanese history to the development of that island nation is the one
that they've had long term with China, the Jupiter of East Asia. If you ask a Chinese person,
they might say it's the Sun. Not a necessarily impossible to justify point of view, either,
if you think about China basically being the superpower of East Asia throughout most of human
history, except for certain periods of time when it reaches certain low points in power,
when the civilizational stock market dips for the Chinese stock. But most of the time the China
of the world is at least as powerful as today's modern day China is, and it helps keep things
sort of stable. I had a Chinese history professor that said that if you wanted to make an argument,
you could perhaps say that the entire Second World War and the pre-Second World War in Asia
is a result of China's historic weakness during that time period. And it's interesting because
if you think about modern day China plugged into that era, you can't imagine any of that happening
at all. Instead, the normal powerhouse of the region, the Jupiter, is eclipsed in the time period
leading up to the Second World War, which creates a vacuum that, like my professor said, if you
wanted to, you could probably get a B plus on a paper where you tried to tie that together with
the reason everything was happening. You have a vacuum in China and a very wealthy territory that
seems to be available in an era where the great powers of the world probably could be compared to
a bunch of ravenous sharks looking to snap up an increasingly small and dwindling supply of
yummy territories. That, of course, later on in our story, in the case of the Japanese and the
relationship to China, I had a buddy that compared it once to a big brother little brother relationship,
which I thought was kind of compelling. And here was his thinking. He said that China,
of course, is big brother and that for most of their early relationship, little brother tags
along, learning from big brother, pretending to be big brother, emulating big brother. But at a
certain point along the way, as they both mature, there comes a time in their relationship where
little brother can reliably kick big brother's ass. And that changes the nature of the relationship
somewhat. If you're looking at this, though, through the wide angle, long view lens, I think
you'd have to say that the relationship, despite the occasional sibling spats and pirate activity,
has been peaceful and mutually beneficial, especially beneficial if you're looking at
this from the Japanese point of view. Because like all of China's neighbors, they will benefit
continually and in an ongoing fashion over the centuries from Chinese innovations.
You know, at the top of my head, I mean, think about writing that the Japanese take and convert
to a Japanese style, but it's from China originally. A ton of philosophical ideas, an entire governmental
organizational sort of template, religious concepts till the cows come home. My goodness,
how about the most Japanese as I think about it, institution of all, the emperor itself might be
an innovation taken from China, maybe as far back as like, you know, the seventh century AD.
What's funny, though, is like all foreign innovations, the Japanese managed to take these
things and turn them Japanese somehow in a way that instead of changing Japan's distinctive
culture, somehow is just woven into it. Now, there have been opportunities in history. We
shall call them historical close calls when Japan could have fallen victim to the same
outcome that many wonderful distinctive cultures all over Eurasia fell to at one time or another.
You know, occasionally you get these great historical blending opportunities, sometimes
that occur against the will of the people being blended. And this will take those wonderful
distinctive cultures and sort of homogenize them. If you're talking about whiskey, it's a blended
sort of thing, whereas a place like Japan is a wonderful distinctive single malt, most of the
time the little bit of water separating Japan as we said earlier from being a part of these great
blending opportunities. But in the late 1200s, you have a couple of close calls. The Mongol
conquests are going on and they're blending cultures all over Eurasia with each other,
you know, against their will. They will run out of room to conquer any more in East Asia. They
run up against water eventually, but you know, the Mongol manifest destiny being what it is
by the time Genghis Khan's grandson, the great Kublai Khan is on the throne of China, he'll launch
two amphibious assaults over the waves on Japanese islands. First of all, imagine that for a minute.
I mean, late 1200s, tens of thousands of troops over the waves, and you don't just have to get
them there. You have to supply them the whole time they are there. And for a significant amount of
time, I mean, we're talking many weeks, the Japanese will fight these armies to a standstill with an
absolutely ferocious defense. Now, in the defense of Mongol admirers everywhere, this is not a Mongol
army as you would normally think of it. Most of it is a bunch of Korean and Chinese auxiliaries who
are conscripts and don't want to be there because after all, their countries have been conquered
by these same Mongols. Nonetheless, a ferocious defense that provides time for Mother Nature to
intervene twice. Now let me tell you as a military history nut, looking at this battle shaping up,
I'm like a boxing fan who's bought the pay-per-view and is very excited about this conflict only to
have it end in a Japanese victory by disqualification due to kamikaze twice. The kamikaze, of course,
the famous divine wind, the wind of the gods, this wind that comes up and so badly damages this
Mongol Chinese fleet twice that it has to call off the invasion and go back home. When you think
about what would have happened to this distinctive Japanese culture and how it would have been strangled
in the cradle had the Mongols conquered Japan and homogenized it and governed it with officials that
might be from 45 different peoples. Bring in a good old Russian governor to control Japan for
a while and see what happens to that distinctive Japanese single malt whiskey when you start adding
all these other elements. So that's why it's an important historical event. Now this kamikaze is,
of course, the deciding factor, but if the Japanese military can't hold off these Mongol forces as
long as they did, they never have time for the weather to intervene. So the key to the whole
thing at ground zero was the Japanese organization and military system. It was a cultural system,
one might call it an organic system that was similar and is often compared to the
broad contemporary system in Europe. The Japanese during the Mongol Chinese invasions were in a
feudal stage. It's often said at the same time when Europe was in a feudal stage. It's a really
dicey subject. I mean, a lot of people complained about trying to fit the square peg of Japanese
culture into the round hole of the European historical template. I mean, the context of
things like knights and feudalism is a European context. The problem is, it's the best analogy
for Europeans to understand the situation in shorthand, even with all the problems attached to it.
Maybe you could say both Europe and Japan starting to explore the early ideas of statehood and that
kind of thing. Both cultures with a hereditary warrior class that made up an aristocracy that had
a bunch of fighters who, as individuals, compete for the title of most dangerous warrior of all
time, right? If you were a military historian buff, where would you place Samurai, the core of the
Japanese army for hundreds of years, the cutting edge, the same way that knights were in Europe?
Hard to not place Samurai in the top 10. A lot of people make an argument for the top five.
I think you have to put Samurai on the top 10 list based on morale alone. I don't think there's
ever been an army that's had higher morale than what Samurai bring to the table. I mean, even
knights who I love and who will fight to the death. I mean, happens all the time, but not usually.
Usually, when you kill enough knights, they rout. That's an unusual thing to happen to Samurai.
They are more willing to die than perhaps any other troop type you can think of. And if you
find troops that are as willing to die, usually it's a small group of special elite or unusual
or fanatical people. You know, the berserkers over in the old Scandinavian armies or what have you.
This is a huge chunk of any Japanese army. Now, one of the best comparisons, I think,
that does sort of fit when you start saying, okay, what's similar about knights and Samurai
is that the real thing when it comes to these kind of warriors, the real deal as they were
in history is different than the way they were romanticized later. And we all get this. I mean,
think about King Arthur for a minute and courtly love and jousting and the Holy Grail. I mean,
think of that kind of the sword in the stone. Think of the romanticizing of what was certainly,
I mean, if you're comparing the knights of the round table, you know, in the late 19th century,
works to something like real knights. Well, think about how much the reality differs from the
romantic version. Well, the samurai had the same situation going in the 1400s and 1500s,
for example. This is the golden age of samurai warfare, not the golden age of samurai, the golden
age of the real thing, the warfare, the gritty, bloody, grimy, horrible. And let's be honest,
a venal sometimes warfare that is the real thing. I mean, you have samurai who fight all the time
during this period because there's a lot of wars. Sometimes you're fighting the Chinese,
like we said, but most of the wars are with other Japanese armies and with other samurai.
There were hundreds of thousands of these guys, and they fought a lot.
In the late 1500s, there will be a lot of fighting. Japan is in the process of some
very big wars that will lead up to a big battle. It's famous, the Sekigahara battle
in 1600. I think there was like 170,000 people supposed to be there. And when one side beat the
other, it was the big push over cap size moment when Japan kind of gets unified.
That's a very quick sounding process the way I said it. But that battle tips things over to a
point where you get a new government that sort of unites Japan. The government is called the
Tokugawa Shogunite, sometimes referred to as the Bakufu. I hope I mispronounced that name
properly. I believe I did. No, as the name implies, the country is nominally run by something called
a shogun. Translated often as like Generalissimo, military dictator, a hereditary usually by the
way, military dictator. Japan's history, look at a timeline. I mean, it's littered with these shogunites.
And when the shogun is running the show, the emperor is a figurehead.
Now, a dictionary may say that the shogun runs things, but in reality, he's dealing with a bunch
of local lords, these people called Daimyo's. Japan during this time period split up into
about roughly 200 separate little areas. And each one of these areas has its local lord,
and they raise their own taxes, they raise their own military forces, they owe allegiance
to the central government, but they have broad ranges of powers to deal with everything in their
own domain, their own way. You can see why maybe people can be forgiven for applying the feudalism
tag to that because on a surface level, it kind of looks that way, doesn't it? The entire period
is sometimes known as the Edo period. Edo being the old name for Tokyo. And that era last from the
early 1600s to like 1868, you know, some 250 years, that's going to leave a mark, culturally speaking,
wouldn't you think? And the fact that it's going to go on until the time of Hiro Onoda's parents
or grandparents means that it's going to leave a mark that persists even on the soldiers fighting
for Japan in the Second World War. It's an immensely influential period.
And part of the reason it's so influential is it's a time where the cultural headbinding is
particularly tight. And the Edo period is known as, I would suggest, a double-edged sword,
a good and bad kind of thing. On the good side, in the early 1600s, I'm not sure there's a cleaner
place to live than Edo Japan. And for a mild germaphobe like myself, probably the only place I
could go back to in the time machine if I had to run away from the present and take refuge in the
past where I wouldn't be totally freaked out. Pretty safe, very safe compared to most other
cities of its size around the world at that time period. Pretty darn literate, very artistic,
population flourishing. But it also has a level of cultural repression that it would be difficult
for modern people living in the free world anyway to put up with. I mean, one historian I was reading
said that Edo Japan has most of the features in embryo of a totalitarian type state in the early
1600s, including things like thought police. One of the things they crack down on is people who
aren't particularly happy staying in their place. They will lock in a system that keeps people in
their place. They're all about the status quo. And if you violate that, the repression can be
particularly harsh. They will in a sense weed out malcontents and people that cause trouble and
particularly non-conformist types. I should point out that if we are comparing early Tokugawa Japan
to other countries, for example, go to the West and see what they're doing. They're totally up in
your intellectual business there too, weren't they in the early 1600s? I mean, they got heresy
trials. They're burning people at the stake and you don't have freedom of speech. You don't have
freedom of thought. So not that different in the early 1600s, but over the entire course of the
Tokugawa Shogunate, things are going to change on the other side of the world. And by design,
they're not going to change anywhere near as much in Japan. Now, the reason that this period is
particularly harsh on internal dissent and free thought and all that has to do with the priorities
of the Bakufu, because they're less concerned about some foreign invasion coming from Eurasia,
like a bunch of Mongols or something, than they are about somebody domestically overthrowing them.
They're kind of afraid of the common people, getting weird foreign ideas in their head that make
them uppity. They're also afraid of people like themselves, other samurai, because history shows
that they're the most dangerous class to fear if you are the ruling elite. Your own people are the
most likely to kill you. So in a peaceful society with no outside threat, the Tokugawans are worried
about something happening domestically. The Japanese are worried about dangerous foreign ideas
undermining their society and corrupting their population, leading them astray, might be the
way they would put it. And their answer to this is to close Japan to the rest of the world.
That's what the Tokugawa are famous for. And of course, that's not really what they did,
but when I was growing up, that's the way the history books put it. And historian Marius B.
Jensen points out that it's a sign of the ethnocentricity of that era that you would think
that closing trade with the West is the equivalent of cutting yourself off in the entire world,
because the Japanese still most of the time traded with China and Korea in places like that. But in
an attempt to keep Japanese society from being polluted with these outside intellectual contagions,
they will shut down trade with most of the rest of Europe. Over time, it should be pointed out,
but nonetheless, that's how they're going to try to address some of their worry about the
population getting uppity and agitated. The other thing the Tokugawa have to get a handle on and
that they're known for is solving the samurai problem that they inherit. After all, if you're
famous as the Tokugawa are for bringing peace to Japan, maybe for the first time in a sustained way
in hundreds of years, what do you do with all those professional warriors that are part of a
hereditary aristocratic warrior class whose entire role in society is to be the fighters
in a time of widespread, sustained peace? It's actually a big problem. And there's a lot of
economic points that are brought into this discussion. So you bring out a history book and
it'll say something like, well, this is an economic class now that has nothing to do,
but they suck up an enormous amount of resources, blah, blah, blah. Our target Murphy had the best
thing I ever saw, though, when he was discussing, let's call it the human side of this. And you
think about it, you go, oh, I can totally see that. It's the problem of having a bunch of people
who grow up emulating the great warrior deeds of their samurai ancestors who train for war
all the time, whose whole point in the society is as a warrior and who never get to use their
skills. Anybody who spent five minutes in a martial art knows the feeling of wondering as
you sit there in practice, even the most basic rudimentary moves. I wonder what this would
be like in a real situation. So imagine what these young, Murphy doesn't use the term, but it's
implied, testosterone fueled, ambitious young Japanese people who only want to achieve what
their ancestors have achieved, but their ancestors lived in a wartime environment and they live in
a peacetime environment. Imagine how well the idea of idle hands or the devil's tools works for them.
So they had to have, and one of my histories had a great way of putting it, they had to have their
energies redirected into another part of society. What were you going to do with all these samurai?
How are you going to justify the cost to society? Give them another job. And the Tokugowans take
this warrior class and they put them in the bureaucracy and they start having them do management
jobs. They become the sort of the organs of the state. And the part that's kind of interesting
to our story is they kind of do it in a way that implies or mandates, I don't know what the right
term is, that they take their samurai values with them into their new jobs. It's even weirder than
that though, because it's during this period now that the samurai don't fight anymore, that they
actually kind of double down on the ethical standards. They get more conservative, more
unyielding, more militaristic. Part of it is because they're romanticizing the earlier past now. So
they actually think that these samurai they admire from the warrior period had higher ethical
standards than they really did. And they're going to try to live up to those. Here's what our
Tiger Murphy says about both that paradox and the fact that, hey, listen, the warrior ethics
that worked well on the battlefield will work well in the bureaucracy. He writes in his book,
Japan and the Shackles of the Past, quote, There was, in fact, hardly any occasion for samurai to
put their martial training into practice. As the actual experience of battle receded into the mists
of history, the ethos of the samurai became paradoxically ever more rigid and militaristic,
with stress on absolute loyalty to the superior, preparedness to carry out any order even at the
risk of death, and a disdain for softness and physical comfort, end quote. He continues a little
bit later, quote, But it was not just the austerity, the whole samurai ethic, the disciplined,
unquestioning response to any order, the personal rectitude and contempt for moral or physical laxity
served just as well to shape a compliant bureaucracy as it had originally done to form a vigorous
military, end quote. Now, obviously, there's an incongruity here, though, over the stakes
involved in different environments. If you're adopting an intensity level that seemed apropos to
a battlefield environment, you know, a situation where people could die. There's life or death here
if you don't follow your honor, duty, loyal tradition, all this kind of stuff. And now expect
those same kinds of standards of intensity to apply to a situation that is not life or death.
You kind of create a little incongruity there, don't you? And if those were never even really the
standards in the days that you're admiring anyway, well, that makes it even more unrealistic, doesn't
it? Earlier, we said that the 1400s and 1500s were the golden age of samurai fighting. But the
1600s and the 1700s are the golden age of creating the fleshed out samurai of mythology, where he's
not just a warrior, he's a Confucian scholar, he's a literate ethical judge of the rest of the
common people. He's a poet, a flower arranger, a calligraphist, and many other things.
If you want to look at this from a class perspective, Mary Sp. Jensen had an interesting line
suggesting that some of the non-samurai people living in Japan might have seen them more like
an occupying army that stayed generation after generation. Interesting counter way to look at it.
It is worth pointing out, though, that the samurai had many different grades and ranks. And at the top
ranks, these are the guys who are like running the country, the big powerful samurai, who are
never going to have to worry about their place in society. But at the bottom rung of samurai,
those people can be practically poor, just keeping their head above water. Now you put
them into the Japanese version of the DMV job, and life is tough for these people, and it's
squeezing them, and it doesn't feel so special to some of them to be samurai anymore. They certainly
often don't remember too much how to fight. I read a quote from somebody writing in the
1800s that said, the samurai are as weak as women now. They just sit around and do nothing.
There's no martial training at all. But the expectation level of conduct could be life or
death. And I mean, one of the things that we maybe should deal with real quickly here is the Japanese
propensity, and you'll see it on display in the Second World War all the time for suicide.
This also can probably be traced back in large part, especially the military version of this
to the samurai, where a battlefield ethic might require you to do something that extreme in some
situations. It gets looking a little fanatical when it's applied to situations that are nowhere
near that extreme. But what started as a ritual sounds to me more like an alternative if you
happen to be a samurai to having a much more terrible, you know, execution carried out on you
because you broke some big rule, so you could kill yourself instead. What started out like that
over time blended into more and more of the society, especially the military, but even
civilian society. How intense is that? You know, as we said, Hiro Onoda's mother,
when he takes us a dagger from his house says, kill yourself with this if you get captured.
How extreme is that? How does that factor into the society? Well, our Tiger Murphy points out that
for a lot of the history of Japan, the average Japanese farmers were thought that was nuts,
just a samurai thing, weird nuts. Somehow it goes from that place where it's only samurai who do
this to a place in the Second World War where you see it quite a bit. Sepuku is the official,
I think, name of the ritual itself. Harikiri, which is vulgar, it means stomach slitting.
That's what the Allied press would often use. But you'll see this in the Second World War
commonly enough that it once again reminds you, okay, this Japanese great power enemy in the
Second World War is different from all the other, you know, combatants who else does this regularly.
Now, in terms of what the Tokugawans were afraid of from other countries, because they, as I said,
will be known for closing Japan, they don't really close it, they begin to choke off trade with the
West and eventually they will get to the point where they're down to trading with one Western
power, the Dutch. And they've got the Dutch isolated in one port Nagasaki, and eventually
they build a little man made island right off the coast. And they connect it to the mainland
with a little ramp and they have samurai guarding the ramp. And it's basically you have to show
your papers if you even want to interact with Japanese on the mainland. And they're worried
about all kinds of things. But like the number one intellectual contagion the Tokugawan rulers
are worried about is Christianity. And there will be a big purge of Japanese Christians,
really bloody, that will go on early on in the Tokugawan era. The problem that the Japanese
had with Christianity is the same problem that a lot of other places have had with it. I mean,
look at how the problem that Rome had with it, for example, before Rome went Christian.
It says, just like Judaism does by the way, that there is a Lord that is supreme over the
earthly authorities. And certain kinds of emperors have problems with that, right?
In Japan, the problem that the Tokugawan saw is, listen, your loyalty is to your Daimyo, your Lord,
or to the Shogun or your parents. I mean, there's a whole Confucian hierarchy here of people
that are going to be part of the list of people you owe your allegiance to and your loyalty to,
and your devotion to. And there's no place for some Christian God at the top of the food chain here.
So it's a threat. It's hardly the only one, but it's the most visibly obvious one. And it's
something that bothers the Shogun and his compatriots about the Europeans entirely.
You know, they would get confused, too. They would ask a lot of questions about Protestants
and Catholics and try to understand that, and it just eventually they were so confused,
they just basically said, a pox on both your houses, you're all out.
But think of all the stuff Japan misses because it's not engaging fully with the rest of the
world and the European powers. I mean, just off the top of my head, they're missing the
Enlightenment, the French and American revolutions, the Industrial Revolution,
Napoleon, the revolutions of 1848, Marx, all this stuff. And remember, these things are
tsunamis in places like Europe, social revolutions, upheavals, big wars. And the only thing you can
say for the way the people experienced them at the time that they happened is that at least
they got them one at a time, usually, and in the right order. So sometimes you have time to
recover from one tsunami before the next one hits you, time to sort of incorporate and absorb
the lessons or what have you from that era. But when Japan eventually will have to join the rest
of the world, they're going to get all that stuff at once out of order. And they're not going to
have built up any intellectual immunity or resistance, they're going to be like that.
They're going to be like the people in the Americas at first contact were with actual
contagions, but with intellectual ones, at least that's how the Tokugawa Bakufu would see it.
This is a theoretical problem the Japanese writers and whatnot are actually talking about.
In the 1800s, as the Bakufu and the Shogunite gets a little rickety, it's getting to be kind
of an old system of government, it's not really doing the greatest job a lot of people maybe think.
But then in the middle 1850s, what had been theoretical happens and a western fleet shows
up in Japan's harbors and basically says, you don't get to stay closed anymore. Historians,
by the way, like to call this the policy of seclusion because it doesn't really mean closed,
but basically to the people who showed up in Japan in the 1850s, this is an American fleet,
by the way, under Commodore Matthew Perry. And as far as he's concerned, they're closed and that's
going to stop. So there will be two visits by Matthew Perry over like a year or two.
And during this time, Japan will be opened as it's so called. So they were never really closed,
so they can never really be opened. But those are the terms many of us grew up with.
And this is an act that is sometimes thrown into the gunboat diplomacy category, by the way,
because Japan didn't necessarily want to do this. Just as an aside, one of my favorite historical
Twilight Zone moments is the one that military historian Gwen Dyer paints. When he talks about,
you know, Matthew Perry's fleet from, what is it, just a few years before the US Civil War showing up
and finding a completely medieval kind of people and military awaiting him sort of on the shoreline.
Dyer says there were no guns, but Mary Sp. Jensen says there were guns, but makes it sound like
they were, you know, taken out of a museum. And so when Perry shows up, he sees a society where
they all have like swords and spears and body armor and that kind of thing. That's a pretty cool
contrast right there. Unless of course you're looking at it from the Japanese side, because when
the rest of the world, the West shows up and forcibly opens Japan, opens in air quotes,
Japan finds out how outgunned it is. So outgunned that it can't stop these. I mean,
if you're Japanese, these foreign barbarians from imposing their will on Japan and they will quickly
and it won't just be the United States. Everybody kind of comes in and oh, I didn't realize Japan
was open for business. So let's throw some unequal treaties their way of the same kind that were
recently foisted on China. And I think it's safe to say that by 1860, you see a Japan that is
potentially on the road to being a colonial victim. This inability to resist one of the great powers
in the United States was really not even a great power during this time period. Call them a higher
second tier power in this time period. The inability of Japan to resist that was almost like the straw
that breaks the camel's back for this Shogunite. They were already kind of rickety, certainly
finding it tough to evolve. It's a 250 year old regime, basically. It's like an old human being.
And so not being able to defend Japan's interest was sort of over a period of years, the end of
the line for them. The next government in Japanese history is never going to forget that job one is
make sure you can defend Japan's territory and interest and culture. What happens after the
Tokugawa Shogunite era in Japanese history is known as the Meiji Restoration. Meiji, by the way,
the name of the emperor during this time period. Restoration refers to the way this whole thing
is going to be billed. It's a story that is akin to Tolkien's The Return of the King, but this is
the return of the emperor. In effect, acknowledging the fact that under this military dictatorship,
the emperor really hasn't been in charge. This explains why everything's gone to hell in a
handbasket. So we will return things to the way that they're supposed to be in harmony with the
universe back to the golden age where the emperor runs things again, which the emperor may not have
ever done. And certainly during the periods where the emperor did do this, they were unusual and in
the distant past, but nonetheless, sounds good to everybody, right? Put the emperor in charge.
How much the emperor is actually running things versus how much these new, mostly samurai class
oligarchs are running things is unclear, but there are powerful dynamic individuals who are part of
this new wave of Japanese reformers who take over the government and try to do a crash course
in modernization in order to survive. And this is part of the miracle side of things. I mean,
if you went to Hiru Onoda and said, why would you want to bring back the values and intensity level
from a time period that led to such a disastrous end result as the end of the Second World War,
you know, he might come back with a line that said, sure, but if we don't have those values
and that intensity, we never get a Meiji Restoration. One of the really great clear-eyed,
long-range visions of these people who will take control of Japan in the Meiji Restoration is the
fact that they clearly understand this adapt or die dilemma that Japan is in. I would make the
case that it's the same dilemma. Most victims of colonialization have faced it one time or another
because what ends up happening is when the potential colonizers show up and meet you,
there's a clock ticking now. And at some point, you have to be able to resist encroachment or you
will get taken over in this time period. And the Japanese, by the way, when they wake up to the
rest of the world, this is how they view it, that this is a total doggie dog world. There are predators
and there are prey and they desperately need to move from the prey situation that they find
themselves in to the predator one quickly and you don't know how long you have. Most of these
countries that turned out to be colonial victims and Art Taggart Murphy said there were only three
places that avoided this. That sounds like a pretty low estimate to me, but even if I added a few
to the list, it's instructive. He said the only three places that avoided direct or indirect Western
or European colonialism or Ethiopia, Siam, which is Thailand now, and Japan.
And the reason why is because this adapt or die dilemma is almost impossible to overcome.
Most of these countries that fell to colonial powers could have overcome them given time,
but you don't have time because the amount of stuff you have to do to ramp yourself up to a
level so that you could compete and resist these kinds of great powers takes too long.
Because, you know, and it's easy to forget this, in the later part of the 19th century,
in order to maintain a first class military by the great power standards of the time,
your entire society has to be devoted and organized in a way to gird it as a foundation. I mean,
it doesn't seem like that, but that's the way it is. And so when you find out way, we've got to catch
up real fast or somebody's going to eat us, we've got to be able to resist anybody that would land
on our shores or fight us. That takes longer than most places have. The Meiji restoration rulers
clearly see that they've got this clock ticking. And so they need a mammoth amount of change,
and they need it as quickly as possible. That's what makes this whole thing a miracle.
The Meiji government, which is usually called the Meiji oligarchs, later they'll be called a
cabal, working in conjunction with the emperor, by the way, and we've not spoken much about the
emperor, but we will in a minute. They're trying to ride the tiger here in terms of a balance.
You know, they understand, as I said, the adapt or die situation, but they only want to adapt as
much as they have to to not die. They still want to preserve Japanese culture as much as they can,
right? So they're not the Tokugawans with the cultural headbinding to that level,
but they still are the oligarchy. And even though they want to promote more men of merit,
and they feel like that's necessary, they don't want to get crazy here. And they're a little
afraid of the masses if you look at their writing. And so they want to go as far as they have to to
compete, but no farther. But what happens when you have a society now that's modernizing with you,
the Meiji restoration rulers will accomplish so much that are basically governmental decisions
that are hard enough to imagine. I mean, I can't imagine my country doing any of the top five,
considering the amount of resistance there would have been to the ideas.
But forget that. It's one thing to, with the stroke of a pen or a calligraphy brush, say,
we're going to start doing this now. It's another thing to have a culture and not just a culture,
a traditional culture and not just a traditional culture, a culture that the government has
encouraged an even more unnaturally traditional element to it and saying, okay, guess what?
We're modernizing now and we're doing it quickly for our own survival.
There's an account from a British observer that lived in Japan during the period where this
transformation happened, the Meiji restoration, because in addition to all the governmental
changes and all the major things they do on that level, he talks about what it's like to just see
how Japan changed in terms of its culture in like a decade. And he talks about the samurai guy who
taught him the Japanese language. And he says, the guy had a sword and a ponytail. And I mean,
that's what Japan was like when he first got there. He says, I distinctly remember, this is
his words, the middle ages. His name was Basil Chamberlain. I think Basil Hall Chamberlain.
And he says, I distinctly remember the middle ages. And then he says, you know, less than 10
years later, he says, now they all look like Europeans. They speak with pretty fluent English
and all the talk, you know, and it's all modern stuff in the late 19th century is of bicycles,
bacilli and spheres of influence. Think about what that does to a culture,
because you can transform a society, you know, with new constitutions, which the Meiji provide
with a parliament, which the Meiji provide with new courts and banks and finance systems. I mean,
this is amazing stuff, right? They will, they will intentionally launch an industrial revolution.
But all that stuff is hard on any society. Think about how hard it was on the ones that got to
have all these historical moments happen to them. One at a time in the right order, the Japanese
extra traditional culture gets to have all this stuff happen in like 10 years.
Now, this isn't a story about the Meiji restoration, which is good because I'd be over my head
already. But we should point out that it's such an amazing time period that there are very sober
historians that compare some of these Meiji oligarchs, some of these really dynamic people
to figures like George Washington, or the role that the young Turks played in the Ottoman state
that laid the foundation for the modern Turkish state. So this is a big deal. And these people
are august figures that are formidable. And some of them will live on as advisors. There's an
advisory group that will be built into this new government. Some of these guys will still be advising
Japan on the course of action it should take into the 1930s, which puts it squarely on course,
you know, to go right into our story. Think about how they would handle their tasks, though,
if it were your task. So if I said to you, listen, you're in an adapter die situation,
you have to modernize your society as fast as possible. What's job one? What do you do first?
What the Japanese did, and it's smart when you think about it, is they looked around and they sent
out observers, people to go all into the Togogawa regime had been very insolent. This is like 180
degree turn because they have to, the new government sends out observers and students all over the
world. And they have them come back and report on what all the different countries do well, right?
This country does industrial production well, this other one does agriculture well, this other one
does military stuff well, whatever it might be. And the Japanese copy them. As I said, it's smart,
right? They'll do the same thing with their government. I mean, in the way the Japanese
are looking at this, Murphy makes this clear, but said to other writers, there's a predator or prey,
law of the jungle thing going on in the later 19th century. And the job the Japanese see for
themselves is to convert themselves from something that's seen as potential prey into something
that's seen as obvious predator. And so the Japanese want to be taken seriously by the other
great powers. So they have to also copy, you know, some form of government that the great powers
have. What is the template that they're going to build this new modern Japanese government on?
It's a conscious effort to create a modern state. And you have lots of choices if you're looking at,
say, European examples, don't you? And they sort of run the gamut, the entire spectrum, you can go
all the way over to one side, and you have like a British or a French system, God forbid,
God forbid, an American system. But you know, you rights of man, a parliament representative to
some degree government, all these kinds of things. Or in the case of the Japanese who were
in the process, can we say that the major restoration rulers were were giving Japan
sort of a soft landing from feudalism, if you will, that's one of the things they're known for.
Probably a little too new to maybe go all France and Britain. So maybe you go to something with
a little bit more military muscle built into the constitutional design. This is the period where
Prussia is active, but will soon become United Germany. So this is a transition period for them.
But either way, it's a more muscular military involvement in terms of the way the state is
organized, right? The Kaiser will be called the supreme warlord. That's the kind of thing
autocrats and emperors like a lot. Or you could just go, you know, turn the dial all the way
to the other side and go full czar on things if you want to. The czar of Russia, of course,
during this period, an autocrat, he's an old fashioned throwback to the divine right of kings.
His position is divinely ordained in the social hierarchy by God. This is not a person who was
fearful of Christianity, like the Japanese were in the Tokugawa regime. This is a person who has
wrapped up in a Christian bow and presented to his people as one step below a deity.
The czar's regime is also notably hostile to all this talk of democracy and all this social
agitation that bothers the Japanese oligarchs as much as it bothers the Russian ones.
So the Japanese will form a system that actually takes the whole idea of the czar wrapped up as
the chosen man of God one step farther and creates an emperor that is a God.
Creates is a weird word. How about warps? We're going to use the word warp a lot here. I read
a historian talking about how this new government will take the Shinto sect, one of the Japanese
religions, and warp it for state purposes. But they're going to do this with a lot of things.
They're going to warp Bushido. They're going to warp the samurai past. They're going to warp
Shintoism. They're going to warp the past. By the way, just like everyone else, only more so.
Go look at the late 19th century, early 20th century textbooks for kids.
You know, maybe something along the lines of an 11-year-old or a 12-year-old,
what they would read in school, and it doesn't matter what great power in air quotes country you
go to, the books could all be entitled, you know, have your flag on it and the title could say
something, here's what's so great about us, because that's what they kind of sound like.
And if you open them up, I want to remind Americans, because I grew up with just the fumes of this left,
that if you open up those books and look at, for example, how they portray George Washington,
you would not call him a deity, but he was portrayed, and I mean, people believe this at this time,
as a guy who never lied, as this archetype figure. I mean, well, I guess we can all understand.
It's very romanticized. There were no warts, and he was portrayed as almost superhuman.
He's a pretty interesting guy, I'm not saying, but you know what I mean. This is part of your
national mythology that was so important during this era, and Japan took this and
turned it up to 11. First of all, they outdid the Tsar, who was only chosen by God,
and they wrapped the emperor into a warped version of Shintoism that got more warped over time,
and turned him into a God. Full disclaimer here, had you done a public sampling of Japanese opinion
a hundred years ago, and asked the people on the street whether or not the emperor was a God,
I'm going to guess here that you get somewhere in the 85% range that says yes anyway. I don't know
that that's true at all, though. But the point is that this was an existing thing that the government
for its own state purposes, like most governments anywhere, took and used, and they used it by
wrapping the entire organization of this modern state around the emperor figure.
Now, in terms of the power of the emperor figure, all I can say about that is good luck
in determining that. And it's such a key point in the story, too, because at so many points,
you want to know who's responsible for this or that decision that has deadly, horrible
consequences. You want to be able to say, where does the buck stop in this system,
and you're not going to be able to put your finger on it. And there seem to be several
layers of veil that cover up the way the Japanese government works. Some of it put in there deliberately
at the time it was formed. Some of it to insulate the royal court from the muddiness of traditional
day to day politics and say the parliament. When I was a kid, the histories taught that the emperor
during the Second World War was like a figurehead sort of to a military dictatorship, not unlike
a 20th century version of the shogun. But nowadays, there are Pulitzer Prize winning histories by
historians like Herbert P. Bix that suggest that that's not true. And it may be what was a conspiracy
theory when I was growing up isn't such a conspiracy theory, the idea that the emperor had his
reputation laundered the way engineers and scientists who had to work for the Nazis did
in Operation Paperclip. So maybe the way you make the emperor an okay figure to be a post war
figure on the global geopolitical Cold War chessboard is to launder his past by saying, hey,
listen, he was a tool of the military dictatorship. He didn't have any power, but maybe he did.
Now the way this system is designed, this major restoration system, the emperor's supposed to
be like the top of the apex in the Japanese social hierarchy. And theoretically, he controls
everything and he has the power to reach down through layers of the bureaucracy and create
justice and solve problems and cut through red tape. And but what's the likelihood a single figure
is going to be able to do all that as they say, when one person is in charge of everything,
nobody's really in charge of anything. And you can see how this gets the entire
nation stayed into trouble. For example, when you look at the relationship in this system,
the major restoration constitutional system of the emperor to the armed forces, the army and
the navy of Japan don't know their allegiance to the nation state of Japan. They owe their
allegiance to the emperor personally. In fact, they're kind of taken out of the realm of politics
all together and put into, you know, his hands for his uses as he sees fit. But what if he does
never get involved in the situation? But what that really means is that the political leaders
have no control over the military, the military can say, hey, we're answerable only to the emperor.
And the emperor stays in his room and doesn't bother anyone. It's a little like that.
When I look at the difference, though, between the potential power of the emperor versus
the reality of the situation, I can't help but see him as a figure like, you know,
the Incredible Hulk. Is that our third superhero reference? My apologies to those who hate that
kind of stuff. But it just seems so perfect in this situation. Because when the guy wants to,
and this seems to be almost like the role of the emperor going way back into ancient times,
they have all this latent power, but they don't use it very often. So it's the Hulk, but they
don't turn into the Hulk very often. And they're almost maddeningly inconsistent when they do.
But when they do, they can move mountains. I mean, one of the things that the war crime
investigations after the war historian Herbert P. Bix says that they wanted to know from the
Japanese emperor is they were trying to figure out if the guy had the power to stop the war,
you know, all he has to do is turn into the Incredible Hulk, say the war will end now and the
war ends. Why didn't he end it at the beginning before millions of people had died, right? It's
very frustrating for the people in the West to look at this society and try to figure out where
the lines of power are. We're very comfortable with a couple of different things, right, that we're
used to. I mean, if you say you have a ruler, and you have like a Magna Carta, or a Constitution
that dictates what they could do, we totally get that right. Bring in the magnifying glass and the
lawyers, you know, you can then read the text and say, Well, you can't do this, you can do that.
And this other stuff that's murky in the middle, we can argue about, we get that, we have a lot of
that. Unfortunately, we also have a lot of the other extreme and we get that too. You know,
that one, that's the Pharaoh God, Julius Caesar, Joseph Stalin, Adolf Hitler, Genghis Khan thing,
we have nothing written down because there's nothing you can't do, total power. The Japanese
emperor is neither one of those things, but seems to be bound by what historian Herbert P. Bix called,
you know, an ethos of restraint in the use of his power, right, something that's bound by things
that are not written, things that are very difficult for outsiders to perceive. Because for a bunch
of this stuff, you have to have, you know, your cultural antenna set to the Japanese setting,
you can really only get that most of the time through amazing decades of study or being Japanese.
But so the outsider is difficult for us to understand, but maybe to the Japanese emperor,
you know, this court protocol, the tradition and a bunch of other considerations maybe is binding to
him as a Magna Carta or a constitution would be to some other ruler. Now, trying to figure out how
the emperor interacts with the military, how they all interact with the prime minister, the parliament,
the privy council, the genro and all these other elements in that society will drive you crazy.
It looks like the people at the time understood it, but I couldn't even figure out a shorthand
way to describe it. So one of the rare times I went to look for somebody else's shorthand way
to describe it and I ended up on Wikipedia, which may be the first time we're using something from
there, but it was perfect. They describe this government and remember with adaptations and
evolutions, this is going to be the government that goes into the Second World War. So where are
the lines of power? Well, the Wikipedia piece described it as a quote, form of mixed constitutional
hyphen, absolute monarchy, a form of mixed constitutional absolute monarchy. Wouldn't you
think that the term absolute monarchy sort of makes the rest of that phrase moot? But here's the wild
part. That is what it is kind of that's a good description of it. But that's not a description
that really makes any sense or helps you figure out who's in charge of the place. One thing you
can say, though, is that by injecting a deity or a religious level of fervor and belief into this
state and this culture at this time period, deliberately as for state purposes, these rulers
ratchet up the intensity level yet again, because I mean, after all, when do you normally inject
religion and deities into things and people don't get more serious and passionate about it?
Probably never. And in this case, that was not a bug. That was a feature. And I don't mean to
say because I think most of these Meiji oligarchs were true believers. I think they, for example,
most of them probably believed in the divinity of the emperor. But let's imagine for a minute that
instead of them being true believers, they were much more cynical, power mongers who were just
looking at the tools they could use to keep the people under their boot. What an amazing tool,
this idea that the emperor is divine is. Look at how if you buy into the state, we would call
it state propaganda, look at how it completely changes your logical calculations. If you buy
the parameters, it turns your mind against you, your rational mind. For example, if you buy the two
pillars in this system that's going to be drilled into the heads increasingly of Japanese students
as they grow up, that the emperor is responsible for all the decisions that are made in terms of
charting the course of the nation and the policies. And also that the emperor is basically superhuman.
What is the logical choice to make in terms of accepting the government's point of view on things
or the course of the nation or anything else? I mean, doesn't it become illogical if you buy
those parameters to think that you have any business even questioning the authority? I mean,
this is basically a God. They see things from a higher perspective. You're an idiot to say that
from your position, you should be questioning that level of authority. If you buy that level of
authority, well, you could have been a classmate of Hiroonata, who I believe was born in 1922.
So when he's in, you know, when he's in the early education levels in his Japan, that's the most
intense it got. Japan, of course, started a public school system copying the great powers. They
thought it might have been some of the secret sauce that made those great powers dominant,
but they also needed a literate population to man all those industries and all those other
things that were going to support their modern military. So it was a no brainer. But, you know,
there's an old saying, I think that nobody ever really objects to children learning to read. The
question that always comes to the fore is what are they reading? And in this case, as in every
country, it's pretty propagandized state stuff. And in the Japanese case, more intense than most.
And in the same way that, you know, people in the United States may have had a little bit of a
hero worship over George Washington in Japan, they had a little bit of a worship worship over
the Japanese emperor. And if you think about how this can, well, I'm just thinking about
differences in how long a country has to inject the national mythology into a population. And
these Japanese schoolchildren, increasingly, if you boil it down to the subject matter,
they're all learning things that we would think are good things to teach. We said patriotism,
love of country, sacrifice, honor your parents, respect authority. I mean, these are all values
that all the school systems the Japanese were imitating were teaching. And the Japanese parents
at the time probably would have approved of. But there's no doubt it'll brainwash you if you're
buying what they're selling. And if you're going to walk a mile in a guy like Hiro Onoda's moccasins,
let's understand that his logical calculation said that simply doing what the emperor told him to do
is the smart choice to make. And if you are a cynical wielder of the levers of power, if you're
a true real politic dictator type, you give your right arm to have that kind of belief system on
the part of your population. Now, let's remember the number one goal of this new government, though,
that, you know, they have to deal with. I mean, all this other stuff is kind of a means to an end.
If you can't defend yourself from an outside power who wants to take you over, none of this
other stuff matters, right? The major restoration has to build a modern army and they do. And they
do it the same general way they've been doing all these other things. They look at who's doing it
well and they copy them and they get their help and they buy stuff from them. Once again, this is
smart, isn't it? On land right around 1870 or whatnot, they're they're dealing initially with
the French military, they will eventually, though, ditch them for the Germans. And in a move that many
countries do, I mean, the United States and the Soviet Union did it all the time in the Cold War,
the Germans will send advisors over there who will bring, you know, equipment, uniforms, tactics,
doctrine, training, leadership, bring some of their key officers back to learn things in Germany,
then send them back to teach everyone else. This relationship is pretty classic, but it sort of
creates a forever German stamp in the early DNA of the modern imperial Japanese army, might be a
good way to put it. Now, as I think we all know, history has been a pretty good demonstrator that
just because you give a whole bunch of the best stuff to some other military doesn't mean they're
going to fight well. Because there are two sides to the equation. And one side sort of easy to fill,
the other side's a lot harder. I mean, one side's quantifiable, right, you can spend a certain amount
of money to get this job done, we can provide this many rifles, we can provide this many uniforms,
this many hours of training, this much support, I mean, all that stuff can sort of be figured out
to the nth decimal. But the other side of what's going to make a successful military is something
as bedrock in terms of values as whether or not your people are going to be willing to die,
and whether they will fight on the battlefield long enough to make that investment in the stuff
that they carry worth it. If you get two armies and they line up on a battlefield across from
each other, and one has the best, neatest, coolest, most devastating new stuff, and the others aren't
with sticks. But the side with the devastating stuff doesn't want to fight, or they're afraid,
or they don't have any interest, and they just leave, you know, fat lot of good, all that investment
did you. But how do you inject or create or artificially stimulate a warrior ethos in a brand
new military? But what if you had a shortcut available to you? What if you already had an
indigenous, long standing warrior ethos and tradition of your own, just sitting there not
doing anything? Could you reanimate it, repurpose it, clone it? Could you customize it so that
it meets the needs of a late 19th century, early 20th century regime? I mean, if I told you that
a state was pushing these values, what would you think? Values like courage, benevolence,
politeness, selflessness, sincerity, honor, loyalty, self-control, and a strong sense of
justice? That's Oleg Benish inventing the way of the samurai, describing the various virtues that
have sometimes been ascribed to Bushido, the ethical way of the samurai. If your kids were
learning those kinds of things in school, you'd probably think that that was a good thing.
What the government of Japan will do during this time period is they will pick and choose,
and we had said earlier that they warp all these things that were pre-existing in Japan. Well,
Bushido goes way, way back, although the term itself may only date from the late 19th century.
But this will be another traditional Japanese thing that the modern state will take and warp
for its own purposes. And according to Benish, if I understand him correctly, he's basically saying
that amongst the wide-ranging intelligentsia debating the various aspects of Bushido,
you could find almost every opinion out there you want, but the state would pick the ones that most
corresponded with things that would help it. For example, finally settling on one of the most
influential, they're called Bushido theorists out there who has boiled Bushido down to just
simply really two things. And you can see why the state would like a guy like this and validate his
viewpoint on Bushido because he boils it down to love of the emperor and patriotism. Well,
that's not a bad thing from a state's point of view to infuse into your public schools and your
children. And then to continue doing so at a much more intense level when the male children from
that public school grow up and become part of the military. The father of the Second World War
Prime Minister Hideki Tojo told a gathering of educators in the 1890s that they should totally
familiarize themselves with how the army does everything because the army is the real finishing
school and all these educators are doing in the public school is preparing the kids to join the
army. So get used to how we do things and teach the kids that way. Now we should add that in addition
to this wonderful high minded philosophical warrior ethos thing, there's much more grounded
understandable reasons why Japanese soldiers might be reluctant to surrender or flee. You know,
things like the commands by Japanese general sometimes that said that we will execute anyone
who does this. So real world concerns to but we should point out lots of other armies in history
have killed deserters and well, people still route. So there's some combination of elements
going on here that ends up creating a Japanese military that from the very beginning the imperial
Japanese army will have morale that's probably equal to the other best armies out there.
And it will only get higher as time goes on. Remember this military only exists from like the
late the 1870s 1880s it really is built. And of course in 1945 it all comes to a halt.
But in that time period, you will go from instantly higher than should be expected morale
to unbelievable fanatical levels of morale. For comparison purposes, because we all know
that the German army in the Second World War is a very good army. But in the book Implacable
Faux Historians Waldo, Henryx and Marco Licchio compare the two in this morale regard.
They point out that the Japanese situation was often just going to be a question of victory or
death. They write quote surrender was unthinkable. In Tunisia, when the German Africa Corps surrendered
in 1943, the British captured more than 120,000 German soldiers, including a colonel general
and his staff, 12 generals in all. The Allied Liberation of France in the summer of 1944,
they write, netted another 200,000 Germans. As the war progressed, the Allies captured
so many German officers that the British set up a special residence for them in the English
countryside. During the final weeks of the war in Europe, more than 1,500,000 Germans surrendered
to the Western Allies. In contrast, they write, no organized unit of the Imperial Japanese army
surrendered during the entire Pacific War until they were ordered to do so by the Emperor after
Japan had formally agreed to capitulate. This, they write, was a record unprecedented in the
annals of modern warfare. End quote. And as we've already pointed out, there were a bunch of Japanese
soldiers that just because the war ended didn't see a fit reason to surrender. So this is a pretty
high level of the morale. You can't say that this whole Bushido injection, which some people
compare to an ideology, others to more like a religion, you can't say that this is the reason why,
but you can say that the state was definitely using the idea for those purposes. The morale of
the Imperial Japanese Navy will also be really high and some of these Bushido ideas will be
injected into that as well. Now they may have flirted with another advisor for a minute on land,
but in terms of who to look to as your mentor for building a great Navy in the 19th century,
late 19th century, there's only one choice. If you want the best, the best is the Royal Navy.
The Sun never sets on the British Empire, it was said, and it's the Royal Navy that protects that.
So the Japanese begin a long standing connection with the British Navy. Same thing as on land,
tactics, doctrine, strategy, leadership, long term serving of Japanese officers on Royal Navy
ships. And then going back, I mean, the traditions of the Imperial Japanese Navy start with Britain.
The Japanese will even buy some of their bigger ticket items from the British until they can
build their own. So the relationship is designed to make up for lost time and quickly ASAP, right,
create an adaptation of a Japan that as our Tiger Murphy points out, is at least a reasonable
imitation of an imperialist power. Of course, if you are trying to present yourself as a reasonable
imitation of an imperialist nation state, that's probably going to require a little imperialism
when you think. And the problem with a little imperialism is it's one of those things that
when a political state starts down that road, it's tough to stop sometimes. I mean, it's like
that potato chip commercial, you can't just eat one. It's a little like that with other countries
and territories too. Once you get one of them under your belt, it starts to feel kind of good.
And well, it's funny because if you and again, I'm less qualified to talk about anything addiction
specialist related than I am to talk about history. But doesn't it sort of look if you look at
nation states and imagine them as people, doesn't it look like Japan's about to get hooked to
something here and that their rise and fall is going to parallel something like, you know,
your classic drug addict cycle of addiction. I think you could make a case and it's a wonderful
hinge moment in Japanese history or maybe horrible hinge moment because they go from
simply trying to make sure they don't get eaten in these, you know, shark infested colonial waters
to looking around themselves for people to eat. And well, like the potato chip commercial.
Sometimes you can develop an appetite for those things. Once you start, it looks like Japan in
this era gets dangerously hooked on imperialism. And it's not hard to see how it happened. I mean,
after all, all the countries, Japan wanted to be like and emulate the club that they wanted
to join to the great powers. All those guys are hooked to it already. Even little Belgians got
a problem won't shake it for a long time. Even the holier than now United States, which denounces
other people's imperialist invaders while swearing that violent transfers of territory with Mexico,
seizures of Hawaii and whatnot are not indicative of a growing problem. We'll begin having a larger,
more public problem in the Spanish-American war when Guam, the Philippines, Cuba and other places
will just sort of, you know, fall into its lap, I guess. William McKinley, the president of the
time going, shouldn't I or should I? And then, you know, Teddy Roosevelt violently fiending on
imperialism. He was a junkie of some kind, might have been adrenaline, might have been something else.
Now, Teddy Roosevelt does not strike me as the intoxicating substances, the mind-altering
substances kind of guy. But if he told me he had an addiction or might be likely to develop one,
you know, to muscle growth steroids, well, shoot, I wouldn't be too surprised about that. And in
fact, as I look at, you know, and all analogies have a little bit of a silly side, but that's kind
of what we enjoy sometimes, right? If you look at this analogy of these countries and imperialism,
it kind of looks like steroids to me. I mean, take Japan, for example. Here's a country that in their
mind should be stacked up with all the great powers. We can hang with anybody, but then they
take a 250-year seclusion break from the gym when they next encounter all these other great powers.
They're huge. I mean, look at how they must have seen Britain on a map. A lot of comparisons can
be made, a couple of violent nations, you know, interesting, distinctive people, all these kinds
of stuff. But that's where the comparison ends, because, you know, when Japan comes out of seclusion,
Britain controls a huge chunk of the world. They're obviously juicing on something, India, maybe.
But Japan goes on a crash course to catch up. Now, let's understand when we say getting addicted
to imperialism, when we're using those phrases for countries, I mean, what do you get addicted to
as a country? Well, let's just really go over this quickly, because I think we all get it. But how
about raw materials? How long have people been invading and conquering places to get somebody
else's stuff? In this modern era, you also have these unequal trade agreements, which can lock a
colony into, you know, turning over large chunks of their raw materials and wealth that reduced or
non-existent rates of exchange. Prestige in this era is huge. You will have a bunch of countries
that are late comers to the colonial party who will take the few leftover places just so that
they have another place, you know, another notch on their belt. The reason those places weren't taken
by great powers, they had nothing anybody wanted. The last thing they have is that they add to your
prestige. You know, I now have six colonies. The last time you saw me, Britain, I only had five.
I'm moving up in the world. Now, those are the things that attract you to these countries in
the first place, right? What's the first reason you start using this steroids? Well, I was just
dabbling. I wanted to get a little bigger. I was recovering from an injury. I needed the raw
materials, the trade position and a little prestige. I wanted to be big like the other guys.
It's all understandable. But when you get involved in it, then you're kind of committed and you get
sucked into something deeper. This is why I like this analogy. And the thing that sucks countries
into the colonial lifestyle are things like the capital investments that you begin to make as a
country or your companies do or your companies in conjunction with a country do, putting in railroads,
mining, development in all these local places, you begin to have a stake, a stake that if people
start saying, listen, the change in foreign affairs dictates, it would be best for us to
leave this area now and turn it back over to the locals. You're going to have a lot of powerful,
rich people who are going to say, wait a minute, what about our investment? And that's of course
just money. What about lives? The lives it takes to conquer these places and the lives it takes to
keep them conquered. I mean, for example, the Japanese will get their hands on Taiwan at a
certain point by some sort of treaty deal, but the people in Taiwan were asked and the Japanese
will lose quite a few people trying to pacify that area that supposedly on a piece of paper,
they were just handed over. I mean, this becomes not just a cost you have to pay to play this game,
right? An entry fee into the colonial games. It's a cost you have to keep paying to stay in the game
and it provides another investment that keeps you from having the flexibility if the times
dictate that it'd be better to give up this policy of colonialism or steroid use. Somebody's
going to say, well, wait a minute, my son died conquering that territory. Are you going to
make his sacrifices meaningless? Are you going to undo everything his life bought? I mean,
do you see how that, do you see how that sucks you in as a country?
I mean, remember too that the Japanese are seeing these European powers sort of at the
height of the good times while they're riding high in the addiction and they're lifting weights
and they're taking steroids and they're going to the tennis salon and they're covering themselves
with baby oil and they're getting their hair bleached and they look great, right? They're not
seeing these countries down the road, you know, on the downside of this addiction when they're in the,
you know, old folks home prematurely with all the health care problems and the steroids are gone
and the muscles are shriveled and they look and feel awful. I mean, when the Japanese look at the
French in what's called Indochina, for example, modern-day Vietnam, they see the French sitting
there having the Vietnamese serve them food in restaurants and a wonderful colonial existence
while of course the French pay them back by giving them French culture and everything. It's a
traditional colonial trade-off. The Japanese will not see the French 90 years from this time period
when in the 1950s they're fighting a vicious insurgency by the Viet Minh trying to kick the
French out of Vietnam, you know, go talk to them then, but of course by that time in the 1950s the
Japanese are in full recovery mode after a global intervention put it into its steroid addiction,
its half-century long steroid addiction, that if it wanted to go back and trace, you know,
the roots of how it began, that initial taste that seemed so consequence-free that got you hooked
and led you down, you know, that terrible path, the rise and fall of Japan's, you know, imperialism
addiction, it starts with Korea, which was just sitting there, wasn't it? Like a dagger aimed
at the heart of Japan as the German advisor from Bismarck told the Japanese government,
the Japanese had already treated Korea very shortly after it was opened up against its will
by the Western powers to that exact same treatment and then foisted the same sort of unequal treaties
on Korea that the West had foisted on Japan, so Japan learns quickly. They were ripe for trying
out what the Western powers were, you know, building their muscles up with and the first hit-free happened
in Korea. In the 1870s and 1880s the Japanese involved themselves more and more in internal Korean
politics and dynamics. Korea is generally in the sphere of influence of the great Jupiter of the
region, China, but increasingly as the Russians have advanced all the way to the Pacific, they have
more of an impact too in that area. But to the Japanese, this is a key, I mean, if this were a
game of risk or something where there were no morals or ethics or anything involved, right,
because the Korean people will suffer terribly, you know, into this time period we're getting into,
but let's imagine people don't matter in a risk game. If you're playing Japan, you want to take
Korea. During this time period, the Chinese and the Russians are in a much better position than
you are, so what do you do? Well, in 1894, somehow Japan ends up in a war over the sphere of influence
control of Korea with China. 1894, it's called the First Sino-Japanese War, and it is really the
first time that this new army of Japan, since they opened up, leaves Japan to fight somebody else,
not counting, you know, island insurrections and whatnot off Japan's coast, had to throw in these
little disclaimers because someone will say, well, you forgot that little teeny thing here. Okay,
first major one. By the way, outside observers, for the most part, believe that China will crush
Japan. Both China and Japan have been undergoing military modernization for kind of the same
reason, both of them finding themselves dangerously vulnerable to Western technology. So working to
catch up, the stated opinion out there by most people was that China had done a better job,
including having a fleet. I love the way, again, this is the time period where race and all that
stuff is so important. They had the most powerful Asian fleet in Asia, it was thought,
and in a stunning, absolutely stunning campaign, the Japanese just rolled the Chinese
on land and at sea, and it's much more shocking, probably, if you read the observers at sea,
where they destroy the Chinese fleet so terribly that, history, Mary's V Jensen says,
China won't have another blue water navy for 100 years. The Chinese admiral commits suicide
on land. It's interesting. The Japanese are so dominant, they're dishing out casualties at 10
to 1 ratios, 15 to 1 ratios, and you can't label any single advantage as being dominant because,
you know, if you sort of delve into it a little bit, the Japanese seem dominant sort
of across the board. Both Chinese and Japanese militaries had modernized, but the Japanese had
done it in a lot better of a way. They made better choices. The Chinese had gone with the
banner system, but it just, it didn't work. It's a coming out party on the world stage,
and it is shocking to Westerners who don't have a lot of respect for Orientals to begin with,
but if they have respect for any of them, it's China, even though they're biting off pieces of
China and whatnot. To them, China still represents sort of the wisdom of the East and Confucian
ideas in this great culture, theoretically. These Japanese are nothing but upstarts, and these
Japanese go into this war with China and end up winning it while losing less, usually the numbers
you see are less than 1,500 men killed in combat. Less than 1,500 men killed in combat?
That's astounding. Chinese numbers are, you know, 10 times that or something.
The idea that you could win a war with China and lose less than 1,500 men killed?
Well, with the downside of imperialism seemingly that small, anybody could get hooked, couldn't
they? The first thing that the Japanese got out of this war, which they clearly wanted,
from the emperor down to the, you know, average Japanese person on the street, was respect and
prestige on the international world stage. The other great powers sat up and took notice.
In 1895, the year the war ended, Lord Charles Beresford was quoted in the Times of London as
saying, quote, Japan has within 40 years gone through the various administrative phases that
occupied England about 800 years and Rome about 600. And I am loathed to say that anything is
impossible with her, end quote. There was a lot of admiration, but it was still tempered by this
idea that yes, they're pretty amazing for Oriental folk. I mean, it was it was an almost a racialist
view of things. Wow, they have moved themselves up to the top of the food chain amongst their people
in that part of the world. I mean, and that was the progressive way of looking at things.
There were people around the Russians are, and again, pardon, this is going to sound like
racism, folks, but we're talking about one of the most racist periods in world history,
and it impacts decision making. I mean, the people around the Russians are thought of the
Japanese. There was one quote of they're just yellow monkeys. Okay, well, what happens to you
if it's your job to deal with yellow monkeys? And you're trying to figure out, okay, how many
troops do we need on the border with those people? I mean, when you're trying to make
conscious decisions about how you should behave, but your view of reality is so tainted by your
racism that you can't possibly imagine these people doing anything that would hurt you.
And that's what a lot of the other people said, the Japanese were able to do this to the Chinese,
because obviously the Chinese are weak as heck, they'd never be able to do it to a white nation.
Well, the end of Japan's war with China here opens up the door to them having a problem with
their first European nation, because Japan gets a peace treaty extracted from China that is like
hitting the jackpot in Las Vegas for the Japanese. First of all, the terms are that they get
a ton of money. It's like the equivalent of four years of Japan's total budget handed over to them.
They also get the island of Taiwan, which is huge and the surrounding smaller islands, right? So
here's Japan's first colony. They also get an agreement that they will sort of have the sphere
of influence control of Korea. And in order to make that work, they have to get this peninsula,
which is strategically very important. So it's all part of the deal. Japan has sort of had this
coming out party. They're in the great powers now. And then all of a sudden, I love the way
our target Murphy describes it, he says, it's the equivalent of having three old seasoned lions come
in and steal the first kill of a young leopard who's just learning how to hunt and just, you know,
thinks he's hit the jackpot. No, no, no, no, no, no, we're going to alter the terms of the deal,
said the three lions metaphorically named France, Germany and Russia. In a move known as the triple
intervention, those three powers come in and tell Japan that they can't extract the treaty from China
that they want to. For the sake of the peace of Asia, they said, but in reality, Japan figured
that all three of those countries had their own ideas about things in China that they wanted.
And so they told the Japanese in no uncertain terms, giving them no choice, by the way,
we'll have China pay you more money than the original deal called for. But you don't get to
have that important strategic peninsula that has that port named Port Arthur on it.
Now I should point out something about Port Arthur before we go any farther,
because it's germane to the story. Port Arthur was the site of a terrible massacre
in the Sino-Japanese war that just ended. In it, the Japanese army went in and killed
men, women and children between 1000 is the low end number you see. And the high end possible
number is 20,000. That's a huge gap, obviously, but there are other people that take that number
much, much, much, much higher than that. But there really aren't that many people in that region.
So they're not really that credible, but just know that that the incredible numbers go much
higher than 20,000. The reason it's important, though, is because you will see on display
things that both look medieval to modern people in the late 19th century and things that are going
to be reminiscent of incidents we will see over and over in the Second World War. The Japanese go
into Port Arthur and the three rationales, just so you know that you'll get for this, you'll get
for the other basically situations like it in the Second World War, you got them at the time,
you will get them today from ultra-nationalists, there's three. One is that these incidents
happened when atrocities were committed against Japanese troops, and so the soldiers kind of
lose their minds for a while. You know, the suggestion is that this is understandable for
troops in combat and that it's not something that the army itself condones, but it's understandable,
right? So you got the atrocity thing. The second thing you'll often hear is that the
press is reporting that these are civilians, but they're really enemy soldiers who are trying to
hide from our troops and live to snipe at them and everything from behind buildings dressed as
civilians. So all these people that look like civilians are really enemy soldiers, and the
last thing you will hear reliably is that the numbers are inflated. Now there is some potential
truth to the numbers are inflated thing because in the same way you have ultra-nationalists all
around the planet now trying to revamp the way the world views perhaps, we'll call them negative
chapters in the history of their military that they're rightfully proud of, but every nation has
them. I mean the Chinese, for example, have an interest in magnifying Japanese crimes against
Chinese citizens, and the Japanese, if you're patriotic, have interest in seeing the numbers
in the best possible light. It's all understandable, but I'm going to let historians argue that sort
of stuff. I'm just going to try to stick to the facts and I'm going to try to give multiple sides,
but here's what an eyewitness, and there were several Westerners in Port Arthur when the massacre
happened. Here's how he described it, and just so you know, you could take this description out of
this time period in this event, substitute it for any number of incidents that happened in the Second
World War, and you wouldn't know that it wasn't written then because they have a tragically
familiar ring to them. This author who witnessed the events at the massacre of Port Arthur in the
First Sino-Japanese War described it this way, quote, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday
were spent by the soldiery in murder and pillage from dawn to dark, in mutilation, in every conceivable
kind of nameless atrocity, until the town became a ghastly inferno to be remembered with a fearsome
shudder until one's dying day. I saw corpses of women and children, three or four in the streets,
more in the water. Bodies of men strewed the streets in hundreds, perhaps thousands, for we
could not count, some with not a limb unsevered, some with their heads hacked, cross-cut and split
lengthwise, some ripped open, not by chance, but with careful precision down and across,
disemboweled and dismembered, with occasionally a dagger or bayonet thrust in the private parts.
I saw groups of prisoners tied together in a bunch, with their hands behind their backs,
riddled with bullets for five minutes and then hewned to pieces. I saw a junk stranded on the
beach, filled with fugitives of either sex and of all ages, struck by volley after volley, until I
can say no more." That's worth going through a few thoughts for a minute here. The first one is
that there's nothing unusual about an event like this, is there? Your history books are littered
with this stuff, going back to the beginning of time, practically. Go read the Assyrian annals,
sometimes it seems like it's nothing but that start to finish. But things are starting to change
in this period we're coming into, right? Early 20th century. And you can't necessarily get away
with things that people got away with forever. Nation states, for example, armies, powers, kingdoms,
warlords, whatever you want to say. I mean, if you're, you know, what's that old philosophical
experiment? If a tree falls in the forest and there's no one there to hear it, did it really
make a sound? Well, if some terrible massacre occurs of some out-of-the-way people in a remote
region and no one ever hears about it outside the little locality, does it really matter?
Well, in this time period, you know, when you're coming into the 20th century here now and we
have telegraphs and communication on that level, well, it's starting to really matter. First of all,
good luck trying to keep it a secret that account we just read you slipped out, didn't it? It wasn't
the only one. Would that have happened 500 years before this time? The second important point is
when it slips out and people in other countries hear of it, they have the ability, if there's
enough of them and they're angry enough, to make you feel their anger. And this will be a key part
in the story too, when public opinion in other countries begins to try to make you conform to
their standards. Standards that, by the way, are changing radically in the 20th century. Another
standard that's changing is the outright idea of, you know, the right of one country to conquer
another and take it over. I mean, this has been pretty well established and understood in the
20th century, it starts becoming uncool, especially amongst the more cool powers. I mean, the old
fashioned ones like, you know, the Germans and the Russians, and of course now the Japanese may
still think you can go in there and take other people over, but we more sophisticated powers
understand that that's just, it's immorally wrong. Meanwhile, they'll go and establish a
protectorate over someone else, you know, which is a treaty-bound agreement we have with them to
safeguard their needs and help them develop. I mean, you see what I'm saying. I mean,
it will require many more layers of diplomatic cover to conquer or control areas in the 20th
century. In the old days, you could just take them over. Well, there are still powers that
live by the old rules and there will be a public opinion price for doing that.
I should also point out that the training of the Japanese military was unlike the training of any
other great power military. In fact, it's hard for me to find any organized military in the late
19th or 20th century that trained their soldiers the way the Japanese were trained. I mean, here
in the U.S., for example, for a long time, I don't know if they do this anymore, but Marines,
for example, used to have combat with each other in boot camp. And basically, they used
weapons that are sticks with padded ends. So you're fighting, you know, in hand-to-hand combat like
that. The Japanese, in the Second World War and before, I don't know if it comes into this period.
I have to be very honest with you. I tried to find research. I don't know if it goes back into this
period. But in the Second World War and in the 1930s, Japanese troops will often be trained
on live people. There are photos and they're horrible that you can go and see online of Japanese
soldiers bayoneting, you know, in training exercises with the other recruits whose turn
is not now watching bayoneting Chinese prisoners whose hands are tied. There's multiple photos of
Japanese captives or whatnot tied to stakes and have bayonet practice and sword. I mean,
I mean, there's an account by a Japanese officer who talks about his training involving having to
slice the head off somebody. And if you look at paintings of the Sino-Japanese war made by
Japanese artists, there's some that show the mass beheadings of Chinese captives with samurai
swords. Now, Japan's victory over China had big ramifications because it was the equivalent
of throwing blood and chum into the, you know, shark-infested colonial waters and telling the
rest of the world that the recent victories by Britain and the opium wars and whatnot
wasn't a sign of temporary Chinese inability to deal with Western military technology. It was
the beginning of the end of maybe this Chinese imperial dynasty. There was obviously some sort
of a rotting house apparent after the Japanese kicked the door down. And that led to something
led to something called the Boxer Rebellion where Western territories ended up bringing in troops,
eight powers, only one of them Asian, one guess who it was. Yes, the Japanese and they sent as
many troops as everyone else put together, basically, you know, throwing their lot in with
the club. We belong in the club. We're here, you know, and looking at a map, they probably had
more of a right to be there than anyone else. Now, the next big foreign policy milestone on the
way to our story here involves a war that the Japanese get involved with in 1904 against the
Russians. The Russians who were one of the three lions that said, for the peace of Asia, you can't
have this Port Arthur area, just not right and force the Japanese to give in. The Japanese always
thought that Russia really wanted it for themselves. Within three years, the Russians had taken it,
confirming the Japanese suspicions and they started fortifying Port Arthur and the whole thing.
So in 1904, when the Japanese had decided, you know, for all sorts of reasons that they still needed
to control this area, they launched, let's just call it a pre-aircraft version of a Pearl Harbor
on the Russian Far Eastern fleet, having torpedo boats go in there and attack Russian ships
about three hours before war was officially declared.
In short order, the Japanese will destroy the Russian Far Eastern fleet.
The Russian leaders around the Tsar who are so caught off guard by this, they didn't think the
Japanese would attack them or didn't have it in them, attack a white power, send the fleet that
they have in the Baltic, the Baltic fleet from up near Finland, all the way to Japan to teach
these Oriental people a lesson, takes months to get there and when they get there, the Japanese
beat that too in stunning fashion. It's not like a close fight at all. Boom. On land, it's more of a
harder slog for simple reasons. I mean, we're like a decade away from the First World War and all of
those lessons they're going to learn in the first year of the First World War, like, you know, you
can't charge machine guns frontally, the impact of, you know, defense. I mean, all the stuff you're
going to learn the Japanese get to learn against the Russians on land and there are horrible photos
showing just, I mean, like, walls of Japanese soldiers dead in front of these fortified positions
because, you know, often led by an officer with a samurai sword, they blindly and fanatically charged.
Now, you don't have to think of yourselves as samurai to do that because we all know the
European powers will do that in less than 10 years. Nonetheless, what you see here is the
Japanese finding out that the cost of this path on which they have embarked to emulate the colonial
powers is not going to come as easy as, you know, that war in China. You're not going to lose 1500
or less dead, you know, down the road here. It's a commitment and against the Russians and the Russo
Japanese war, the Japanese lose something more like 40,000 dead. The Russians too, by the way,
it's nasty. It's World War One fighting before World War One. And it's all the early war stuff
when everybody, you know, has to learn the terrible lessons, you know, about charging into
artillery. I mean, it's, it's nasty and horrible. And then there's disease too, as all these wars
during this time period have a terrible problem with. It also, and this is another lesson of
modern war the other great powers will learn very soon. It takes a horrible toll modern war does on
your economy and the Russian economy and the Japanese economy will instantly start to feel
the pinch and then the stretch. And it gets to the point where the Japanese secretly go to American
president Teddy Roosevelt and ask if he can get both countries out of this mass and broker some
kind of a deal, which he does and wins the Nobel Peace Prize for by the way, but a decent number
of people in Japan think that the American president in his peace deal ripped the Japanese off
that they essentially won this war, but they didn't come out of it with a treaty that,
you know, looked anything like hitting the jackpot did in the first Sino-Japanese war.
This looked more like a treaty, you know, for countries that had a tie rather than one, at
least where the Japanese people reading a bias press that magnified their victories think that
they had dominated, lose all these lives, all this money, beat the Russians in all these battles,
and not get significant territory or a big financial identity.
When the terms of the agreement ending the Russo-Japanese war are made public,
there will be violent riots in Japan and people will die. The population there, I mean pretty
much every history book you want to point out, the people there take it as another grievance.
The Japanese are holding onto grievances like the Rain Man character did in the movie of the
same name and they remember vividly, shall we call it the triple intervention screw job that
ended the Sino-Japanese war where a bunch of Western powers who never would have settled
for someone else doing that to them treated the Japanese in a way that the Japanese took personally.
They saw it as changing the rules of the game when the Japanese start winning
and they often saw it in racial terms and maybe not incorrectly, well now it was happening again
and not only was it happening again but it was happening despite the fact that the Japanese
had taken proactive measures to see that it didn't again. In 1902 they signed an alliance with Britain
and part of the reason they did it was they were hoping that if you have a great power on your side
a bunch of other great powers won't come in like they did last time and try to steal your kill
and yet here with the agreement ending the Russo-Japanese war it looks like it made no
difference and your kill got stolen again. Goes on the list of grievances.
But it's very possible that the Japanese citizenry had unrealistic expectations.
This is the way our Tiger Murphy describes what Japan had won for itself in a decade including
two wars here and it is far from insignificant he writes quote. Japan's victory in the Russo-Japanese
war was if anything even more striking than its triumph ten years earlier over the Qing Chinese.
For the first time since the fall of Constantinople a non-Christian non-western power defeated the
forces of a Christian nation. Both the Japanese navy and army acquitted themselves brilliantly
with the navy sinking much of the Russian fleet off the coast of Korea while the army's battles
on the Korean Peninsula culminating in the siege of Port Arthur led to Japanese mastery on land.
Some of the consequences of the two wars were similar he writes like the Qing the Tsarist
regime never recovered its prestige its defeat set the stage for the 1917 revolution. Meanwhile
just as Tokyo had picked up Taiwan as a spoil of the earlier war so the 1905 settlement finally put
Korea into its orbit. Tokyo had to use an ugly trick he says to force the abdication of Korea's
King Kojong in order to legally convert Korea into an outright colony but the trick he says was
probably no worse than what the United States had done in 1893 to overthrow Queen Lalino Akane
and incorporate Hawaii into the American Empire. Japan he says was behaving pretty much according
to the standards of the time more to the point in fewer than 40 years he writes the country had
transformed itself from a weak tottering polity into the preeminent nation state of Asia and the
first non-western country in centuries that the great powers had to admit into their ranks
but the bill for that transformation had not yet been paid in full it turned out to be far
higher than anyone at the time could have imagined. End quote. The reaction to Japan's victory over
the Russians as historian Andrew Gordon says runs the gamut from outrage to admiration.
You got guys like the emperor of Germany the Kaiser who's a believer in something he calls the
yellow peril that all these innumerable Asian people like ants will join together someday
and swamp Christendom if you believe that you know to a guy like that it looks like the Japanese
have emerged as the tip of the spear that will lead you know the Asians to swamp Christendom
but you have a lot of other European states that all of a sudden have become admirers.
Some of them had turned you know and become fans of the Japanese after the victory over China but
after the victory over Russia a bunch more people show up and Japan you know when the historians
say that they kind of joined the great power club it's more official than you think they actually
change you know the level of the ambassadors that are sent to your country all of a sudden you
know when people are debating things like in the United States they'll be a debate over is it good
that the Japanese are taking over Korea or not and there'll be people who write back even experts
and diplomats who are going absolutely you know what they're doing over there is the same thing
we're doing in the Philippines in other words you really do get special consideration as a member of
the you know predator club as opposed to the prayer club now another viewpoint though you can look at
is from the colonial victim viewpoint of people like the Koreans this would be an awful period
in their history they will suffer terribly so from their viewpoint this isn't a you know good
thing this is a tragedy and once again you know keeps them from ruling themselves they will be
seen by the Japanese government the same way that colonial victims were often seen by the mother
country sometimes especially if the colonial victims are of a different skin color they will
be seen as less than human or certainly less than Japanese second-class citizens from the get-go
but finally there's another interesting group of people whose reaction here is important the other
non-white victims of colonialism who have just seen something that inspires them they've seen a
non-white power punch the great powers in the nose in a way they could only dream of and
it gives them an opportunity to dream of the potential of maybe even with Japanese help doing
that down the road this idea may be that the Japanese emergence in Asia is the beginning of
the reality of a bunch of ideas that are some kind called pan-Asianism the idea of well it's
basically the Kaiser's worst nightmare come true in a way that helps a bunch of people
that would love to gain their freedom from non-Asian powers historian Andrew Gordon writes quote
quote in places as distant as turkey iran and india over the several years following the war
japan's victory over russia was invoked by modernizers and anti-imperialist activists
as an inspiring harbinger of their own possibilities for nation building and independence from the west
end quote now the reason this is going to get weird though is this is a real thing the idea
of how this might be a useful you know way for colonial victims to throw off the yoke of their
oppressors with the help of powerful people in their region maybe even with the same skin color
let's look at it from a racial standpoint an opportunity to be seized maybe right and there
are japanese intellectuals and an entire you know political history in japan of people arguing that
this should be what japan does free the region lead the region become the economic powerhouse
the diplomatic superpower i mean all these things it's a way japan could have gone it's a missed
opportunity it's a tragedy if you're looking at it from people like sabura ayanaga's viewpoint he
wrote a book called the pacific war i may have said this in the late 1960s and the point of the book
is to try to figure out whether the japanese public could have avoided you know the terrible descent
into war well this is the time period where that opportunity best presents itself and one of the
ways because the japanese public just so you know they're almost entirely me if not entirely almost
entirely supportive of the idea of japan having this real huge superpower role in the region
but how that role manifests peaceful leadership versus you know some sort of military colonial
domination well that's what's being discussed saburu ayanaga seems to lament the lost opportunity
when he writes quote if japan had been a champion of asian nationalism had really desired independence
and progress for its neighbor and had joined with china to liberate asia from western imperialism
the subsequent history of the region would have been vastly different
japan would have identified with chinese nationalism helped to end foreign domination
and made a real effort to create enduring good relations with the new china unfortunately he
writes japanese leaders chose the opposite course of action they competed with the west for a place
at the imperialist table and a slice of the chinese melon end quote now i have to say pan asianism
is intoxicating as an idea even to me just for the alternative history possibilities
i mean can you imagine with all of the you know independence movements and underground rebel
things that were going on and all these different you know colonial victims in asia during this time
period if somebody had in this you know in a single swoop come in and formed an organization
an alliance system a framework and just said everyone can join right now what's more the
missing ingredient for all of those you know peoples that were under the colonial thumb is
some sort of military that could you know fight off a military from the great powers well all of
a sudden that's what you have in japan so the possibilities if it took off could make the
fall of the soviet union look like a blip on the historical map but there were a lot of
things sort of you know working against that maybe the number one thing being that the japanese
were not about you know a lot of historians point this out the japanese were not about to
submerge themselves in some sort of grand asian united nations where they were just one of a
bunch of different powers the japanese were in a place where they were thinking of themselves
as is one intellectual right had said the head and shoulders of the world but
the japanese are starting to get some of the other i would say byproducts maybe you look
at it that way and you have a right to others might say necessary precursors of colonialism
you know in for a penny in for a pound but the japanese are exhibiting the same sorts of racial
superiority tendencies that all the other colonial powers that are colonizing asia do too
like we said about shintoism and bushido and concepts like that the japanese state will warp
this idea of pan asianism for its own purposes in the second world war there will be something
called a concept called the greater east asia coprosperity sphere yes it's a mouthful but
that's the official name this is one of my history professors back in college called it
this is the marketing front that japan uses to disguise their war aims but that's a very simplistic
allied way of looking at it because truthfully a lot of people bought into this idea whether
or not the government did and some of the people in the government certainly did the problem with
the idea of creating a giant asia for asians in a hemisphere freed by the you know sacrifice of
japanese soldiers willingly giving up their lives for the greater good right that's something every
mother and father can get behind when they send their son off to the imperial japanese army
you have to kind of live up to that on the ground right you can't cloak yourself in the robe of
asian liberation and then treat the people that you liberated worse than the people that you
liberated them from in 1910 japan officially annexes korea they had acquired the sphere of
influence rights officially in a treaty when the japanese war with russia ended five years later
boom they just take it out right it's the first real colony of japan of course they've had taiwan
for a while now too so japan goes from a country writing about joining the colonial great powers
to one of them and they don't act a whole lot differently than the countries that they wanted
to be like the korean economy becomes a subsidiary of the japanese economy for the purposes of the
japanese economy and the people in korea are treated like second-class citizens and sometimes
they're treated like chattel the brutalities sometimes are horrible the koreans would sometimes
have the gall to get out and demand their rights and they would be shot down at protests i mean
this is not the kind of thing that goes on the greater east asia co-prosperities we're marketing
brochure um you know when those come out author saburo ayanaga discusses this period in japanese
history and mentions something else that won't be in the marketing materials he says quote the wars
for control of korea exceeded their objective and escalated into a general advance into china
policies towards taiwan and korea became more ruthless as pressure increased on china resistance
to annexation in both areas was mercilessly crushed i discovered he writes a vivid example of that
cruelty among the papers of a military man assigned to taiwan immediately after the island
was ceded to japan it was a photograph he writes of japanese troops beheading two pigtailed taiwanese
rebels who apparently had been captured in a skirmish the horrible scene foreshadowed the
atrocities committed in every area touched by japanese forces during the pacific war end quote
now the japanese certainly committed atrocities on a wide scale but we should make some cultural
allowances i think shouldn't we for differences i mean for example let's take something that bothered
the allied soldiers an awful lot and it would have bothered me too the idea of cutting people's heads off
i find this particularly hard myself but let me tell you what i mean in 1944 there was a photo
that i believe was taken off of a body of a dead japanese soldier and the photo was forwarded
to a couple of different press outlets i think in the united states life published it and life
was huge there's no way to describe how big life magazine was in that society at that time
and they published this photo i think you could call this photo arguably top three most upsetting
photos for the allied populations in terms of stirring them to a white hot anger the photo
depicted an australian commando i believe had been captured on the island of new guinea by natives i
think and sent to the japanese on the island the japanese interrogated him took him to a beach
put him on the sand the photo shows a blindfold on and i think it's like a sticky blindfold i
don't think it's actually wrapped around his head so it looks kind of particularly modern for some
reason he's got his arms pinioned with a rope there is a semicircle of japanese soldiers around
watching and the you know australian is in the process of having his head cut off there's a
japanese officer standing above him and he's swinging the samurai sword down and the photographer
caught it in mid-stroke now let me point out that there is going to be some cultural elements that
i have to deal with and you might too when you look at this it's the same sort of cultural
elements that the allied populations had to deal with that the allied soldiers had to deal with
cutting people's heads off looks medieval straight up looks barbaric it looks sadistic
it looks like something that european countries for example haven't done since the 1600s when
japan you know was last opened before the recent period it's like they froze their development
maybe some might think but let's remember this is a cultural difference and that in places like
china they were still pretty comfortable cutting people's heads off too and if we're getting into
this on a you know let's have a debate about cutting people's heads off and the rightness or
wrongness of that theoretically i mean if they had just taken this poor australian commando
and did what most countries would have done to spies and let's be honest one man's commando
can easily be another man's spy especially since everyone always wants to make you a spy when
they're prosecuting you if they can if they had just shot this poor guy you wouldn't have heard
much about it it was the cutting off of his head that freaked everybody out but you know the other
side might not have seen it anything like this and in fact you know people from other countries
where beheading was still something you know that wasn't thought of demonically might not have had
as much of a problem with it either it's a weird thing though because theoretically all we should
care about is the suffering right i mean if you shoot somebody or if you cut their heads off
it's probably pretty close if they hang them we should probably feel more sympathy but people
got hung all the time and you didn't see any particularly you know top 10 photos from the
second world war that depicted that here's the part though that might be more interesting
thing that photo exists apparently if my research is correct because the guy who was doing the
execution the japanese officer swinging that sword down on that you know tied up captive
asked somebody to take the photo of him because he wanted the photo i mean let me ask you this
if you had to kill somebody in your life you know sometimes people have to do that
but how'd you like to have a photo of you in the process of doing it to save for later
in the west we would think of that as something a serial killer some weirdo you write a book
about and psychologists analyze do so it's not that beheading shows a particularly cruel
nature by the method itself but wanting to be photographed doing it well by the time the 20th
century rolls around for a great power that looks a little bit weird and maybe a sign of something
now we could suggest that you know everything we've talked about so far all these cultural
elements layered on top of each other and working together in these human beings in some unquantifiable
way would help explain all this of course at the same time we could suggest that the man cutting
off the australian commando's head in the photograph is a you know run-of-the-mill routine
general-purpose sadist you get those everywhere don't you and in wartime they tend to come out
of the woodwork for understandable reasons but it's stuff like this that will make allied armies
think differently about the japanese in terms of their level of hatred and intensity that even the
germans who you know the the allied powers did not like the germans they really did not like the
nazis but it's different and things like this played into it and yet you know if you look at
this story in 1905 1906 at the end of the russo-Japanese war and realize that the allied armies
fighting the japanese is only like 35 years away you try to figure out what the heck is going to
happen what do they even have to disagree about right hmm well this is where our little steroid
analogy kind of comes back into play because if if japan's taking of taiwan and korea is like
taking sort of soft core steroids the ones that will make you bigger but they're not going to
turn you into a great britain or anything mammoth like that but on the upside they're not going
to kill you either you can absorb both of them and still be okay the japanese are going to get
like a little sample a free little taste a little tiny piece of something that has the potential
were they to expand and go deeper into it to make them as big a country as they want to be in terms
of resources and wealth and territory and whatnot the downside of course like any sort of more
hardcore more effective steroids is they also have the potential to kill you japan's empires
cause of death is now visible in the story as part of the settlement that ends the ruso japanese
war it's a little teeny railroad something that will be called the south manchurian railway
a little teeny mining concession just you know in a little area that at the time will be called
manchuria it's a controversial name actually now because some will say that this is part of japanese
propaganda to legitimize their view of things in the region but we'll call it manchuria without
understanding a lot of history books use quotes now around the term it's named supposedly for the
manchu people who are one of the many northernish chinese sort of steppish people who take over
china from time to time traditionally though the area falls into sort of the general chinese sphere
of influence but the russians had sort of supplanted them in the last 20 or 30 years as part of this
general disillusion of china or its inability to you know keep great powers from biting off chunks of
it the area is huge by the way i read it's the size of like texas louisiana and alabama put together
lots of coal lots of iron uh potentially huge amounts of wheat like i mean we're talking united
states bread basket type amounts of wheat the entire area of which the japanese only have a
little tiny little piece of south menchuria at this point but the entire area borders several
different countries and several different cultures and if you're looking at it in the terms the period
would use several different ethnic groups or races it's mostly chinese by the way but this
manchurian area touches korea it touches china it touches syberia it touches bungolia
it's a huge area big enough to give you you know whatever you wanted in terms of
of raw materials or food or space or customers in an emerging market
but also large enough if it sucks you in to kill you and the potential to draw you deeper into the
affair is ever present and there are people working on you know making sure that happens
in several different places in this story at the same time it's like a wild west with spies it's
like berlin used to be when i was a kid where all the spies in the world supposedly hung out
you know in that one little area that's what this area around the south manchurian railway that
japan is developing it becomes a little like that and there's people in there who work for the
corporations who are developing things there's people who work for you know some shadowy groups
and they're just trying to see what the opportunities are you know to expand a little bit nonetheless
initially it's not much of a problem because it's just that little area and the japanese apparently
have the right to develop along the railway line you know in a narrow sort of way we can develop
hotels along the whistle stops and then eventually that becomes you know an infrastructure to support
the hotels and eventually that becomes homes for the people that work at the hotels and at
schools for the people who work at the hotel's kids and slowly but surely these japanese companies
in conjunction with the japanese government by the way in a way that does remind one a little bit
of the way the british sort of colonized india was a corporate affair initially eventually
transferring to a government sort of thing similar pattern in japan but the development in this region
is phenomenal it happens at a time when china starts to fall apart i mean we've talked about
pieces of it being ripped off in various eras earlier in the story this is the era where it just
fragments and the countries in pieces and warlords are running the show and some parts of it at times
can be almost a little wild westish you know where where a government's in power or the two weeks later
another government's in power and then every now and then you know the old government comes back
it's wild but the japanese have every right to think that it might be worth having someone to
defend japanese citizens and japanese investments and all that stuff in the area so they send a
division i think of a group that will eventually be called the guandong army these people are going
to play a key role in this story and they're going to be part of the unveiling of a giant hidden trap
in the japanese governmental system that provides the you know the opening of the door to the
disaster here in this story but no one knows this right now we have a couple more landmarks
to hit on the way to our destination though one of them happens in 1912 in 1912 the emperor that
the meiji restoration is named after dies he's replaced by his son the emperor will be known
as the taisho emperor his name is yoshihito i believe though and the taisho emperor period is
really important in japanese history and part of the reason why is because there's something wrong
with him now exactly what was wrong with him is not something that the royal court was really
publicizing remember this is an era where they're trying to publicize the emperor is sort of a god
the idea that you would have all these human imperfections is not exactly something that
matches with the marketing material i've read accounts that suggest maybe the emperor had
cerebral meningitis maybe when he was a little boy and never fully recovered but some people
just say he just wasn't up to the task here's what herbert p bix historian herbert p bix writes
about it in his book hierohito hierohito of course was the world war two emperor and this is his
father yoshihito bix writes quote hierohito's father crown prince yoshihito made emperor at 33
was unable to continue meiji's legacy physically weak indolent and incapable of making political
decisions he was utterly lacking in knowledge of military matters even though he was now the
commander-in-chief less than one month after yoshihito's accession to the throne at the start
of the new taisho era the press reported the appointment of extra doctors to the court in
december 1912 admiral yamamoto i believe it's gon b i told general matsukada matsuyoshi
that when it came to recommending a successor prime minister emperor yoshihito quote is not
of the same caliber as the previous emperor in my view it is loyal not to obey the taisho emperor's
word if we deem it to be disadvantageous to the state bix continues quote thus without any institutional
change having occurred the accession in 1912 of hierohito's father became an important turning
point in the conduct of state affairs end quote well they say nature abhors a vacuum and power does
too and all of a sudden we get to a very interesting question which is in a system where if you said
you know who's got the power everyone answered the emperor in a period where the emperor is not
up to using that power me who is your default choice when the emperor is not up to the task
that's not been really defined in this vague system and so the 1920s will be a period for example
when different elements in the system will be trying to sort of jockey for a larger position
of power in the state now that you know there's a vacuum sort of where the emperor's role is supposed
to be more on that after the brief interlude that is known as world war one the first world war
breaks out in 1914 and in asia it is a very different sort of an animal than it is in europe
obviously in europe it is a catastrophe it is a charnel house it is a nightmare in asia it's not
that bad at all in fact the japanese get into the war they have an alliance with britain anyway but
they get into the war on the allied side interesting to note that both the italians and the japanese
will fight with the allies against the germans in the first world war and then switch sides in the
second but in this case for the japanese this is a wonderful opportunity to like hit the jackpot in
the way they haven't hit it since that first war in china right the first sino japanese war in this
case the germans don't have a lot in asia but what they do have is almost undefended and so you can
argue you know who came out of the first world war the best and i think the two candidates that are
the most logical choices here is is it the united states or is it japan the united states came out
of it much much stronger than you know what they were like when they went into it and they did much
better than japan did but they paid a much larger price in doing it in a really short period of
combat operations the united states lost a lot of people comparatively now the japanese lost
virtually nobody but the you know winnings weren't as good but if you look at a map look at what the
japanese acquire as a result of taking over german possessions in asia what do the germans have well
they have a little piece of china you know basically like everyone else does right remember 1900 the
box of rebellion everybody had a little chunk of china the japanese take over the german chunk of
that and then they take over some island chains that the germans had they have the marshall islands
they have the marianas and they have the carolines if you know your second world war history you'll
note that these are some of the most important battlefields of the pacific war and if you look
at a map of japan and its possessions before the first world war and the same map afterwards you
will notice that they basically gain their pacific island empire what japan would later consider to
be sort of its pacific defense perimeter as a result of taking over these german possessions
in the first world war in 1915 sort of when no one's looking because everybody's killing each
other so horribly on the western front the japanese go to china and issue a bunch of demands now the
chinese are falling apart during this time period the government's very weak and you can see the
japanese almost have a chance to say to themselves well you know what can we get away with here and
the demands include some that would basically the historians i was reading say basically turn china
into the beginnings of a colony of japan this freaks the chinese out they're in no position to
resist the japanese themselves but they appeal to the great powers the japanese are forced to back
off on the most outrageous of these demands but it begins to set up conflict with the allies where
before this time period really there hadn't been much of a reason for disagreement
in 1917 we all know what happens to russia then right they have a revolution you get a provisional
government that can almost go maybe in a democratic way for five seconds but then that collapses into
the bolshevik revolution which collapses into the russian civil war which ends up with the
communist victory and this freaks everybody out japan more than just about anyone else now let me
stop for a minute and point out two things one there is no way for us to understand how much
the bolshevik revolution scared and freaked people out during the era right our our attitudes
toward this now are so much calmer than people back then you know would have felt and the more
traditional and conservative your society the more threatened you were likely to be by what was seen
at the time period as a utopian experiment and by the way one that some people were very interested
in so in some of the you know some countries like there are people in britain and ireland and the
united states for example western europe that looked at the bolshevik revolution as something
potentially positive but to the japanese communism was extremely scary and one of the things that was
not emphasized in the histories when i was growing up either with talking about the nazis or talking
about um the japanese was how much at least they believed and their people believed and how much
the materials that they used as propaganda for their own populations you know sold this idea
that they were these anti-communist warriors and that so much of what they did was based on
fighting communism nowadays the histories are very clear that you know read the materials right what
are they writing about what are they talking about well this communism stuff scared them so much
that one of the arguments made for why japan has to begin to maybe take over more of manchuria
is to move up into this territory along the border with what used to be russia but now
is some weird place called the soviet union in case we have to fend off you know communist hordes
a fear of communism plays into the rest of imperial japanese history
and they will never get over this fear and it's worth knowing that the largest army japan will
deploy in the second world war by far will be the one that is standing by just in case the soviet
union attacks them in 1918 in november the first world war ends and japan like a bunch of other
powers will get involved in an effort you know to try to play a role in the russian civil war
war but basically when the war ends japan gets to go to the peace conference i mean it's a you
know it's really moving up in the world but at the same time when they propose a sort of a racial
equality kind of clause a really tepid one is the way one historian describes it the western powers
and guys like woodrow wilson it's no surprise shoot that down the japanese take this as a sort of a
argument against all the sort of high-minded talk they're hearing because there's a lot of
wilsonianism going on here that's kind of where the term comes from right this high-minded stuff
the first world war had rocked the countries of the world and even more than at the end of the
second world war there was this attitude that this must never happen again and so there was a lot of
remember they create the you know early version of the united nations the league of nations because
we're gonna have countries talking to each other again what's more and this shows you the pie in
the sky level but i mean there was a lot of thinking that we have to have a language that we
all speak we can't have all these foreign tongues anymore that make us you know impossible to understand
each other so let's all learn esperanto but there was also a real sense that one of the main reasons
you know that the the world got sucked into those wars was competition over colonies and
things like that the very crocodile in the water that's played such an important role in the story
was seen to be an important role in why the first world war happened so one might think this would
change people's attitudes in terms of having or not having colonies what it really seems to have
done is change the way you have to speak about them talk about them and refer to them right you can't
you can't really talk about dominating a people but you can talk about a protectorate where you're
creating the conditions where a stable government can take hold you know for the for the safety of
the citizens i mean you know it's it's a different way of sort of explaining to other people why you
have things like veto power over the you know foreign policy of another country but the japanese
are watching all this stuff to sort of you know see what this new wilsonian world's going to be like
and what it kind of does sort of the mood of the age is strengthen that group of people in japan who
think we should be working with china we should be the leader of asia in a in an economic sense i mean
that group is sort of exalted all throughout the 1920s and the 1920s are this really sort of exciting
era in japanese history where if you're looking at it in terms of sort of the stages that one would
expect a true democracy to go through when they're going you know from where japan was to where a
true democracy would go you would expect the stage that japan has in the 1920s to happen it's a
crucial stage it's the stage though you know where all those intellectual contagions brought over in
pandora's box by that american fleet that opened japan in the 1850s it's when they've all had a
chance to sort of take seed and mature and grow up and bloom and bear fruit even the 1920s is a
wild time in japan and it's a time where the oligarchs that were controlling that country
start to lose control of the country and it goes back to the fact that the emperor is not able to
play his normal role but the japanese are embracing the sides of democracy that are a little bit
sometimes messy they are rioting regularly um after the russo japanese war they are protesting
this parliament which was supposed to just be a rubber stamp organization for the emperor and the
the clique that rules the country is instead really contentious political parties start developing
and you begin to see an interesting development which is that the japanese really take to political
parties a lot of them and really get into the the ebb and flow of the of the confrontation and the
ideological battles and the discussions and all that stuff but there's a a chunk of japanese society
that is just so turned off by a couple of things the political wrangling and how venal it is and how
it seems to you know put party over country and they also don't like some of the other things that
they see infesting their society which they also kind of attached to this new democratic sort of
system they don't like the materialism that they see where are these almost religious values of
the samurai and frugality and what makes us great and loyalty to the emperor these are what we would
consider to be if you actually look at their beliefs and you know their place in japanese society
super patriots to these people it looked like the country was you know coming apart at the
traditional seams these are the sorts of people when if we talk about a nation getting the equivalent
of decompression sickness as we said coming up from the deep water too fast you get the bends
these are the people that get left behind in a society maybe that's moving forward too quickly
and they're not just going to passively accept it and you know they have working in their favor
the fact that you know they may differ in many ways with the leadership of the country the old cabal
style leadership there are some things that they agree upon and one of the things they agree upon is
that the country is dangerously flirting with radicalism but of course when you're one of the
most traditional great powers in the world if not the most traditional your definition of radicalism
you know might be a little bit different than most here's what historian
james l mclain writes in his a modern history of japan quote feisty tenants and disgruntled labor
intrepid feminists and radical students seething minorities and outcasts moga and mobo anarchists
and communists to many within the governing establishment it appeared that the country
was coming apart at the seams in the 1920s the disruptive consequences of modernization the
competing attractions of new visions the dislocations inherent in industrialization the tensions
associated with new modes of living and the stresses that accompanied imperialism were
imploding on one another the tumult of the 20s alarmed many bureaucrats and members of the mainstream
parties who sought ways to restrain the more extreme forms of radicalism that seemed at times
to threaten the very existence of the state and to quote the japanese state will always be more
paranoid and more repressive against any perceived threat coming from the left side of the political
spectrum and in japan that that includes like bomb throwing bolsheviks and anarchists to liberal
writers who question the divinity of the emperor or militarism or women's rights activists it's a
broad group of people that sometimes gets thrown into a similar bread basket i mean there will be
a sort of police force a thought police inaugurated during this period that will go after like
liberal writers and thinkers who will be jailed and sometimes tortured to death in prison it's a
tough time to be questioning the status quo from that political side of the ledger in the 1920s 1930s
and certainly 1940s up till 1945 japan the other side's extremists didn't have that kind of problem
in part because some of them were in government already and in the power structure especially
when you got down to like the junior officer level of things in some military circles so they
weren't really outsiders they were kind of insiders the other reason why is every time the government
tried to deal with one of those you know super patriot type societies or groups those groups
would basically wrap themselves in the imperial flag you know you couldn't use a they don't love
the emperor excuse on them that would get a lot of the public behind you because their response is
no we love the emperor we love the emperor more than you love the emperor and our extreme actions
here in our willingness to lay it all on the line for the emperor proves that we love him more than
you do i mean that's a tough one and you will see a lot of the you know things that are done by these
ultra nationalist groups they will get off would like sometimes little hand slaps these groups by
the way have some of the greatest names you will ever run into these patriotic groups that start
off as kind of like pseudo-secret societies but more and more you know come out in the open i mean
there's one called the black dragon society there's another one called the dark ocean society and they
have one called the cherry blossom society which sounds beautiful but those members of that cherry
blossom society kill people there will be assassinations in japan a rising amount starting
at least in the late 19 teens they have a prime minister in like 19 i think it's 21 who's assassinated
they have another one assassinated in 1932 they have the head of a major corporation assassinated
and these groups are killing these people as a way one to get them out of positions of power and
sometimes they do they'll change the course of the way things go by taking out a key person
other times they do it as a way to send a message you know so the other people out there it's an
intimidation move and an american diplomat i think it's an american diplomat will call the
government of japan during like the late 20s early 30s as a government by assassination and oftentimes
the assassins are members of these groups what do these groups want they want to go back to a
golden age that never existed these groups are generally although there's differences among
them but they're generally strongly anti-communist they are strongly pro-military and they think
that japan's been you know given into the western powers on arms limitations and all that too much
they are usually pan asian so they believe in you know japan leading an asian revolution against
you know western supremacy and the superior nature often of the japanese race and people
and spirit they loathe parliamentary democracy and all its vile politicians who are corrupt
but they also have a big problem with the business and corporate interests of the times the zibatsu
the people that you know the corporations and the governments that are partnering together for
developmental purposes and everything else these people see them as a western infection
that is destroying the traditional nature of japanese societies and ripping off the populace
right taxing them to death and squeezing them to death the peasant class i mean there will be a lot
of members of these groups or sympathizers who will come you know from idealistic peasant youth
who see what's happening you know in their little villages and whatnot and are outraged so you join
a group like this because one of the things they want to do is make it all better and the only way
to do that is to put the emperor back in power like he was in the good old days that never existed
and he'll fix everything justice wise and if we just you know bring back the old samurai virtues
that never existed either life will be grand again it's a utopian sort of movement and there's a
couple of figures in it who are so revered and held in such awe by their subordinates that
there's almost a demi god like element to a couple of them big thinkers pushing these ideas
and if they get what they want there's going to be an expansion of japanese power in manchuria and
then a confrontation with the soviet union at the very least so with all these different players in
the japanese political sphere it's a kind of a vibrant but possibly explosive stew here maybe
the beginnings of a vibrant early rough and tumble democracy maybe something that could
fall off the cliff in a bad direction there will be several major historical wild cards that get
played on japan in the 1920s that would have made it tough for democracy to flourish anyway i mean
in 1923 there's a horrible earthquake and it affects a couple of major cities more than the
rest of the country but it's like 150 000 dead people a tsunami massive economic damage
in 1924 the usa decides they're going to pass some immigration act that the japanese see is
particularly discriminating against them the united states is almost oblivious to the fact
that it bothers the japanese to the japanese it's another sign that they're not being taken as equals
it goes right on the rain man grievance list in 1927 there will be a financial crisis that
throws japan into economic turmoil and then two years later everybody gets hit by the great depression
that's a hard sort of soil to try to nurture the seed of democracy and isn't it
we should point out that the emperor yoshihito who has not been seen in public very much since
like 1920 his son hirohito is sort of taking over the duties his crown prince well in december 1926
yoshihito dies hirohito takes over so we now have the world war two emperor you know here in power
and theoretically perhaps more capable of playing you know some sort of activist role in the system
you know should he want to japan does play a part in several major between the two world wars arms
control agreements specifically ones limiting naval shipping this absolutely infuriates the
ultra nationalist right as you might imagine and there will be more assassinations i think it's a
little ironic that some of the people that get bumped off in this interwar period are people
trying to address the fatal flaw in the japanese constitutional system the one that prevents the
political leaders from actually controlling the military pretty basic when you think about it
if you're going to have a real representative system right historian mark rpd is describing
how this created a confused situation with japan's china policy and he writes about the
what's called the right of supreme command the fact that the army and the navy are only
answerable to the emperor and not to elected officials or bureaucrats um he describes its
effect on on chinese policy and he writes quote to begin with structural and political weaknesses
within japan confused the development of a clear cut policy first among these debilities was a lethal
flaw in the modern japanese constitutional system it's centered on a link between a theoretical
supreme imperial throne supposedly the source of all political legitimacy and authority
and an ill-defined locus of political responsibility it meant that any institution
in the japanese state could if it had sufficient practical power pretend to act in the name of
an inviolable emperor and thus assume a supreme decision-making role with one critical exception
however he writes no institution could claim an actual constitutional right to do so the exception
was the armed services right of supreme command which made the services directly responsible
to the emperor and to no civil authority it thus gave the army and navy the legal authority to
act and speak in the name of the imperial throne as the throne was not constitutionally responsible
to any other institution within the japanese state the services could theoretically act as they
please without check or interference from the civil government end quote if only it was that simple
though because then it would just make the japanese division of power in the system like a lot of
other states right where you have an army on one side and elected officials on the other and they
kind of don't necessarily see eye to eye but there they are two camps the japanese military
isn't unified at all start at the top where the services don't get along with each other
let me point out that inter-service rivalry between things like the army and the navy in most
militaries is pretty common but the japanese once again are like everyone else only more so in this
regard and the services really don't like each other and really don't see eye to eye and can only
unify sometimes when they're talking about you know their right to control events or their right
to receive piles of money when it comes to specific things they have total disagreements i mean the
navy sees the next war in the pacific against the united states the army sees the next war
as an expansion in manchuria eventually to confront this new soviet union along a border
where their japan controls the entire manchurian area right the texas alabama louisiana state full
size in this system those two services are equal and they're totally out of the control of the
civilian government so who referees disputes between them maybe a more complicated question is
who referees disputes within them because neither the army nor the navy are even unified as a service
they're faction-ridden the army famously has a faction and these are unofficial things by the
way although certain officers become associated with it so it's not a good comparison but i mean
imagine political parties and you just you know you're not officially one way or the other but
you know general yamaguchi is a republican you know that kind of thing in this case one of the
factions is called or known as the imperial wave faction kodoha is the japanese mispronounced term
certainly and these people are the ones who buy in to like the super patriot stuff the cherry blossom
society sort of thinking it's almost religious and it wants to go back to a golden age he wants to
get rid of you know all the materialism all the liberal democracies and the politicians and the
corruptions and just go right back to us show a restoration you know the the return of the emperor
to total power so the same theme again right it comes up in japanese history it's a utopian kind
of way of looking at things and normally you would say to yourself well who the heck cares
you know what a bunch of maybe mid-level officers in the japanese military think right who cares if
they're democrats or republicans who cares if they're imperial wave faction people or the other
faction which is you know still expansionistic and still doesn't love politicians and all that kind
of stuff but they're more conservative and more opportunistic the imperial wave faction wants to
take manchuria and move on up to the soviet union from there again who cares bunch of kernels and
lieutenant kernels and majors and captains what are they going to do in a normal military not much
shut their mouth and follow orders but we run into and it's key to the story
another one of those little wonderful you know distinctive things about japan that goes back
to an earlier era and that provides an opportunity for a bunch of junior officers to hijack policy
here in a way that would be impossible in most great powers not impossible everywhere but impossible
in most great powers unless things were going down a dark road which of course as we know things are
there's a japanese concept called gekokojo and it's difficult to understand it's another one
of those things where you kind of have to have the cultural antenna set to japanese
it's also controversial because you will hear historians wonder how much of a role this really
played in the story versus how much it was a wonderful excuse exploited by you know higher
ups as a way to say oh well we didn't do it some captain acting alone did it but the concept is not
exactly unknown in western societies or western militaries for example the japanese just take it
to you know extremes again in a in a western military for example the concept might be something like
you know the rule that says that if american soldiers are in combat somewhere and some higher
up orders them to commit some sort of atrocity they have a responsibility to be in subordinate in
that situation right it's not only forgiven it's kind of required well the japanese take that to
the next level sometimes and they will have you know this concept that goes back centuries that
essentially says that lower ranking people in some circumstances have a right maybe a responsibility
to act in subordinate and sometimes that can mean extreme sorts of behavior like killing people
but some of the things i read almost portray it as like a societal safety valve right in a system
you know shaped like a pyramid in terms of its power structure how do the people at the bottom
ever have a way to register you know their displeasure with something for example maybe this
is one of those ways the key to the whole thing though is you got to be doing it for the right
reasons right your heart has to be in the right place sure they committed an outrageous act but
they meant well this is why something like a koku job probably doesn't work as well for your
you know communist assassin who wants to kill the prime minister and sees that as part of his
doing it for a good cause but the public can be really sympathetic the japanese public to these
people who do it for patriotic reasons right well clearly they loved the emperor sure they were
misguided but they meant well and again you will see these people get off easy sometimes in these
cases and maybe that's a reason if you're more conspiratorial and if you're a general that
doesn't want to face a firing squad for treason you know you can just have some captain or colonel
do it and then say that it was kakako joe and they meant well right let's let them off easy
now maybe the upside of a policy of letting them off easy is that you don't create martyrs out of
them but the obvious downside is it's not much of a deterrent either an example perhaps of this
gekoku joe you know inaction happens on june 3rd 1928 when a railway car full of officials from a
province a warlord province in manchuria in air quotes gets shredded by a bomb the bomb kills
several people including the governor of one of these provinces it also kills the warlord himself
will die a few hours later this warlord had been a friend of japan's up until that very explosion
but a couple of japanese mid-level junior officers including maybe as low as a lieutenant's involvement
but a colonel and a captain maybe took it upon themselves we are told to plant this bomb in
order to create an incident that required a response that triggered a policy change that
these officers thought was the smart move here right they would have triggered something that
may have led to the takeover of manchuria if you wanted to craft an analogy here you have to start
playing with things like you know us central command forces in the middle east having some
mid-level officers there you know independently decide we're going to spark a war with a place
like iran because we think it's in the long term you know good interest of the united states to do
so right it'd be better to fight them now than later i mean everyone would thank me if they knew
what i knew i mean it's it's a little inconceivable to think about that it has happened throughout
history i mean it's not that inconceivable but amongst the great powers usually there's more
you know control over that mid-level of command in this case it's very possible that what you have
here is a tail wagging the dog where people at the at a low level are able to you know control
policy perhaps that's one interpretation the other is that they're just stooge is acting for
much more powerful generals or corporate interests you know you buy the interpretation you like
nevertheless this 1928 train bombing assassination which goes by several different names by the way
my favorite is the chang so lin explosion death incident because it sounds like a tom wolf novel
title to me nonetheless it didn't achieve almost certainly what the people who did it wanted and
did in fact prompt significant blowback across a number of different fronts front number one
is global public opinion 1928 you know is right before the great depression starts in most of
the world but you're already starting to see in europe and over here in the pacific a little subtle
change in the weather if you will from that 19 you know 20s post first world war rainbows and
unicorns thing all of a sudden the real politic returned to normalcy sort of clouds are starting
to appear and this is one of those incidents that sort of cast a pall a little bit on things
in the united states especially this assassination stuff just looks sinister by its very nature
but the real significant blowback is that this is as my great ad would have called it a come to
jesus moment in the japanese governmental system because initially the japanese government is not
sure who does this and it's supposed to be a bunch of locals i mean one history i read said it was
some opium addicts that the japanese blame this on some chinese opium addicts another one said it
was blamed officially with a communique on elements of a northern chinese nationalist army more on that
later but almost no one outside japan was buying it and when the opposition party in japan finds out
that it's a lie all heck breaks loose in japan the prime minister himself during this period a general
named tanaka won't survive politically this scandal and the problem with 2020 hindsight is
totally clear as you look back on it it's a moment where the military essentially pushes back against
the political leadership and they get away with it because the prime minister is told by get this
the emperor hierohito and one of the few times and it's an early young indiscretion he says well
turn into the hulk when something goes awry in this whole investigation but he will tell the prime
minister to get to the bottom of this the prime minister says i will and if there are any army
men involved you can be sure we'll take care of this then he goes back to his army folk who look
at him now as a totally politicified general he's not their comrade anymore he might as well be a
politician and they don't cooperate with him and when he says we have to look into this they
essentially say no we have to cover it up and they give him a whole bunch of good reasons why it
should be covered up it'll affect our international standing it will affect our troops in manchuria
blah blah blah but the bottom line is he doesn't have the power and it's made apparent during this
incident to tell them no i don't want your approach i'm the boss we're going to do it my way he
essentially has to go back with his tail between his legs to the emperor and when the emperor finds
out he didn't do anything the emperor turns into the hulk and blames him with the famous line the
emperor said in the post-war conversations to allied investigators the emperor says he told the
prime minister don't you think you should resign boom i mean that nice banal little comment there
is more powerful to a japanese person especially a general like tenaka than anything a mustachioed
spitting fascist dictator type getting in your face and threatening to dismember you nine ways to
sunday could achieve and tenaka will not only fall from government he'll die soon afterwards boom
don't make the emperor happy might as well just leave by the way it's worth pointing out that
according to hierohito he learned from this that he it was a youthful indiscretion he shouldn't have
in a virtual sense killed this poor prime minister by turning into the hulk and he would learn not to
do it again so this very incident is one of the reasons allegedly you don't see the emperor
involving himself more in these sort of matters when after the war you keep looking at these things
going why the heck did the emperor involve himself more in these matters the real bottom line though
if you look at it and according to hierohito himself is there were higher ups who might have
been implicated in all this had a real investigation and maybe some interrogation under torture of the
mid-level officers who carried out this stuff uh hierohito says that the mid-level officer in
question threatened to squeal about everything so you know things get covered up no investigation and
nothing to see here we move on and yet in 1928 you've established this sort of line in the sand
that says that if the political leaders and the military leaders disagree there's not much the
political leaders can do about that unless the emperor gets involved which he says he learned
from this incident you shouldn't do now i should point out that the 1928 train bombing what do we
call it the chang solin explosion death incident the timing of that is not coincidental it comes at
a time when there's a lot of rising anxiety in the south manchurian area about events happening
in china events that have the potential if they go a certain way maybe to cut off the supply of
manchuria at some point in the future and there are people who begin to make the argument that
that can't happen we're already hooked and it's worth asking the question who's hooked are these
corporate slash government interest in the south manchurian area are they hooked or is the government
hooked to the revenues coming in which unfortunately often get turned right back around into new
military expenditures because these new areas require you know greater amounts of troops a
bigger navy all these other things i mean it comes with the cost right security protection
but are the people hooked well it's during this time period that an open propaganda push is made
to convince the japanese people that darn right we're hooked and not just us you're hooked because
we have this thing a lifeline in manchuria that connects us to the eurasian population and you
know sends raw materials and goods and stuff back to japan that keeps us all alive well
the question about whether or not japan really needs manchuria is an interesting one historian
sandra wilson in her book the manchurian crisis in japanese society 1931 to 1933 points out that
the whole idea of manchuria as this vital lifeline is part of the propaganda of the japanese state
the stuff it's using to justify whatever's required to keep using manchuria using the
equivalent of the idea that we're hooked she writes quote the principle that japan was dependent
upon access to the resources of manchuria for survival as a nation was part of an attempt to
create a narrative justifying japan's claim to the region and was closely linked with the assertion
that manchuria rightfully belonged to the japanese despite china's technical sovereignty over it
end quote she then goes on to describe this phrase that was in use and she points out that it had
instead of a dry sort of diplomatic tone it it referred to sort of the idea of what japan has
already paid in blood and sacrifice and investment for this territory it's what we talked about earlier
certain things attract you to the region then certain things keep you there she writes quote
far from being a dry diplomatic term kenichi in the early 1930s was rather as mirakami
hioi has pointed out a vivid word suggesting sacrifice and the shedding of blood and it relied
for its effect upon a certain view of history in which the sino-japanese and russo-japanese wars
figured prominently manchuria she writes was frequently referred to as the place where the
spirits of 200 000 japanese war heroes slept the importance of the south manchurian railway and the
large amount of japanese public money which had contributed through the railway to the development
of manchuria were also evoked as evidence of japan's right freely to exploit the manchurian
resources end quote citing the sacrifices of 200 000 war dead would be i would think a pretty
effective tactic in most countries even today in the uber patriotic era we're talking about even more
effective in the uber patriotic japan even more effective than that
but if you happen to be an investor for example in you know the south manchurian railway you have
every reason right around this same time period that this warlord's done away with to worry about
your investments because events in china are starting to get to a point where it's conceivable to see
somebody unifying it in the not too distant future and what's going to happen if that occurs
remember everybody's been taking advantage of china during this proceeding period here because it's
been down but what if it gets up i mean this is the sleeping giant of the world the largest
population on the planet when it's all put together it's a land mass the size of the united states
i mean the japanese have been taking advantage of this you know situation while the chinese are
weak they currently occupy places the chinese consider theirs what's going to happen if all
of a sudden somebody puts Humpty Dumpty back together again here they all have half a billion
people the japanese have 70 million how do the long-term trends here look i mean you can see a
positive possible outcome if you are the people you know who want to keep this lifeline to japan
open you want to keep this you know addiction you can make it work but it means you've got to either
keep china perpetually divided or split it up permanently or you've got to take it over or
you've got to control it in such a way that you will never lose control of it but you get to
tell it what to do you can't have a powerful independent china though because obviously
that's going to get messy when they want their stuff back the other of course policy approach you
could take is the one that those more liberal people in japan have been advocating let's have
this cooperative asian relationship with china where if japan and china you know with their
population and resources and our high tech you know knows to the grindstone fanatical work ethic
i mean we can do anything maybe you go the route those people want because it's the only way to
deal with china once they're back on their feet right start negotiating now when they're still
weak so that they don't hate you later because the japanese are not in good graces with the chinese
population during this period the sleeping giant has already awoken on the ground the chinese people
are pissed off and a lot of historians blame the 1915 you know we sit in the middle of the
first world war when everybody's attention was on western europe the japanese tried to slip one of
these treaties on a very weakened china that would have made them a proto colony and they freaked out
the chinese but the people freaked out it wasn't a governmental thing i mean the people started
boycotting japanese goods riots would erupt where they killed japanese officials in you know chinese
cities i mean it was anger it was the same kind of nationalist awakening that japan had had you
know when commodore perry and america's black fleet you know came and opened them up you get this
awakening in the case of china they were mad at everybody for what had happened when they were weak
being taken advantage of but the japanese more and more were you know getting the focus specifically
of their ire and so if you want to forestall this if you don't want the sleeping giant to be mad at
you when it's fully awakened now might be the time to start patching up old wounds and fixing
things and by the way five six seven years before this period you know when wilsonianism rainbows
and unicorns were totally in play the japanese were giving territory back to china this peninsula
you know when they were trying it was policy for a minute but the people in tokyo aren't necessarily
in control of policy as we said this is where the tail wagging the dog comes into play where a bunch
of people who are on the ground can create situations that the military and even the government behind
them simply have no option but to respond to once again if you're conspiratorial you don't believe
any of this is like this you believe it emanated from ground zero and has been you know let's call
it responsibility laundered the whole way but the the traditional story is we have elements that are
out of control you know in asia that are able to prompt events that everyone else has no choice
but to respond to for example in 1931 there will be another explosion on a railway track are you
sensing a pattern here also carried out supposedly by mid-level japanese officers here's the way
a historian james l mclain in a modern history of japan describes it quote captain kawamoto
sui mori laid the 42 yellow packages of blasting powder with care shortly after 10 p.m on september
8th 1931 he detonated them displacing a portion of the tracks of the south manchuria railway line
as it passed the northern outskirts of mukden kawamoto and his co-conspirators intended to derail
the dairy in express due just minutes later and blamed the act on the local chinese warlord zang
julang incredibly when the train reached the damaged section of track it swayed only slightly
and passed on safely unruffled kawamoto relayed a pre-arranged message to his home base this is the
famous pre-arranged message quote engaged in action with the chinese forces who set off explosion
along railroad end quote the author continues quote ostensibly in response to that quote end quote
unprovoked aggression units of japan's guantan army immediately attacked the barracks of zhang
soldiers in mukden and chang chun within 48 hours japanese troops occupied the two cities
and doihara kenji a colonel in the guantan army named himself to head an emergency committee to
govern mukden effectively detaching that provincial capital from chinese control end quote this event
by the way is known by a couple of different names most famously it's called the manchurian
incident historian andrew gordon says that in japan this is generally considered to be the start
of what they call the 15 year war which is essentially the second world war so this is
an explosive moment in some people's view of the entire subject we're going to talk about here
and it is the result of so much james bond undercover you know it's like the star wars bar
with all the gun slinging you know bootleggers from that time period i mean here's how historian
mary sp jensen describes it and he's a pretty sober historian so when he uses a word like partying
understand you know how much like a novel this is but these are the people engineering
these events on the ground in a place like manchuria jensen writes quote
plotters had better success in manchuria in the days preceding the explosion that triggered the
manchurian incident an unsavory group of japanese had collected at guantan army headquarters he then
goes on by the way to name these people the first one is a guy who murdered um you know he left
bleeding i think it's a writer and he was there jensen says with money sent by japanese writers
but he says even better finance was this colonel you know the guy who had actually blown up the
warlord in the train so he's there too and jensen says quote arrogance avarice and dishonesty found
shelter under the claims of crisis guantan army officers were in touch with associated
figures in the tokyo general staff but those men doubting the timing though personally
favoring the coup dispatched tatigawa yoshitsugu freshly disappointed that march to the scene
to urge caution and delay guantan army plotters aware of tatigawa's mission deflected him when he
arrived with a round of partying that delayed his appearance at headquarters when he was ready to
resume his mission the next morning a bomb had already gone off on the south manchurian tracks
end quote so the government not necessarily against the idea of this manchurian deal
but doubting that it's a good time send somebody to say don't do it now he's deflected by a bunch
of people who take him out drinking so he can't deliver the message right away by the time he's
sobered up and ready to deliver the message the events already happened that's like a movie isn't
it but this isn't like the 1928 incident where everybody seemed caught off guard there's a bunch
of people who know this is going to happen and there's a lot more people who knew that at some
point you know in the distant future this was likely to happen and when it does the civilian
government is exposed as powerless now as an aside we should point out that the prime minister in
power is often lambasted as weak so maybe he is but he wrote an emergency note to one of the
you know sort of old guard wise men that are built into the japanese system the genro who are
less and less powerful than they used to be back in the major restoration days but this guy's obviously
desperate and this note comes only hours after the explosion happens where the government is
finding out about this stuff from the newspapers their army the japanese army over there's not
telling him anything the prime minister's name by the way is wakatsuki and his appeal to the
general for assistance says quote i am not being kept informed by either the foreign ministry or
the army ministry i have just warned them through chief cabinet secretary Kawasaki the chinese forces
in manchuria and mongolia number more than 200 000 while we have only some 10 000 i asked the army
minister what are you going to do if by chance your challenge causes something you haven't
anticipated something that given you are so outnumbered you can't stop the army minister told me
we'll send in troops from korea indeed they may have already gone in i rebuked him how can you
allow dispatch of soldiers from korea without government authorization he said well the fact
is that during the tanaka cabinet troops were dispatched without imperial sanction i gathered
he had not foreseen any problem at all under these circumstances i'm quite powerless to restrain the
military how can his majesty's military act without his sanction what can i do maybe i
should not be talking to you like this but can you do anything i'm in serious trouble and quote
now if the prime minister sounds panicked there it's not just my vocal interpretation this is
the way marius b jensen describes the situation you know as all this is coming to light in the
hours after the incident quote within hours the guantung army had achieved its initial
military objectives against the fendian army once the forces were engaged pleas of military
necessity were used as justification for additional moves giving the lie to promises from the tokyo
civilian government that these were steps taken to preserve order and that no further expansion
was contemplated those in positions of responsibility were anxious to limit the incident and regain
control of events while the field and junior grade officers that people the general staff and army
ministry were jubilant that the manchuria mongolia quote end quote problem was finally being addressed
in tokyo he writes the atmosphere was electric with rumors of plots to take on the home government
a nervous government did its best to hush things up to avoid destabilizing the situation
but this had the effect of magnifying rumors the reality he writes was bad enough end quote
so what was that reality well some of the ultranationalists looked at this as the coming
out party jensen continues quote a few weeks after violence broke out in manchuria lieutenant
colonel hashimoto kingoro of the second division general staff and stalwarts of the cherry blossom
society conceived a bizarre plan to wipe out the entire government by aerial bombardment of a cabinet
meeting a crowd of rightists would then surround the war ministry and general staff headquarters
and demand the creation of a military government for this october incident as it was called which
never took place hashimoto received 20 days confinement from superiors who did their best
to deny that anything untoward had taken place end quote so this guy's got a plot to destroy the
government by bombing it while it's in session and he gets 20 days confinement from superiors
what's going to happen here though is going to get japan in all kinds of trouble because as
as over the months go on and the kwandan army just keeps rounding out their conquest and looking to
create it says buffer zones to keep you know bandits and whatnot farther away they're conquering
manchuria and the people in japan that were worried and were against this start coming around i mean
for the first two weeks the stuff i've been reading says the japanese populace wasn't sure what to
think about this but after you know incessant propaganda and talk about how this is the lifeline
and stories and films of japanese you know heroic victories the public comes around and
they support this big so if you're the politician kind of worried and saying we need to get control
of the situation and no more expansion but every time the army expands the public loves it what do
you do well if there were no consequences maybe you just go along with it but there are consequences
and they're huge and they lead directly to war and let's remember in this war a bunch of these
patriotic civilians supporting the troops are going to die in their homes burned to death
and i've had conversations a lot over the years with people about what's called strategic bombing
the bombing of civilians in cities that was so prevalent in the second world war and there are
so many side issues and moral quandaries and things to examine but the one that often gets brought up
and it's well it's at this point in the story where it's relevant if it's relevant at all
has to do with responsibility on the part of your average japanese person if they're getting
bombed in the second world war is that something that's the equivalent of getting their just desserts
right or is it a historical sort of you know warning maybe lessons are not real in history but
is it sort of something that reminds you that these sorts of things have consequences because
there's people that will blame the japanese public for supporting you know this road to war
that they're going down but to not support it seems a little counterintuitive i mean how likely
is it to imagine this japanese public conditioned the way we've talked about with all the carrots and
sticks and cultural headbinding and and punishment for people who who didn't toe the line and all
these other things how likely is it to have imagined that they would do anything other
than support their troops when the troops are victorious in the field right when it's their
own sons out there fighting and of course you got the government pushing the super propaganda button
all the time you know how likely is it that you're going to see anything other than what you did see
what's more forget all the cultural headbinding stuff i've been throwing out there and just think
about your own people how hard is it to imagine you know most of them not coming out and supporting
the troops it's something that can be reliably counted upon so if that's the case
can you really hold people accountable and say they had any you know real options as a group right
en masse sometimes individuals surprise us but en masse was there really another road for the
japanese patriotic civilians to go down once their troops were fighting in the field hmm
it's an interesting question as i said but i guess the way i look at it is i look at it and
think god that could happen to anybody and if that means we can all be bombed and deserve it well
that's a scary thought isn't it in the case of the uber patriotic japanese during this period
it's extra scary because this is like a blank check for whatever this guantung army is going to do
do control from the central authority is tenuous at best and over the next several months this
guantung army is going to destroy japanese diplomatic credibility with the rest of the
world because over and over the japanese government and even the top military officials are going to
say uh we're not going to advance any farther everything's going to stay the way it is and then
the almost as they're saying it the army in the field would advance at one point the army
itself the guantung army says we are not going to we promise we will not advance on the city and they
do so at a certain point not only is the rest of the world not believing anything that japanese
government is saying but it's making them extra angry i read one historian who made a point of
listen this is a really bad time for the world in the great depression and all this everybody's
got their own problems every country on the world stage would love to be able to say i'm just going
to ignore this it's a long way away but looking like they're being played for fools over and over
by the japanese government instigates pushback that might not otherwise have been there in the
defense of the japanese government they may have believed it every time they said we're not going
to move any farther and then think about the weird position it puts the government in when the army
does move farther against orders has great victories conquers more territory the media
shows the newsreels and plays it up the public is cheering what are you supposed to do denounce
them and remember nobody in the foreign world out there at all knows that you don't control
your own army you don't want to admit that to them so you kind of have to own these things now
it's a bizarre situation it gets even more weird at times too because and you can't tell again if
there's a a forced feeling to this if you feel like you have to do it or if they really want to
but i mean the emperor has to have the general of the guantung army over for tea private meeting in
the palace i mean it's this enormous honor and he's being honored for all these conquests in
manchuria that he went against orders to do i mean what sort of message are you sending here it's
bizarre and i should point out there have always been some historians and writers out there that
suggest that it's possible that you could look at this entire situation with this guantung
army acting on its own as a case of gekoku joe on a mass scale an army wide level an entire army you
know being insubordinate for high minded moral reasons and maybe you say their heart was in
the right place and maybe because of that you forgive them especially since they keep winning
see how that goes but if it's true that this army really did all this on its own and for
super patriotic reasons right well then they've just managed to doom the very country and deified
emperor that they worship because they've gotten japan into a cycle now that it's not going to be
able to get out of the best example i came up with is unfortunately of limited practical value
because unless you've gone out too deep in the ocean you know with the breakers crashing on you
you're not going to know what i mean but in my head it seems like the perfect analogy and if
you've ever done it you know what i mean when you get trapped in that no man's land between the
breaking surf and the shore too far away from the shore to get to safety before the next giant
wave crushes you so there's only one option you have to go out deeper into the surf so you can
dive under that giant wave before it starts crashing the problem as we all know is that when
you come up sputtering from that you have another giant breaker bearing down on you and you're even
farther away from the shore so you have to go out even deeper and dive under that one of course you
can't keep this up forever eventually you drown following that strategy and the japanese are
going to drown in china and if you believe the army defenders out there who were trying to explain
what they were doing they're going to drown in china simply trying to find a defensible place
to stop advancing the army claims it's got bandits to deal with for example these bandits are probably
really chinese guerrilla fighters and at one point they'll be like 350 000 of them that's a lot of
bandits by the way there will be a constant drumbeat of things that are called incidents when japanese
troops and bandits or japanese troops and chinese troops or japanese troops and warlords troops
will have some sort of a you know gunfight or something and all heck can break loose for a
while that the japanese will take another city in response to that and they'll settle down and
then another incident if you string all these incidents together from 1931 to about 1937
you get i mean they were like 50 in a really short period of time so you get a lot of incidents
and some historians like to refer to that whole period as an era of undeclared war between japan
and china neither side by the way wanted to declare war for different reasons the japanese
are trying to make it look like nothing's really going on here nothing to see here great powers
it's not a war we have a bunch of incidents going on and the chinese have their own problems more on
that in a second these incidents can get very large though there will be an incident in late
january in shanghai which will go on until march 1932 shanghai by the way i believe the second
largest city in asia after tokyo itself between three and four million people in a giant city
that is an urban environment so you can only imagine what it's like to have fighting going
on in the streets of shanghai you will have at one point you know it starts off with japanese
marines but they get into trouble because there's very stiff chinese resistance and street fighting
so the japanese government sends in more troops at one point you'll have 100 000 japanese ground
troops several hundred planes like 75 or so ships if you know that's incident doesn't really do it
justice in fact the high numbers when you start adding up civilian and military deaths for this
incident run somewhere between 10 and 20 000 killed that's quite a few people in something
you know that sounds as small as an incident now we've been talking a lot about the japanese here
we've been pointing out that they've been fighting in a quote end quote chinese but who are the chinese
during this period it's worth examining you know the resistance here for a minute the resistance
used to be you know 10 years before this time a bunch of fragmented states the dis united states of
china perhaps you could have called it but in the intervening like eight years there's been quite a
bit of consolidation the number one consolidator is a guy named chan kai shek who is a fascinating
character a japanese protégé maybe you could almost call it but a chinese patriot he's a guy
who went to military schools and whatnot in japan learned a lot from the japanese came back
participated in the overthrow of the imperial system and the emperor was a key you know protégé
of the guy who started the you know first chinese republic and he's been fighting ever since to maintain
sort of you know a put together china he's a difficult guy to pin down because he seems to
be willing to do whatever it takes you know to achieve his goals and his goals are both to create
this you know great china that he sees you know rising from the ashes of this terrible low point
in chinese history at the same time a china maybe run by him maybe perpetually he's got this military
dictator side to him that his critics um you know harp on so bear that in mind but he's a
relatively remarkable person i mean think about somebody trying to put the united states back
together again if it broke up into its component states against the will of those states by the way
and you get an idea of the task we're talking about here chan kai shek is part and is the
leader most of the time of a governing slash political party called the kwamantong we used
to call it the koumen tang when i was a kid so if i slip into you know bad habits you'll know why
but that leader and that party are sort of the big dog in this chinese reunification thing going
on during the 1920s he's the major threat that these japanese people you know in manchuria see
i mean this chan kai shek guy could put china back together again and then where are we his
main competition in order to achieve this though are communists people getting help for example
from the new soviet union chang by the way getting help from the soviet union too but he'll take help
from anybody who will give it to him all he wants to do is achieve his goals the communists are working
with the communists but they're maybe the second great power in china during this era and they and
chang will have this terrible struggle with each other sometimes they'll you know kiss and make
up long enough to fight the common enemy but chang kai shek's point most of the time is that he wants
to unify china first destroy his internal enemies first and then turn on the japanese so when during
this period the chinese appeared to really like not be fighting back too much and deliberately sort of
taking the the easy road backing up making nice i mean it's all because chang kai shek's got his
eyes elsewhere he's trying to defeat the communist in his country and by the way as i said when this
guy's taken you know money and arms and organization from the soviet union the western press is
portraying him as a communist stooge he's the red general to them but later on he's going to turn
on the communists and he may be this is arguable it's off the top of my head he may hold the record
for most communists or suspected communists killed he'll kill like 300 000 of them in one purge
he may have killed millions of them and many of them may not have been communists at all he's famous
for a phrase he may or may not have said so let me issue that disclaimer right here but the phrase
was something like you know he'd rather kill a thousand innocent people than let one communist
get through it's a little twist of the old american idea you know that better a hundred
hundred guilty should go free than one innocent man be prosecuted in any case chang kai shek seems
to be pretty focused on china and conquering it first and then turning its enormous weight on
the japanese invader afterwards is his policy and that allows this undeclared war to continue longer
than maybe a lot of the other leaders in china and chang's underlings want it to
to meanwhile though chang kai shek and the chinese have complained to the only body out there that's
available to do that the league of nations the prototype as we said earlier for the united nations
this will become a practical test for the rainbows and unicorns organization that is supposed to
prevent aggressive war because the chinese are asserting that that's what you have here
and not only that the japanese are the signatories to a number of treaties during the so-called
interwar years designed to make war if not uncommon and maybe even totally illegal one of these is
called the kelog brian pact for example and sometimes that's the way its supporters sort of
touted it you know we're gonna make war illegal because people signed a treaty so you can see
how that goes nonetheless the chinese make the complaint the league of nations has to respond
to it they send investigators in 1932 early to look at the train tracks that were blown up and
examine everything talk to all sides and while they're doing this the japanese militaries creating
a puppet state they're gonna call manchukuo and the reason you create a puppet state instead of
you know trying to conquer it directly like you would in the old days is because you just don't
do that anymore it's just not done great powers don't conquer others you create a sort of a
wilsonian sort of colony where you call it the return of the manchu people to controlling
their own destiny the japanese brought in the last emperor of china a manchu put him on the throne
made it look like hey we've restored the manchurians to their rightful place we asians are all in
this together it's going to have this pan asian flavor to it meanwhile the japanese army is going
to defend it it's going to send you know economically anything japan wants back to japan
and the japanese will control all the major decisions it's a puppet state but the rest
of the world is going to say you can't keep it the united states will be the most vociferous
critic and by the way the u.s. it has is operating on many levels here on one level there's a moral
level the the americans have a lot of christian missionaries for example in china and they get
to watch a lot of this stuff unfold uh and it's horrible on the ground so they're complaining
for moral reasons but the americans have huge economic stakes in this region something called
the open door policy that they want to keep open they don't want anything that would threaten
the good thing that they have going trade wise with china and if japan starts taking all these
areas or making treaties that you know lock china up for themselves well that cuts out the u.s.
interests so there's a lot of reasons the americans aren't so happy about this they'll
they'll invoke something called uh from this period called the stimson doctrine which basically says
the u.s. is not going to acknowledge support countenance or anything any territories that are
you know created through aggression whether or not its aggression is up to the league of nations
they do their investigation they come back with a report that is actually so even-handed you have
a feeling that the great powers didn't want anything where they had to confront anybody
because as i said earlier they all have their own issues they'd rather look the other way
but the japanese required like you know a real acceptance that they'll be allowed to keep manchuria
they did not get that so when forced to make a choice between the steroid that could make them
maybe as big as they want or you know staying in the good guy column you know off the global
international naughty list they chose keeping the manchurian addiction and this will be disastrous
in the long run in a practical sense what it means is when the japanese don't get what they want
from the league of nations they walk out of the league of nations trendsetters in that regard because
germany and italy will eventually join them but to people like the americans and the british and
the french this looks like choosing the dark side in an ever increasingly dark you know world as the
storm clouds on the on the international horizon deepen and darken and threaten the japanese have
decided you know in terms of this international community idea this rainbows and unicorns thing
of the past it's just a plot by the great powers to keep the status quo we're out but when you think
of you know what options they actually had in this regard you know what can the japanese really do
if we're gonna walk a mile in the moccasins of the japanese government here we have to ask what
real choices they had in the same way you know we were wondering about the responsibility level of
your average japanese patriotic japanese citizen well in this case you know sometimes i think we
pretend like there's a fork in the road here for these governments and we hold them accountable
for making the wrong directional choice you know at the fork in the road when maybe there was no
fork there at all and this is a wondering but i mean in this case look at what was being asked
of this japanese government they're being asked to give up this territory that many great thinkers
have been out there in japanese writing and whatnot and and many of the prominent people
saying japan has to have in order to survive and protect themselves in part from these very great
powers who banded together in this league of nations are telling them they have to give it back
you know you can't have these steroids to get as big as we are the japanese as we've already
pointed out right had this long laundry list of rain man like grievances some of which are real
you also have that wonderful element in play that we talked about the number of people now
that have died to conquer this place the number of people that have died to protect the investment
in money that's you know been invested to create this wonderful safe area in china by the south
banshee in railway and it just goes on and on so if you're a political leader that's going to
see this as a way to avoid having a showdown with the other great powers in the world and your
choice is you have to give this back could you realistically do that
i mean i would think that the loss of face on the world stage you know the embarrassment of
having to you know listen to what everyone's saying go with your tail between your legs
i mean i think that alone would doom a politician you know with the voters in an electoral system
wouldn't you but what about you know real doom as opposed to electoral doom because this is the
period where you know if you realistically suggested giving manchuria back because the great powers
we're telling you to you might not live to see the next month because we talked earlier about
something one american i think referred to as government by assassination in japanese history
this is the period where that skyrockets and it's the high water mark of that between like 1931
and 1936 and you will see a number of major figures not just political figures but also corporate
ones gun down how about the one in 1932 where 11 naval cadets from a faction in the navy that wants
a military dictatorship and a return to the emperor and the golden age and all that they
storm into the building where the prime minister is and the 11 of them kill him and there's even a
conversation that's recorded that happens you know while it's going on where the prime minister says
something to the effective you know if i could only talk to you you would understand and the
person who's about to kill him says dialogue is useless boom the people who kill the prime
minister release a manifesto one that historian james el mclean reprints and he says shows the
depth of emotional anger experienced by these people who want to put the emperor back on the
throne to fix all the injustices the manifesto says quote look straight at the present state of
your fatherland japan where we dare ask can you find the genuine manifestation of the godliness of
the imperial country of japan political parties are blind in their pursuit of power and egoistic
gains large enterprises are firmly in collusion with politicians as they suck the sweat and blood
of the common people bureaucrats and police are busy defending the corrupt politico industrial
complex diplomacy is weak need education is rotten to the core now is the time to carry out
drastic revolutionary change rise and take action now end quote mclean in his book japan and modern
history says it's these kinds of coups along with the stuff the challenge is posed by manchuria
that dooms everything he writes quote the manchurian incident and the violence from the right in 1931
and 1932 marked a cappernican turn in japan's foreign relations and domestic politics on the
continent the conception of the new state carved from chinese territory and dominated by a wing of
the japanese military soured sino-japanese relations beyond redemption began the isolation of japan
from an infuriated west which viewed japanese actions as naked aggression and propelled the
island nation along the path that would lead it to even more dangerous foreign confrontations
at home the assassinations and attempted coups exposed the fragile structure of japanese politics
contributed to a snowballing loss of confidence in party politicians and encouraged the ideologues
who romanticized the country's imperial past and sought to forge a new national polity end quote
the 1932 killing of the prime minister is a perfect example how so many of these coup attempts
and assassinations that happened between like 1931 and 1936 go because they'll put these young
naval guys the assassins on trial and they're all like 20 years old so they're kids and they'll
wrap themselves in the ultra patriotism stuff and the public will be very sympathetic i think
they get a petition the court does signed in the blood of hundreds of thousands of japanese
citizens pleading for leniency people offer to die in the place of the young naval officers i mean
it's it's a level of fanaticism on the part of one segment of japanese society that makes it
difficult to just crush these people as anti-government terrorists and by the way for killing the
prime minister these guys get a pretty lenient sentence jail time be out maybe and not too long
what the hell is that there'll be several of these events in the 1930s culminating in the
very famous one the february 26 incident that happens on february 26 imagine that 1936
in this one you get some of these imperial way faction junior officers who lead like 1500 soldiers
against the war ministry and some other major buildings they take them over they kill a bunch
of officials two former prime ministers it's very dramatic actually and once again they're
sometimes talking between the assassins and the and the ones that are going to be killed it's
very dramatic but if you believe the emperor's post-war comments he basically says he turned
into the hulk again at this moment ordered the the imperial guard to crush the whole thing
some people commit suicide the rebels give up and this time there's a crackdown afterwards so
this is the bridge too far for the ultranationalists right in japan the kodoha faction and they get
crushed after this so several people i think it's like 18 to 20 people will go to the firing squad
be hooked up to the old stake and shot a bunch of generals will be purged from the army i think
it's more than half which shows you you know how deeply embedded this imperial way faction was
other influential officers that are not sort of ostracized will be pushed off to commands where
they can't cause the kind of trouble that somebody oh for example in charge of the guantan army can
cause and the military will once again sort of strengthen its hold over the government you know
they'll say to protect it from these kinds of things happening and this of course is a period
of growing global anxieties we all know right the middle 1930s tough time you know the late 20s see
the fascists come to power in italy the 1932-1933 time period have the nazis coming to power in
germany both of those ideologies of course make it over to japan in the pandora's box
intellectual contagion update you know version 3.517 with a patch but while most people don't
think of the japanese during this period as nazis fascism is sometimes debated and people will ask
well you know where the japanese are this period fascists you didn't ask for it but my own opinion
is to me it looks more like you know this era provides some frosting on the top of a very tall
multi-layered japanese cultural cake each piece of which we've been lovingly talking about in this
story so not not seistic or fascistic but both of those ideologies make an impact and they seep
into some of this during this period they influence things that is of course as i always say my own
non-expert opinion the experts on this from multiple countries have different views by the way on you
know the proper classification of the japanese second world war government or just right before
the second world war government now if you wanted to just sort of look at the optics though and try
to make a judgment based on that well the japanese are not doing themselves any favors because they
may not officially be fascist at least in my mind but they sure do play nicely with them
in november 1936 the japanese and nazi germany will sign something called the anti-common
turnpact which is supposed to be sort of directed at global you know communist efforts to undermine
the world the italians will eventually sign it the spanish will eventually sign it so these are
basically the fascist states of europe so if you're not a fascist you're sure signing the same
treaties and the japanese who already were not getting wonderful press in places like the united
states see it just get worse now we should point out a new geopolitical reality that's very important
now in the scene here that now that the japanese have this puppet state of manchukuo where manchuria
used to be it means they now have the same neighbors manchuria used to have which means
japan now has a giant or excuse me the puppet state of manchukuo now has a giant border with the
soviet union and another giant border with mongolia which is a puppet of the soviet union
so now the idea of maybe getting involved in any sort of meaningful combat with china that would
take any significant amount of effort looks like it might take troops away from this giant border
that looks horribly open to you know maybe a giant tank attack or maybe infiltration by communist hordes
in 1937 the japanese do not want a general war with china the problem that they're going to have
is this is exactly the time period where the chinese are thinking maybe that is what they want
and of course for the longest time in this story you haven't even been able to say what china wanted
because there were multiple chinas weren't there warlords and multiple different states and i mean
you know you could hardly keep track of it for so long but in late 1936 something happens that will
change you know the entire affair and it will do so sort of against the will of chankai shak he's
going to be kidnapped by some of his subordinates who are going to whisk him away to a location where
for two weeks they try to convince him that he has to stop waging his civil war against the communist
and turn against the japanese this meeting has the feeling of like a mafia sort of get together
where it's you know put a gun on the table and say either you change your policy or you're not
leaving this meeting it gets even scarier for chankai shak when the communists show up they've
been invited and instead of some sort of explosion amongst arch enemies maybe chang had no choice of
course you actually get this patriotic moment in chinese history where these bitter enemies
decide to work for the common cause they're gonna fight the japanese and stop fighting each other
now let's just play the cynical card for a minute chang will eventually execute one of these guys
that lured him to this detainment i think in 1949 something like that and there are more than a
couple of books that will suggest that the goal of the communists here rather than some high-minded
you know national unity thing involved you know the positives for them of getting the
nationalist chinese enemies of theirs and the japanese enemies of theirs to fight each other
kill as many of each other as they can and then you know eventually maybe easier to take over down
the road so you can always go there if you want to but on the surface this looks like a pretty
patriotic heroic you know moment in chinese history and you can certainly see it in the
writings of the common soldiers saying things like you know for the first time in my life i get to
fight you know in a united effort against an outsider now the japanese are unaware basically
of any of this so in july 1937 when another one of the incidents breaks out in beijing which is
of course the modern day capital of china everyone thinks it's the same old same old and by the way
there's japanese troops in small numbers all over china for various reasons going back to treaties
decades ago in this case though the ones in beijing open fire against chinese troops vice versa they
fight for a little while the truce gets started and the japanese can't get the chinese to agree to
the normal kind of almost embarrassing terms that they agree to routinely that doesn't happen this time
instead they get a public proclamation from chan kai shek it's really like in front of the global
stage throwing down the gauntlet saying we're not going to take it anymore and he says quote
if we allow one more inch of our territory to be lost or sovereign rights to be encroached upon
then we shall be guilty of committing an unpardonable crime against our chinese race
china's sovereign rights cannot be sacrificed even at the expense of war and once war has begun
there is no looking back end quote this proclamation is meant for several different
audiences it's obviously meant for chinese people who are in large part really excited about the
chance to finally you know strike at the outside enemy as we said but it's also meant for the
japanese public and they will be infuriated for the most part by it and the editorials and the
newspapers will play it up in generals and and bureaucrats will call for china to be chastised
here and punished for their effrontery and chan kai shek specifically not looking very good to them
all of a sudden they kind of liked him when he was fighting communists now when he's allied
to communists don't like him very much anymore but this proclamation is also meant you know for
global public opinion to tell the peoples and the great powers listen how much of the rainbow and
unicorn fumes are still left i mean the politicians in all these countries like france and britain
and the united states i mean these people are all talking a really good game still with the
high-minded moral sentiments and chang's message is kind of another way of saying maybe put your
money where your mouth is um and answering a key question a lot of people who are wondering about
supporting china have which is will they be around five minutes after real fighting starts is it
worth my investment will there even be a chinese army still around by the time the rifles that i buy
for them get there it's a legitimate question people that are probably in the best position to
answer this question although they're probably biased you would think though would be the japanese
military after all they've been fighting the chinese now for years in this undeclared war
and they're apparently telling the emperor that they can get a handle on this chinese problem
just give them three months so not exactly the highest opinion of chinese military capabilities
but let's remember they've not seen a united china nor have they seen a very defiant one up till now
they're getting both this time but in an attempt to sort of answer these questions for you know
the global audience out there chan kai shek and his generals choose a strategy and it's got a lot
of reasons why he chose it but there's a lot of downsides too that will put everything that's
going to happen you know as much as china has an opportunity to do this anyway on the other side
of the world from most of the great powers it's going to put all these events front and center in
front of the people whose opinion matters in this case the people that can make loans send arms and
maybe even launch embargoes on japan or maybe even bring in troops i mean the possibilities are
endless if you can just get them interested you know what if you expand the war to an area where
they're already really interested how about taking the war to shanghai where all those great powers
have a lot of money invested have commercial interest have in most cases thousands in some cases
tens of thousands of their citizens living there as expatriates or workers
how about you just bring the war to shanghai where the entire global media will be there to
witness it too and what if you throw in a ton of your strength you know that you've built up over
the years and and sort of safeguarded and kept for just such an occasion so that you can give a huge
display of your capability to fight the japanese when you want to so what if you do all that and
you know if you trap these technologically superior better trained better coordinated better
supplied better led more experienced in many cases japanese troops if you trap them in the narrow
alleyways of the city and shanghai in its dense cores like a modern european city stone brick
buildings i mean you trap somebody there it could be and this is a book title that i used for this
by author teeter harmson stalingrad on the yangsi now things like street fighting that all falls
into the tactical questions obviously if you zoom out here though and look at this from the strategic
point of view look at what chang has done here and as i said it's a double-edged sword but he's
essentially sort of calling japan's bluff in terms i would say of being a true great power
because there are several great powers that don't have the landmass or raw materials foundation
you know to put them in the very top class of great powers there's nothing a germany for example
can do about that they've tried the levens round thing once before but they make up for it with a
lot of other things like the japanese do but the chinese are legitimately huge we're talking about
land masses that you know your soviet union type size things although that was somewhat bigger but
united states type sizes it gives them a luxury most places don't have gives them the luxury of
space and if you are a battlefield general space is to say it's huge might be an understatement it
might be a determining factor think like a russian general for example the chinese will sometimes
trade space for time and one of the times will be here but look at what they've done i mean if
you look at a map the japanese are up in the north fighting you know above beijing and stuff
shanghai is more than 600 miles to the south with intervening chinese territory the whole way
the only way the japanese are going to be able to fight is by using the japanese navy to ferry
troops continually from other areas and land them in amphibious operations around shanghai
they're going to have to create an ocean going logistical supply line all the way back to japan
that's more complicated and expensive than doing it with railways and supply lines on land
i'm going to get an idea of the distance here in the book um the battle for china which each
chapter is written by a different expert historians edward j draya and hance vandevin
try to put it in u.s terms and they say that if you locate beijing which used to be called
p king back in this era but if you locate beijing up at michigan's upper peninsula that would put
shanghai over by washington dc kantan down by new orleans wuhan they write would be where st
lewis is approximately and chong king would be in southwestern kansas imagine somebody
landing on the east coast and trying to conquer everything to the mississippi now imagine it's a
small island nation with about 70 to 80 million people that less than what 75 years ago was living
under a military shogun and was closed to the western world china is going to call japan's bluff
here right how large are you you want to play this game you're beating us in single deck poker
how about we throw out five decks and see if you can still play of course let's not forget the
downsides of fighting in a place like shanghai i mean if you're chinese shanghai is your commercial
capital too if new york is your commercial capital how much are you going to appreciate having
a couple of mid 20th century armies numbering in the hundreds of thousands fighting it out
anywhere in your city what's that going to do to your industrial output it's even stranger than
that though and there's a certain dynamic when you get modern battles in big big cities and
that's that you can have fighting raging in one part and yet total peace in another part so imagine
new york city has this fighting raging in a place like queens or a burl like brooklyn but it's peaceful
enough in manhattan for you to take a date up to a skyscraper have martinis and watch over the
balcony at the puffs of smoke in the distance where the fighting is raging that'll happen in
shanghai too where people will come out to watch and don't kid me new yorkers you'd have a lot of
people coming out to watch that's the other problem with deciding to have a battle in shanghai
the people if you have a city of three to four million people and they're going to start to
fight a modern battle in the middle of it what happens to them well a mass exodus begins right
as the fighting starts in shanghai that will be the largest in the city's history and at times
will reach stampede like levels of panic and you have to imagine and and all the books try to convey
this the sea of humanity in this city at this time it's already a crowded city and you have all
these war refugees that have also poured into it so it is jam packed with the sea of humanity
author peter harmson in shanghai 1937 stalling ground on the yang see you know recalls one
account from somebody who was caught on a bridge with a bunch of civilians trying to get from one
perceived unsafe district in the city to a perceived safe one harmson writes quote for the
foreigners of shanghai visitors and residents alike the war was a rather violent diversion but
nothing truly dangerous or so they thought for the chinese life was falling apart as the fighting
intensified around the japanese district thousands of refugees fled through the streets heading for
susau creek and the garden bridge which was the only link to the international settlement that
remained open it was a mad and merciless stampede where the weak had little chance now quoting the
primary source quote my feet were slipping in blood and flesh recalled roads farmer a journalist
for the new china daily news who found himself in a sea of people struggling to leave hankou
quote half a dozen times i knew i was walking on the bodies of children or old people sucked under
by the torrent trampled flat by countless feet end quote harmson continues quote near the creek
the mass of sweating and panting humanity was almost beyond control as it funneled towards the
bridge which was a mere 55 feet wide two japanese sentries were nearly overwhelmed by the crowds
and reacted the way that they had been taught with immediate reflexive brutality one of them he writes
bayonetted an old man and threw the lifeless body into the filthy creek below this did not deter any
of the other refugees who kept pushing toward the bridge and what they believed to be the safety of
the international settlement they could not know it but they were now moving in the wrong direction
towards the most horrific slaughter of innocent civilians of the entire shanghai campaign end
quote these refugees are trying desperately to get to the area they think is going to be the safe
zone because they know that neither army wants to kill foreigners from great powers and they know
those foreigners stay in places like the french concession part of the city or the international
settlement part of the city so they're trying to get there it's an already crowded very nice part of
town and so as these refugees pour in they're going to swell the numbers even more now they're
running away from the first real combat which gets going august 13th 1937 but it's more the strategic
taking of places in preparation for the big attack the big attack will come the next day
almost at exactly the same time murphy's law comes into play you know murphy's law of urban warfare
in dense population centers and in an attempt to bomb japanese warships in the river running through
shanghai twice in 15 minutes chinese planes will instead release their bombs in places that kill
lots of other people innocent people people from their own country if you had wanted to design an
experiment maybe you're an arms manufacturer looking for data and you wanted to give the maximum
number of people you know one bomb in a given situation could kill you could not design probably
a better testing ground to get positive results as you would see them in that situation then choosing
this part of shanghai at this time i mean an urban center with concrete everywhere
buildings on both sides and people absolutely jam packed they're extra jam packed here as well because
they're watching there are thousands upon thousands of people lined up on the boulevard
watching these chinese planes and cheering them on as they try to hit these japanese ships in the
river so when these bombs go awry the thousands of people watching actually i mean there's
accounts actually see them coming down at them they had a split second to think about what was
just about to happen here's what peter harmson writes quote the two bombs released by the
chinese airplane had struck at exactly 4 27 p.m the attacks stopped the arms of a clock at the
entrance of kathay hotel freezing in time the moment of the twin blasts the shock waves and the
debris had both taken a toll on the mass of people who had been crammed into the street
to persi finch a foreign correspondent it was as if a giant mower had pushed through the crowd
chewing it to bits now quoting the foreign correspondent quote here was a headless man
there a baby's foot wearing its little red silk shoe embroidered with fierce dragons he wrote one
body that of a young boy was flattened high against a wall to which it clung with ghastly
adhesion end quote now harmson continues quote a sickening stench of burnt flesh filled the air
as the wounded came to they started moaning some were screaming part of the facade of the palace
hotel had been blown away on the fourth floor a man clung desperately to the remains of the
wall with one hand waiting for help it came too late and he eventually let go crashing through
the glass awning of the hotel's entrance before hitting the pavement others attempted to crawl
to safety scrambling with fumbling limbs over mangled bodies and slipping in the blood that
covered the sidewalk end quote now let's understand why we know in such graphic detail this kind of
stuff well the guy that the modern author just quoted was a foreign correspondent who was in
the street when the event happened the press is there and it makes a big difference you want
to know how you really get foreign countries interested in events far away in overseas places
have their own citizens die there they'll pay attention as an old reporter i can tell you
the practice is known as localizing the story it's easier to get people to relate to something
that seems like it's closer to their lives than something far away that's sort of amorphous and
hard to get your mind around in this case an author peter harmson recounts the situation
involving 66 year old christian missionary reverend frank rollinson he's been in china for a long time
on this particular day he's driving his car with his wife you know in the passenger seat
and his 13 year old daughter with him down avenue edward the seventh which you know that's a british
king so that should show you you're probably not in the you know chinese part of town per se
i can hear about a billion chinese people screaming in the back of my head saying it's all chinese but
anyway avenue edward the seventh reverend frank rollinson about to run people over with his car
it's so packed in the street that his wife says you'll get a better view he's trying to see some of
the you know bombing in the river going on like everyone else if he gets out of his car he gets
out of his car and he gets a hole blown open in his chest and the story you know his wife gets out
sees her husband bleeding out in front of her the 13 year old daughter gets out of the car and sees
this horrific traumatizing sight and in a weird way because we are human beings and it's how we
function to be able to recount that event back to the folks back home will make more of a difference
than explaining you know the other people that that bomb killed because that bomb that killed
this reverend on avenue edward the seventh will also hit i guess the best description i can describe
is a is a six-story shopping mall but much less structurally sound it's called the great world
amusement center and it's normally packed with thousands of chinese people right now it's packed
with thousands of chinese people who happen to be mostly refugees more than normal even on site
getting a rice you know food handout and the bomb hits there and the bodies are stacked five feet high
here's how author peter harmson describes it quote the mood was excited once more at about
4 45 p.m when two chinese aircraft seemed about to make another run on the japanese positions
cheers and applause rose from the street then sharp-eyed individuals noticed two small dark dots
dropped from one of the planes the same bombs that another guy he'd earlier spoken of had seen
they fell with deadly haste hitting the busy street before anyone had time to react let alone escape
one left a huge crater near the traffic control tower in the middle of the road the other exploded
a few feet above the ground causing shrapnel to fly over a large area the explosions were
so powerful that they killed a servant at the building of the ymca nearly 700 feet down a
subsidiary road the casualties included several foreigners harmson writes on avenue edward the
seventh reverend rollinson lay dying in his wife's arms while his teenage daughter was watching just
yards away two other americans hubert honigsberg and his wife were killed in their car it was the
same type of carnage as in the nanjing road earlier just larger death on the most massive scale
was at the entrance of the great world amusement center where the fatalities were piled five feet
high the victims men women and children had been thrown up against the walls of the buildings
many were stripped completely naked after the intense gas pressure from the bombs had torn
off their clothes end quote the eventual death toll from the great world and surrounding areas
will be more than 650 people men women and children the death toll from both of these accidental
bombings put together is more than 1200 people almost 1500 seriously wounded seven foreigners
among the dead author peter harmson calls these american deaths here in these bombings the first
american casualties of the second world war they matter more than they should theoretically
see in terms of public opinion because after all people are people they should all count but
there's something about an american christian missionary and his daughter watching him die
on the roadside and all this stuff that attracts american attention once again and even though
these are chinese bombs that accidentally did this most of the ire is directed at japan and
after all one can ask the obvious question what the heck are they doing in shanghai anyway a chinese
city so understandable but it's just part of the drumbeat of atrocities that make its way into
you know the foreign media and a picture's worth a thousand words right there's going to be a weird
perverse sort of incentive loop that happens with these terrible disasters and the suffering of the
chinese people because the more the chinese people suffer and the more it's publicized
the more international sympathy and sometimes eventually aid that brings them so for example
you know a month or two from this time period the japanese will bomb a railway station in
shanghai and a photographer will be there again you know the media working all the time here
will catch a photo snap a photo of this destroyed railway station with bodies lying around
and a baby i'm guessing six months old seven months old sitting there covered burnt but crying
and he sent this image back to the you know great press outlets it got published and it's one of the
most moving and emotionally demanding photos of the war and it's this kind of thing that plays into
a change in mood especially once again in the united states a photo like that is a if you if
you're a reporter and you're trying to move public opinion and somebody hands you that photo
so that's gold how weird is that that person's suffering that little baby suffering on that
railway platform after the bombing is in a weird way serving the interest of chinese nationalism
and patriotism by you know helping to publicize the mass chinese suffering going on in a way
that moves people in a way that you could say yes 2000 chinese people died the other day and you
go oh well you show the baby on the platform they go oh my god it's weird isn't it but i mean that's
how they teach a reporter for example in the news business i mean if it bleeds it leads
and please localize your story so people care this is an example of both of those things
and almost the exact same time that those bombs are going awry and killing all those people on
the waterfront and at the amusement center the chinese launched their big attack against the
japanese the one by the way that was suggested to them by a german general because the germans are
training the chinese and this is very weird if you know the story because like five minutes from
now the germans and the japanese are going to be allies but in this battle which some japanese
refer to as the german war the germans are helping the chinese they've equipped the
chinese elite units with german helmets and german stick grenades i mean they look like
the africa core asian edition right wearing khaki asian features but otherwise looking like
german soldiers they have advisors at the officer level that sometimes as advisors sometimes do
will lead units into combat the chinese amongst a number of other troops they're pouring troops
in and the japanese are starting to as well have these two units the 87th and 88th division both
of which i think you could reasonably classify as elite the best units in the army they also have
stuff the chinese do that they've lovingly built up over the years a tank force an air force small
obsolete but they've got one some armored cars i mean but it's all been took forever to build
and they've saved it up and they're going to throw it all into this attack and they're going to do it
with fanaticism it's going to be interesting for you military history majors they're going to fight
the japanese the same way the japanese will fight the allied powers in the second world war
from a position of being the one who has to have sacrificial suicide attacks to make up for
material differences there are stories of chinese troops you know throwing themselves under japanese
tanks and blowing themselves up to stop a tank column you know shades of what the japanese will
do in the second world war the officer casualties on this first day for china will be irreplaceable
and shocking but as one author pointed out you are literally fighting in rubble in streets with
buildings and you're having people shooting at you from behind all that it's crazy kind of
stalingrad type fighting but in the first day the chinese suffer irreplaceable losses author
peter harmson writes quote first and foremost however the massive fatality rates among officers
and to an even larger extent the rank and file where the result of chinese forces employing
frontal attacks against a well armed entrenched enemy the men who as a result were dying by the
hundreds were china's elite soldiers the product of years of effort to build up a modern military
they formed the nation's best hope to be able to resist japan in a protracted war nevertheless on
the first day of battle they were being squandered at an alarming unsustainable rate end quote
by not sweeping away the japanese though the way the german general had advised here
they allow things to stay in place everybody to reinforce and this thing to go on for three
months now i suppose looking on the bright side it's a kind of a victory for the chinese forces
because the japanese thought they'd take shanghai in three days so three months is a lot harder than
the japanese thought the other thing that's a lot harder than the japanese thought was how many
people they would have to lose as casualties in order to do this numbers are sketchy here so
taking with a grain of salt the japanese suffer about 40 000 casualties in this three month period
remember casualties are killed wounded captured missing
they will by the way end this entire affair with a stalingrad like almost you know attack
around the city on both sides and they're getting ready to close it off so the chinese forces have
to withdraw so that they don't get you know dunkirked but china is going to suffer something
more on the lines of 250 000 casualties in three months 250 000 casualties it's hard to get your
mind around but maybe a good way to look at it is if you take those numbers i just gave you japanese
and chinese casualties and you put them together in three months of fighting you have almost as
many people darn near as many people as the united states lost in its entire involvement
admittedly short but more than a year in the first world war by the way chinese numbers always
look like somebody did the math wrong it always looks like somebody multiplied by some strangely
large number or something but it's part of what makes chinese history so overwhelmingly all inspiring
you can hardly get your mind around the numbers sometimes you know we had said earlier sort of
with the japanese you get an extra dose of intensity with the chinese you get an extra dose of numbers
now when the chinese forces are sort of required to withdraw from shanghai now you begin to see
maybe the downside or another downside of expanding the war to this area because if you lose shanghai
now you have the victorious japanese in a new theater of war now they're in central china
and they're winning and they're pursuing the chinese forces on the road back to the not very
far from shanghai chinese capital at nanjing back then was called nanking the chinese have expended
an enormous amount of effort they are in no position necessarily to stop and halt the japanese
advance here what are the japanese going to do when they get to the chinese capital well that's
a well known and still controversial story but a shorthand way to describe the traditional way
of looking at it is it looks like a mongol sacking of a city arguably the most horrific atrocity
that will occur in 15 years of war in the pacific and asian theater will occur when the japanese
get to this chinese city but that's coming up next just strap yourselves in at the beginning
of the next program because it's going to get nasty quickly i have a confession to make
i did not like the idea of the harry potter books when i first encountered them you have to understand
i am a fantasy snob i'm a lord of the rings snob i am the kind of guy that likes my fantasy to go
so deep that we could have legitimate conversations over the proper use of pronouns in the wood elf
language i'm not talking about the high elves i'm talking about the southern murkwood dialect i mean
that's how i like it i want big long poems in a language some guy invented in his head
so i scoffed when my kids wanted me to read the harry potter books to them and then i started
getting into them you know more and more it's funny they almost start like a book written for
like a seven to ten year old and then i think the next one came out like about two years later
and it's almost like that book is for the same kid that read the first one but now two years later
and they get increasingly more complex and adult and dark and i just remember one day waking up to
the realization at 4 45 in the morning that for six straight hours i've been saying just one more
page while i read the order of the phoenix you know i had to work that day that's what i'm going
okay you have a problem a lot of people like to have books read to them and a good narrator of
course can add so much to it i like the guy audible's got doing the whole harry potter series right
now his name is jim dale click on a few samples of him and see if he doesn't just have one of those
voices that first of all you just like to listen to anyway but second that just sounds like a person
that should be reading a harry potter book to you it's great amazon prime members right now through
july 31st 2018 can get audible for a mere 4 95 a month that lasts for three months and it goes up
to the regular only 14 95 a month audible members just so you know get a credit every month that's
good for any audiobook in their store regardless of price and the unused credits roll over to the
next month if you don't like an audiobook you can exchange it with no hassle plus your audiobooks
are yours to keep forever even if you cancel i love that part if you're somebody that ever gets to go
out and enjoy you know summer activities and whatnot audiobooks are of course a great thing
to enjoy while you're doing it you could be in the dark harry potter world while you are tanning
on the beach maybe that's the best way to do it audible by the way has the largest selection of
audiobooks on the planet which lets you fill your summer with things like well this harry potter
series or you could go all you know wood elfish and go you know get the lord of the rings too
if this sounds like a good deal to you why don't you go to audible.com slash hardcore history you
could also text hardcore history all one word all lowercase letters to 500 500 to get started
once again that's audible.com slash hardcore history or just text hardcore history to 500 500 to get
started. Wrath of the cons, Punic Nightmares, Apache Tears and of course Ghosts of the Ostfront
just a few of the classic hardcore history titles available from dancarlin.com every true fan has
heard these favorites hey they make great gifts too if you think the show you just heard is worth
a dollar dan and ben would love to have it a buck a show it's all we ask go to dancarlin.com for
information on how to donate to the show.