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World War II in Asia But let’s first think of all the reasons we like Japan before we zero on its one truly psychopathic moment in history. Mount Fuji, autumn Shibuya girls and, well, you know the other guy History of Japan • Founded on Confucian beliefs, script from China, Buddhism from India (6th c), pottery, all via Korea. • Indigenous Shinto religion, Amaterasu sun goddess. • First mythology written 700s. • Oldest hereditary monarchy in the world, Akihito is truly The Last Emperor (#125!) • Courtly medieval culture based in Kyoto. First novel written-- by a woman. Buddhist Temple, Nara Kyoto Imperial Shrine Ritsurin Garden, Japan Zen Buddhist garden Pottery of Japan Lacquerware Raku-ware The Shogunate, 1603- 1867 • The Tokugawa shoguns consolidate power into feudal dictatorship, emperor as figurehead • Samurai warrior class only allowed to own swords. Bushido code of ethics values honor, loyalty, self-control, courage, kindness. • Guns banned. Also foreigners. Dutch, confined to Nagasaki. • Despite ‘police state’ ethos, peace and trade promote lively, urban commercial culture w/ refined crafts kabuki live theatre, bunraki puppetry, the woodblock prints that inspired van Gogh … • And many courtisans, up to 15,000 in Edo (today’s Tokyo) alone. The Samurai Samurai mission to Paris Samurai armor The Meiji ‘Restoration’ • Revolution prompted by arrival of US Commodore Perry’s ‘Black Ships’ in Edo Harbor in 1857, breaking 300year isolation. Impose unfair trade treaties w/ US • Reform-minded samurai overthrow shogun 1867, restore Emperor, embark on radical & rapid modernization by learning Western technology, adopting institutions. Beer. • Economically successful but psychologically destabilizing. Citizens taught obedience, Constitution gives power to Emperor, thus those who control him. • 1920 and 1930s, moves toward social democracy and liberalization falter as Depression, right-wing factions pushes country to military dictatorship Meiji Emperor moves from Kyoto to Tokyo Japanese adopt Western clothes, habits Meiji-era tramways The Meiji Constitution proclaimed 1889 Japan in 1912 • At the death of the Meiji emperor, Japan has a modern constitution modeled on Germany’s • Centralized modern administration, taxation, law courts • An end to feudal privileges and class divisions • Universal free schooling for boys and girls • Powerful army and navy that had defeated China and Russia, conquered Korea and Formosa • Well developed internal transportation • Equal terms with West in treaties despite West’s racism • Near-worship cult of emperor and Shinto religion yet real power with samurai-class advisors who traveled to West Map of Asia, 1930 Japan covets China • Begins with outrage when Japan defeats Germany and seizes control of Shandong peninsula, seaport of Tsingtao, but China gets it back in 1922 • Racial exclusion laws in US in 1920s and refusal of racial equality clause in Treaty of Versailles stir anger • Investments in Manchuria for transport, raw materials (Japan has few natural resources) at risk in unstable Chinese warlord era (or it’s just a good excuse) so Japan takes over region in 1931 and installs deposed Chinese emperor as puppet ruler • Withdraws from League of Nations, 1933 Invasion of China • Launch attack on Beijing, then sweep south, bombard and occupy Shanghai • Nationalists retreat, fight on w/US help via Burma, then by air from India • Communists lead guerrilla resistance from bases in north The ‘Greater East Asia CoProsperity Sphere’, 1940 • Ideal of a pan-Asian empire within a fascist geo-political order • 1940 colonial powers France, Netherlands fall to German ally. Japan takes over Indochina • Signs Triple Axis Pact w/ Italy, Germany 1940 • War of ‘liberation’initially welcomed in Indonesia, for instance 8 a.m. Dec. 7, 1941 Pearl Harbor: Dec. 7, 1941 • • • • • US oil & gas sanctions, stalled negotiations provoke Japan to launch surprise attack on Navy base in Hawaii. 2,400 killed, 188 planes destroyed, 8 battleships sunk, or damaged plus others Simultaneous attacks launched on Burma, Guam, Philippines, Hong Kong, Jan-Feb 1942: attack Burma, Indonesia, Singapore surrenders after siege, US withdraws from Philippines, 10,000s POWs from both. Air raids on Australia, California May: Japan reaches India. Peak of expansion. World War II in Asia • Fought at sea, naval technology critical. Japan can’t replace trained pilots, sailors, access oil and gas yet ‘fights to last man’. Just 15% of US war effort devoted to Pacific yet also grueling campaign under torturous conditions. • Philippines and Singapore surrender, tens of thousands of POWs captured, many of whom will die in captivity. • May 1942: Battle of Coral Sea halts Japan’s advance south. June 1942: Having broken Japan’s code and thus gained advance warning, US dive bombers at Battle of Midway sink all four Japanese aircraft carriers. • 1943: Dogged 3-year ‘island-hopping’ campaign to close in on Japan starts with Battle of Guadalcanal. • Incendiary bombing campaign masterminded by future Secretary of Defense during Vietnam War, Robert McNamara. Japan resorts to kamikaze suicide flights. • Guerrilla resistance fighters such as Ho Chi Minh, Sukarno, will put skills to use fighting returning colonial powers. Japanese Empire, 1942 Accusations of Atrocities • Fueled by racial supremacist beliefs and militarism, Japanese commit atrocities: Nanjing massacres, rapes, Unit 731 lethal human experiments, Bataan Death March in the Philippines, BurmaThailand railroad labor • Refusal to ‘apologise’, official visits to war shrine, textbook gloss-overs continue to infuriate neighbors Korea, China. • 250,000 victims of biological warfare experiments • Estimated 5.4 million civilians killed by Japanese, about 2/3 Chinese. Up to 20 million Chinese die • 540,000 POWs die, incl.15,000 Westerners. • 300,000 Nanjing alone Nuclear War • The Manhattan Project informs new President Harry Truman that bomb is ready in July 1945. • As Russia invades Manchuria, Truman orders nuclear bombs dropped on Hiroshima & Nagasaki. • Japan surrenders. • Did it save lives overall or was it a war crime? First and only use of nuclear weapons in war. • 9 nations now have them. Postwar Asia • Japan occupied by US for five years, given new constitution. Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal but Emperor allowed to remain in place. Incredible economic growth ends in 1990s. Still 3rd largest economy in the world but rapidly aging population. • China resumes civil war; Communists win 1949. Nationalists flee to Taiwan which becomes de facto independent. • 1950-53, liberated Korea becomes first proxy war in Cold War, millions killed, peninsula divided as it remains today. • French attempt to re-assert control over Indochina but driven out after Dien Bien Phu disaster 1954. Their financers, the US, take over and prolong war for two more decades, leads to millions of Vietnamese deaths, mostly civilian. • Indonesia gains independence from Dutch in 1949. • British partition India, grant it and Burma independence 1948; Malaysia, Singapore 1963 after ending communist insurgency. Death toll from Hiroshima & Nagasaki Pacific War Casualties • 50% of total of World War II, or about 36 million • US military deaths: 111,6000 (casualty rates five times as high as in Europe, illness rates very high) • British (UK, Australia, India) military deaths: 28,000 • About 150,000 Allied prisoners of war • China: 4 million • Japan: 1.8 million plus c. 400,000 civilians to bombs • Civilian deaths elsewhere: 1 million in Philippines, 4 million in Indonesia, up to 18 million in China, 1.5-3 million in Bengal famine. 1970s Japan’s come-back: technology The Toyota Corolla, 1978 The Sony Walkman, 1979 1980s: technology meets pop culture Totoro, 1988 Super Mario, 1985 Video Links • • • • • • Battle of Guadalcanal (History Channel) Battle of Midway (History Channel) Japan’s View of the Pacific War Hiroshima (BBC) Premier Hideki Tojo on trial (US gov. footage) Controversy of Yasukuni shrine visits (UK Telegraph) • Movies: Empire of the Sun, Bridge over River Kwai, Iwo Jima, Pearl Harbor.