Dan Carlin's Hardcore History - Show 67 - Supernova in the East VI
Episode Date: June 9, 2021When do spirit, tenacity, resilience and bravery cross into madness? When cities are incinerated? When suicide attacks become the norm? When atomic weapons are used? Japan's leaders test the limits of... national endurance in the war's last year.
Transcript
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What you're about to hear is part 6 of a six-part series on the Second World War in the Asia-Pacific
Theater.
If you have not heard the earlier segments, please go check those out.
You probably want to hear this in order, but there's a few of you out there who don't care
about the sort of stuff, in which case, well, catch up and join us, won't you, for part
6 of the light and airy story that is supernova in the east.
December 7th.
It's history.
1941.
A date which will live in infamy.
It's hardcore history.
People who are knowledgeable about the Second World War and many people are, it's one of
those subjects that fascinates human beings the world over, understandably so.
People who are aficionados of the Second World War knows that the rhythm of the Second World
War reminds you of an opera or a musical theater production where the end is going to be like
the end of the world, a ragnarok or a gotcha dameron, and the whole last year of the war
is whipping yourself up like a roller coaster going uphill waiting for that giant dip where
you're building up to that horrific ending.
The last year of the Second World War is the worst year of the Second World War.
And the kind of numbers that demonstrate that are, for example, casualties, killings.
Look at the German deaths, for example, in January 1945.
That's a month that is mind blowing.
The Germans will have more than 400,000 of their soldiers, maybe close to 450,000 of
their soldiers die in that month alone.
Or comparison purposes, that is more military deaths than the United States suffered, all
branches of service, all cause of mortality for the whole war.
Historian Neil Ferguson says the German military loses more soldiers in the last year of the
war than the entire rest of the war put together.
And some of the latest estimates of casualty numbers suggest the Germans were losing on
average 10,000 soldiers every day in 1945.
So from January 1st to May 8th when the war ended in Europe, 10,000 a day on average.
That is almost twice as many people as the United States lost at the Battle of Antietam,
which many military historians consider to be the worst day in U.S. military history
and the Germans were getting it day after day after day.
If you think to yourself, and this would be totally understandable, who cares, right?
The Germans are reaping what they sowed.
That would be fine, except it's hardly just the Germans.
In his book How Wars End, author Gideon Rose says that every month in 1945 between 100,000
and 250,000 non-combatants in Asia were dying again every month due to the actions of Japanese
forces.
These are data points, but you have to add all the other data points up too and see the
conveyor belt of death, the factory assembly line of human destruction that's going on
in 1945 or really the last year of the war.
I mean, you don't have to really imagine too much to just know that the Holocaust is going
on during this time period in Europe and people are dying in those camps every day.
So every day the war continues.
That tally goes up reliably.
I'm reminded of a song by the rock band the MC5 from the late 1960s, early 1970s.
They wrote a song which I think is about the Vietnam War and it's entitled The Human
Being Lawn Mower.
And to me, the imagery as horrific as it is works better for the Second World War and
especially the end of the Second World War than it does for Vietnam, a lawn mower that
cuts human beings instead of blades of grass or an assembly line that's reliably heading
towards a furnace or a chopping machine with people on it.
And when the lead singer would say the words The Human Being Lawn Mower, he would emphasize
what was going on by then saying chop, chop, chop, chop, chop, human being lawn mower, chop,
chop, chop, chop, chop.
That's what's going on in the last year of the war.
So why is the last year of the war still going on?
Neil Ferguson in his book The War of the World quotes an aide to U.S. General Omar Bradley
who is fighting the Third Reich in Europe and the aide made this statement, Ferguson
says at the end of 1944 and the statement was quote, if we were fighting reasonable people,
they would have surrendered long ago end quote, but they're not fighting reasonable people
clearly.
They're fighting a fanatical regime in the Third Reich, which is committed to going down
with the ship and taking the entire country down with them.
And the Japanese we've already pointed out to outside observers who are not Japanese,
it's always looked fanatical.
Hitler and his cohorts know that they're not surviving the post war period regardless.
They're all going to hang at the end of a rope.
So maybe that influences their decision to take everything down with them.
His propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels had famously said, if we have to leave, we'll
close the door behind us with a slam that all the world will hear, pity that all the
German civilians need to go with them.
And in the Japanese situation, their military is planning for a last ditch stand on the
home islands. If it comes to that, the army thinks they can put two and a half million
Japanese soldiers into Japan's built up cities and then add to those numbers with a ton of
civilians that as we said in the last segment are training with bamboo spears by this time
and make life impossible for an invading army.
What's the goal?
What's the end game?
Well, both the Germans and the Japanese are hoping to inflict a last big blow against
their enemies that causes their enemies to rethink the peace terms.
Because as even a cursory understanding of the Second World War makes clear, the peace
terms are unconditional surrender.
And the reason we know that is the Allies made an attempt to broadcast this.
Make it known to everybody.
The terms are you give up and then we decide what we're going to do to you.
Now this is controversial. After all, if the terms of surrender are going to be that harsh,
the Axis powers are going to fight longer than they otherwise might, which means the
human being lawn mower, the conveyor belt of destruction continues longer, the Holocaust
goes on longer, the Asian civilians die, you know, more day, I mean, just it's controversial.
But there's an attitude if you look at the sources that you need an unconditional surrender,
if you're going to finally end this recurring problem.
And the Germans especially are seen as a recurring problem.
My stepfather, who was half German by ancestry, had said, look at the German history over
the past hundred years, right?
The Franco-Prussian War, the First World War, the Second World War, that is three generations
of German youth going off to fight in wars that destabilize the international system.
Franklin Roosevelt thought it was Prussian or Juncker militarism that was at fault and
that countries needed to have finally this tendency rooted out of them.
And to do that a free hand would be necessary.
You couldn't have some sort of deal like the deal that ended the First World War.
You needed the ability to remake these societies to finally end the repeat offender status
of some of these places, right, who would upset the peace of the world.
So for many people it was this view that the entire sacrifice of all three of those wars,
but especially the Second World War would be in vain if it didn't end the right way.
There's a quote from Assistant U.S. Secretary of State Breckenridge Long that's used in
Gideon Rose's book where he says, quote, we are fighting this war.
Because we did not have an unconditional surrender at the end of the last one, end quote.
It's controversial though.
And people like Winston Churchill sometimes seem to vary in his views that you find on
whether or not he was for it or open to some sort of conditional peace in his book series,
the Second World War, which cannot be taken as gospel truth, you know, you take it with
a grain of salt because he's bolstering his own post-war image, but he knows that unconditional
surrender is controversial.
So he tries to defend it and he says that they tried to sit down and come up with conditional
terms, right?
If it was not going to be unconditional, what should the surrender terms be?
And he wrote, quote, they looked so terrible when set forth on paper and so far exceeded
what was in fact done that their publication would only have stimulated German resistance.
They had in fact only to be written out to be withdrawn, end quote.
We should also recall that there were political reasons in the Allied alliance for doing this
too.
The Soviets were very suspicious that the Western allies would cut a separate deal with Germany
and sort of leave them in the lurch.
An announced public pledge for an unconditional surrender helped bind all the allies together
in a united cause, right?
No one's going to make a separate piece, but it meant the war would go on longer.
And both Japan and Germany were hoping for some sort of last ditch punch in the nose
that would wake the allies up to the fact that, you know, this war could continue for
years if you didn't come up with a better peace deal.
I mean, that's really what's something like the Battle of the Bulls, the Second Battle
of the Ardennes in 1944.
That could be the only reason to do that because there was no war-winning element to that.
The whole point was to do such damage and maybe have a whole bunch of Allied troops
sort of surrounded and endangered so you could maybe bargain with them.
And in Japan, they were continually looking for the last great battle that would help
wake the allies up to the idea that unconditional surrender was a bridge too far.
When last we spoke, we were talking about the Battle of Saipan in July 1944.
Well, the Japanese Navy had thought that the war had been decided some of the naval experts
after the Battle of Guadalcanal and most of the rest, at least after the Battle of Midway.
In the Japanese War Journal of Imperial Headquarters quoted in Richard B. Frank's book, Downfall,
they were very open and this is official that the war was over in terms of who was going
to win.
And it said, quote,
We can no longer direct the war with any hope of success.
The only course left is for Japan's 100 million people to sacrifice their lives by charging
the enemy to make them lose the will to fight.
End quote.
That is an amazing statement.
We will sacrifice all the people in this country to get a better deal than unconditional surrender.
And what was it that the Japanese really were holding out for?
The emperor.
They were worried that an unconditional surrender might mean that the emperor and the entire
imperial system would be tossed out and this was something they could not live with.
What's more, the idea that the emperor might be treated as a war criminal and might be
hung or something after the war was intolerable to a ton of Japanese people, including a ton
of civilians.
I mean, remember, there's a decent number of Japanese folk who consider this person a
living god.
His voice has never even been heard by the public.
I mean, there's a whole lot of stuff that makes this an almost super human figure and
the idea that the country might have to lose, there really weren't a hundred million people
in Japan.
It's more like 70 or 75 million.
But I mean that you might have to sacrifice that to keep one guy on the throne.
Wow, that's, well, if we were fighting reasonable people, it would have been over already.
This is not reasonable.
I read a couple of different takes on this that suggested it was a lot more than the
emperor.
This is the imperial system, which includes a lot of what we would call the oligarchy
or the old guard.
There's a lot of people who have a stake in the imperial system and they would all be
thrown to the wolves if this went away.
But it would seem to be the kind of thing where you're going to keep the human being
lawnmower operating at breakneck speed to keep a single guy from the gallows after the
war maybe.
The problem Japan has is different than Germany because one of the things we said at the end
of the last segment was that the famous plot against Adolf Hitler on July 20th, Operation
Valkyrie where a bomb exploded in a meeting room attempting to take Hitler out.
Well, that's an attempt to get rid of the fanatic in chief, right?
I mean, as I said, if we were fighting reasonable people, the war would be over long ago.
But in Germany, you have to get rid of the unreasonable person at the top to have a chance
to do that.
Japan's government's very different.
It's hard to put your finger on who's in charge.
And we dealt with this extensively in the first segment of the program pointing out
that Japan's system was one that outsiders certainly, but even insiders sometimes could
have a tough time figuring where the buck stops.
Author Ian W. Toll had written a line that just I think was a perfect summation of that
where he said, quote, the same institutional defects that had produced Japan's irrational
decision to launch the war in 1941 now prevented a rational decision to end it, end quote.
And S.C.M.
Payne in his book, The Wars for Asia in 1911, 1945 had said that Japan's government had
been called a government by acquiescence or a system of irresponsibility.
And he said, quote, because if everyone is responsible for policy, then policy formation
becomes anonymous so that no one is actually held accountable.
The primary value emphasized in decision making was a consensus reached through informal
procedures, end quote, a consensus that required the most diehard fanatical elements of the
military to be on board.
And at least the army was not.
And this, by the way, is why everybody spent so much time talking about the 19th century
development of the Japanese constitutional system design and everything to get us to
the Second World War because the Second World War is where a couple of major things happen
where you just go, it's almost like a tragic flaw in Greek theater where it was built into
the Japanese system a long time ago, and it only comes out when the system's under massive
stress like, you know, a world war.
But the fact that the Army and Navy, for example, have an outsize amount of control and influence
tends to bend the decision making in a more hard line sort of way.
And people who want to talk about peace actually put their own lives in danger to do so.
So in both Germany and Japan, as the war starts to grind into the last year, anybody who tries
to bring up the idea of peace or who suggests that the war may be lost are enemies of the
regime.
In Germany, in the last year of the war, between 10 and 20,000 people I read were hung or executed
in some other way, soldiers and civilians alike on charges of what was called defeatism.
In Japan, Marius B. Jensen, the historian, says that the military was watching the people
and had jailed some people for high level defeatism as it was called.
And Saburo Yanaga in his book, The Pacific War, talked about how careful those were his
translated words, peace advocates in the government had to be.
He says that they faced assassination or a coup when he blames the army, but that's who
he blames for a lot of things.
The point being that even bringing up what might be a rational question like, do we have
to have Armageddon?
Is that the way this whole thing has to go?
Could get you charged as an enemy of the state and in a place like Germany, you could get
you hung.
So rationality isn't just in short supply, it's actively punished by death.
I keep thinking of both the average Japanese person who may or may not have wanted to die
for the emperor.
Are they looking forward to actually taking up arms with their women and children and
fighting alongside the Japanese army in the built up areas of Japan in house to house
hand to hand combat against the Allied forces?
Something tells me they're going to be a lot of regular Japanese folks who would see that
as a failure of government.
And once again, there are going to be people who say, well, then they shouldn't have started
the war.
They shouldn't have mistreated all of the populations they dealt with so much, which is a fair point.
But let's remember that if the Japanese are going to die because they're going to have
to be rooted out of all these buildings, somebody's going to have to do the rooting out.
And this is what my stepfather was referring to once when he talked to me about how it
was a kind of a double-edged sword reading in the newspapers about how well the war was
going because my stepdad's a guy who got into the Second World War at the real tail end
of it.
So had there been a 1946 continuation of the war, that's when he would have been in the
thick of it.
So like a lot of people by the end of the war, he was kind of trying to time it out in his
head, right?
Is this thing going to be over before I'm on the frontline areas?
He was a naval guy, but the frontline areas was right off the coast of Japan if there
was 1946 fighting.
And he said every time there'd be another victory and another island taken, another closer
hop to Japan, you know, and more of the shrinking of the blast radius of Japan's supernova.
He said that's the same as saying we're one step closer to the final battles for Japan's
home islands, the Ragnarok, right?
And he's thinking to himself, you know, everybody already knows how diehard the Japanese were
on all these islands.
We've already had to take from them that they don't care about as much as the home islands.
And we still have to go to, I mean, nobody was looking forward to this.
I just keep thinking about how unnerving the previews to it all would be if I were a nearly
fighting age young man in the United States in say April, early May 1945.
And I'm reading about the Battle of Berlin, right?
The last assault the Red Army launches on Hitler's capital city with Hitler in it.
The last big battle, right, it's going to end right here, Ragnarok in Berlin.
If I'm reading about that, something that turns into arguably the worst urban combat
in human history, the Red Army loses more than 80,000 men in 16 days.
The Germans lose more, more than 20,000 civilians.
Hitler kills himself in the bunker with the Soviet troops yards away.
The only way it could have been more last ditch is if a Soviet soldier had broken down
the bunker doors and stabbed Hitler with a bayonet.
And Hitler is not perceived as any more fanatical than Japanese leadership and maybe your average
Japanese loyal soldier and maybe even his wife and child, who knows.
But to somebody like yours truly reading the paper, this would have looked like a horrible
preview of what the Tokyo situation is going to look like in a few months when we get to
that.
And yet the alternative to Ragnarok is to let the human being Lawnmower continue to rack
up obscene monthly death totals until it's stopped.
There are no good choices are there.
And choices are where people like yours truly, I know many of you too, we just, we can't
help but look at the choices and become fascinated with, I mean, it's tempting always for a person
who's into war games and chess and all that stuff to think about this in terms of a game,
like a geostrategic card game.
And the danger with that is all the decisions look so much easier when you're looking at
them now.
You have no idea all the little influences and roadblocks and inhibitors and pressures
and everything else that was working on the historical figure.
I always have this image of them coming back in a time machine and hearing someone like
yours truly say, well, here's what you should have done.
And having them say, oh yeah, sure, you don't think I would have done that if I could have,
but I couldn't have because of all these things that are not even in your history books that
were acting on me.
So without having been said, it's still hard for me to not look at this sometimes like
a card game.
And in 1944, what's fascinating of that year is that the Germans and the Japanese only
have a few meaningful cards left to play, a limited amount of harbored and stockpiled
strength, a little bit of rocket fuel, if you will, that they've kept aside for just
this time.
So what do you do with it?
What do you use it for?
What is a worthy goal to use some of your last remaining strength for?
If winning the war probably isn't on the table.
I never like to say it's never on the table because war is full of weirdness to the degree
that you just never, you can't ever say ever.
Somebody's always pulling victory out of the jaws of defeat.
But basically, there are no war winning cards left to play, at least no obvious war winning
cards left to play.
So how do you play what cards you still have left?
That's fascinating to me.
The Germans offensive in late 1944, the one in the second Ardennes, as it's called, we
Americans called it, the Battle of the Bulge, that's an example of Hitler playing one of
those last cards.
I've got the stockpile of stuff.
Let's use it here.
What was he trying to do?
Historians and armchair generals ever since have been critiquing that decision.
There were a lot of people even at the time that maybe would have liked to have seen all
of that stockpiled strength used against the Red Army instead to maybe forestall what
happened in Berlin long enough to let the Allies get there first.
The Western Allies would be a better way to put it, right?
Because the Soviet Union's an ally as well.
But regardless, you know, hindsight's 20-20, right?
The Japanese cards that they have to play, they're playing early on in 1944.
I mean, they launch an offensive in the Burma India Theater in March 1944.
And then a month later, they launched the largest offensive of the war on their part.
And I think I read the largest offensive in Imperial Japanese Army history with the Ichigo
Campaign in China.
We mentioned both these campaigns, actually, briefly in the last segment.
But the Ichigo Campaign is the kind where you look at and you don't even know how the
Japanese do it.
We mentioned a long time ago that to me, the Japanese look like one of the peoples on the
planet that punch above their weight class because they are able to pull off stuff where
you would look at their population numbers and their geographical questions and their
history and think that they're just not, they're not going to be able to do that.
And then they achieve it anyway.
And I sometimes wonder, looking at their history, if maybe they just have to.
We've talked about the limitations of their somewhat dysfunctional subpar, usually in
terms of outcome government design.
We've talked about the problems that they have with the organization of the military
and how you have this issue with mid-level officers able to exert an undue amount of
control and influence over military policy.
These are all things that put the Japanese into very tough situations and time and again,
somehow despite all of the impediments and the odds against them, the Japanese people
managed to pull the fat out of the fire more times than not.
I read somewhere that for the Ichigo offensive, the Japanese stockpiled ammunition for two
years, an aviation air fuel for eight months.
And when they launch this multi-stage offensive that will go from April, 1944 to at least
December 1944, I believe there's still significant fighting going on in January 1945, the half
a million Japanese troops, more than 15,000 vehicles, more than 100,000 animals, launched
this assault on China that is ferocious.
And we should point out that nowhere in the Pacific was anybody facing armies like 500,000
Japanese soldiers.
These are land war in Asia-sized armies.
The big battles in the Pacific later on are going to be fractions of this number.
The only exception I can think of is the Philippines campaign, which is still to come.
But even then, the Japanese are more on the defensive there, whereas in China, on the
Ichigo offensive, it is a massive, many months long assault.
But when you're fighting Chinese armies, which are traditionally very large, and in
this campaign, the Japanese are often outnumbered and fighting multiple Chinese armies, which
means lots of troops, you better have lots of troops.
The irony of the whole thing is that the Japanese will in large part succeed in many ways in
this offensive.
If you were judging this offensive outside of the context of the war, you'd go, wow,
they pulled off a lot of upsets here, almost knocked the nationalists out of the war, did
retake the American air bases they wanted eliminated, did connect these territories
they wanted connected.
But as so many historians I was reading pointed out, so what?
So you took this giant amount of remaining rocket fuel you'd stored up and saved to use
somehow and you did it in a way that won't slow the Allied advance across the Pacific
Islands and toward the Japanese homeland at all?
Was that a wasted card?
You actually achieved a lot of what you wanted to achieve.
It actually worked out pretty well, judging by a non-contextual sort of standard, but
in a contextual sort of standard, didn't do anything to slow down the losing of the war.
It was to say it keeps the human being lawn mower working over time, 750,000 Chinese soldiers
may have been killed.
I've seen like 100,000 Japanese as a death toll sometimes.
The numbers are hard to trust and differ source to source and the methodology is different,
but there may have been 200,000 Chinese civilian deaths due to this offensive.
In the same way that there are critics of Hitler's decision to use some of his last
precious rocket fuel against the Western Allies instead of against the Soviets saying that
it was essentially a boon for communism and it trapped more of central Europe behind the
Iron Curtain, a similar charge is sometimes made against the Japanese for the Ichigo campaign.
For example, Japanese military historian Hirotakeshi writing in the Battle for China
proclaims the Ichigo campaign to have been a disaster for both the Japanese and the Nationalist
Chinese.
He says the only winners were the communists because they sat back and watched their two
worst enemies, the Japanese and the Nationalist Chinese kill each other off.
The Nationalist and the Communist Chinese of course had been fighting a civil war when
the Japanese invasion of China sort of temporarily put a damper on that, but it will spring into
new life after the Japanese are defeated and because perhaps of the damage that was done
to the Nationalists, the Nationalists will lose that civil war and well of course we
have a communist China today.
So there are some historians who suggest that the Japanese helped give us a communist China
today.
It's interesting and fascinating to contemplate, isn't it?
Considering that in 1944 Japan was probably the most anti-communist country in the world,
there's some historical irony to it, isn't it?
Talk about not getting what you wished for.
I happen to find much more intrigue in the Japanese offensive in Burma, the one that
kicks off a month before Ichigo and was supposed to act sort of in tandem with it.
To me it's much more interesting because there's a wild card element involved and if you're
where the Japanese are at this time in the war, wild cards look good.
How about playing a joker card in a campaign, right, introduce a little chaos somewhere
where it might do some good for your war effort and if you can't win the war, what can you
do?
The Japanese offensive in Central Burma is known as the Ugo campaign from the Japanese
viewpoint.
In Anglo-American histories it's often referred to as the invasion of India in 1944.
Now most military history accounts of the Ugo campaign state the sort of goals that
also don't really do a whole lot to keep Japan from losing the war, doesn't even really
do much to slow it down.
I mean, you know I love the encyclopedia of military history by our earnest Dupuy and
Trevor Dupuy.
They describe the Japanese goals this way.
By the way, Kawabe and Mutaguchi are two Japanese generals.
Quote, Kawabe had directed Mutaguchi to prepare for an offensive across the mountains into
eastern India with three of his divisions, which, with attached units, totaled nearly
100,000 veteran combat troops.
The objective was two-fold, they write, first, to seize the Imfalco Hema plain of Manipur,
the logical assembly area and base for any Allied invasion of Central Burma from India.
Second, to cut the railroad line into Assam, which passed through Manipur and which carried
almost all the supplies into China that they were sending.
End quote.
So this doesn't sound a whole lot different than the Ichigo campaign, does it, the sort
of sound military objectives that won't keep you from losing the war.
But there's a secondary consideration, or a lot of my history books will call it a
secondary objective, sometimes they'll have a whole paragraph outlying the seizing of
the railheads and all these military things and then add like a couple of words or a single
sentence at the end of the paragraph and say something to the effect of, oh yeah, and
maybe prompt some sort of a rebellion in India.
That little secondary consideration is the most interesting part of this plan to me.
And the most scary to a dedicated imperialist like Winston Churchill in his book, well series
of books, the history of the Second World War, written not that long after the Second
World War.
And sometimes you can see it as almost a window into the psychology of Winston Churchill.
Churchill doesn't talk at all about seizing this railhead or this.
He lays out what a, the head of the greatest colonial power in human history, his worry
is.
And he puts it this way.
They, meaning the Japanese, proposed to invade Eastern India and raise the flag of rebellion
against the British.
And quote, raise the flag of rebellion against the British.
What would that even mean?
Well, first we have to recall the global situation in 1944, a ton of the world, our colonial possessions
during this time period.
I mean, go look at a map, and a lot of the places that aren't colonial possessions are
de facto ones where they're sort of under the control of other people.
I mean, but almost all of Africa is colonized during this period.
Most of the places that the Japanese took over after the Pearl Harbor attacks, they didn't
take from the indigenous peoples.
They conquered those places from the colonial countries that had taken them over a long
time ago.
And the Japanese threw out the Dutch who were controlling places like Java and Sumatra.
They threw out the French who were in Indochina, right, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam today.
They threw the British out of Burma.
And now the British were in India.
And what if the Japanese could have cloud seeded a revolution there?
It's a weird thought, isn't it, cloud seeding a revolution?
But if you look at the histories of the late 1940s after the Second World War, the 1950s,
the 1960s, really into the 1970s, there are so many wars and struggles and political problems
that one could broadly classify as the unraveling of colonialism.
I mean, the Vietnam War is as a result of the unraveling of colonialism.
And so many of these places that will fall into these categories in the decades after
the Second World War have the seeds and the nucleus of those things in existence already.
I remember a history professor pointing out that one of the key amplifiers and accelerators
of this process was that the Japanese didn't just throw out these colonial powers when
they took over these countries from them.
They threw them out quickly and at the same time.
So instead of the Dutch having to leave, the Indies, and then 10 years later the French
having to leave Indochina, and then 10 years after that the British having to leave India,
the Japanese threw them all out in a matter of months and kept them out of those territories
for years.
And so when those countries evicted the Japanese and retook their colonial possessions, those
colonial possessions had not had their colonial masters there for some time.
Have to put those genies back in the bottle, especially when those areas weren't too happy
with the colonial masters already.
India is a perfect example of that.
By 1944, there are some seriously angry Indians and they're angry at the British.
Recall our conversation earlier on when we had talked about how the Indians who already
were for years before this time advocating for independence from Britain, how they even
found themselves in the Second World War, it was a slap in the face.
The British Viceroy just said, we're in, didn't ask Indian leadership or the top people in
India at all.
In 1942, when talks broke down on Indian independence, Mohandas Gandhi called Mahatma Gandhi, the
great soul, he starts the Quit India campaign, which says we're not going to cooperate with
the war effort for his troubles.
He gets thrown into jail along with most of the leadership of his political party.
There will be something like 100,000 Indians thrown into prison during this time period.
There will be riots, rebellions, protests that some of these protest troops will open
fire and hundreds, if not thousands, those numbers are debatable, will be killed.
There is a famine in Bengal in 1943, which we also mentioned, which will stretch into
1944, which it's a very controversial issue.
It's often blamed on war-related things.
And a guy who gets the lion's share of the blame on the part of some peoples, Winston
Churchill, and he's called genocidal by some Indians today, but millions will die in this.
It contributes to the mood.
Brigadier Peter Young, who wrote a book in the 1970s called A Dictionary of Battles,
claims that it was taking 100,000 British and Indian soldiers to keep the lid on unrest
in India during this time period.
So this is even before the Japanese make their move here, worth pointing out that India is
not the kind of place no country is, but especially not India that is of like mind about anything.
It is an enormous country and potentially the most diverse country I've ever seen, top
to bottom, side to side.
And it was even bigger in this period than it is now because its territories included
the modern states of Pakistan and Bangladesh as well.
Some of these peoples support the British.
There are princely groups, for example, that have an arrangement with the colonial powers.
The Muslims and the Hindus have different opinions on things.
We'd mentioned earlier there's 2.5 million Indian soldiers fighting for the Allies.
But there's also Indian soldiers fighting with the Japanese against the Allies.
It's a much smaller number.
But in this campaign, this invasion of India in 1944, they're going to play an important
role.
They're led by a charismatic Indian figure, his name is Subhas Chandra Bose.
And if you wanted to make a really poor analogy, and I apologize for this, but Gandhi and Martin
Luther King have some similarities because Martin Luther King modeled some of his tactics
on Gandhi's nonviolent approach.
Well, if you want to equate those two, then Subhas Chandra Bose is more like an unreformed
version of Malcolm X. His attitude is much more of, by any means necessary.
And whereas Gandhi eschews violence to get the British out of India, Bose embraces it.
And he's leading a bunch of Indian troops.
I think the Indian army fighting with the Japanese is like 16, 17,000 people.
I think he's leading 7 or 8,000 in this assault on India.
A lot of these Indians were POWs, and they were offered the chance.
You know, when Singapore fell, a lot of them fell into Japanese hands.
They were offered this chance to be in horrific POW conditions or join this army, and a lot
of them, unsurprisingly, did.
But Bose is involved in trying to tell the Japanese commander, listen, you defeat the
British military forces here, and I will go into India with these Indians, will carry
Indian flags of independence, and will raise India to rebellion.
What would happen if that actually occurred?
I mean, I can't think of any card the Japanese could play at this point in the war that would
create more, if you'll pardon the Star Wars reference, but more of a disturbance in the
Allied force than prompting a rebellion in India.
Now, because India is not of one mind, I don't think you'd ever see anything like India
just flip to the Axis powers, but you could easily see India descend into chaos, because
you'll see it after the Second World War during the chaos involved in independence.
And India is one of those countries that five minutes after it descends into chaos, you
have a humanitarian catastrophe on your hands.
If it's taken 100,000 British and Indian troops to keep India unrest under control without
any of that, what's it going to take if India goes sideways on the Allies?
What's more, if you really want to start talking about fascinating what ifs or counterfactuals,
why would this stop at India?
Those of you who remember the Arab Spring, not that long ago, will recall how amazing
it is to see how quickly an idea and a mood, if you will, can spread.
We once described ideas like an intellectual contagion, and there were many people who
said that the Arab Spring was only made possible because of modern-day communications.
But that's happened many times in the past.
Those of you who look at the famous year of 1848, the so-called year of revolutions and
how many revolutions sprung up in so many different countries at once, what if the Japanese
could cloud seed a revolution here on the part of a bunch of these colonially oppressed?
Is that a good way to put it?
Subject peoples.
It's a joker card to introduce a little chaos into the equation and see what happens.
Let's recall that the Japanese propaganda has been laying the groundwork for this for years.
That's why we brought it up much earlier in this conversation, I think maybe in the very
first segment where we talked about Pan-Asianism, which is an intellectual doctrine with a long
history and many countries have their own version of it, but the Japanese took a little
bit of that and injected it into their concept of an economic union, the famous Greater East
Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere.
They were consistently saying things like their troops were pushing for Asia for the
Asiatics.
We had quoted again in the first show, I think, that Japanese soldier who said that he was
fired up by his teacher back in, I think it was their version of high school, who was
talking about the white man and what he was doing in Asia to Asians, and that same teacher
talked about black folks in the United States, Native Americans in the United States, and
this Japanese soldier said he was fired up to free all these people.
In 1943, the Japanese make a big show of giving independence to a bunch of these countries,
like Burma, for example, although they're not really giving it to them.
It's a great propaganda tool.
Back in 1941, to name just one example, the Japanese Foreign Minister said, quote, Japan
is determined to shatter the white man's mastery over all the Orient, end quote.
If you are a British man in London reading the London Times in the morning or a Frenchman
in Paris doing the equivalent, that sends a chill up your spine.
But if you're a Vietnamese person in French Indochina or a Burmese person in Burma or
an Indian person in India, and many of those people, if you look at the rules sometimes,
not all places were the same, but they're living under rules that make them seem like
second-class citizens.
Some of the rules I've seen remind one of the Jim Crow South or apartheid South Africa.
Well, the Japanese driving out your colonial rulers from far away from your homeland might
look a lot more like liberation than conquest.
And if the Japanese had only been able to walk the walk a little bit better and live
up to their hype a little bit, who knows what they might have accomplished.
But as we've said over and over, they didn't.
And I don't know if that's because the entire thing was nothing, and this is what I learned
growing up by the way, but nothing but a fig leaf for Japanese brutal imperialism the
whole time, or whether it was a case of the Japanese right hand not knowing or caring
what the Japanese left hand was doing, oftentimes the military people seem a lot more dismissive
of this idea of Asia for the Asiatics, and the Japanese as the tip of the spear for Asian
independence than Japanese intellectuals, citizens, or soldiers do.
It's a cause worth dying for if you think about it though, I mean, many of the peoples
fighting on the good guy side and the bad guy side and a whole lot of wars think they're
fighting for good reasons, I'll never forget the Nazi daggers emblazoned with the phrase
God is with us.
Bottom line though, is that even though something like that is a huge long shot, the Japanese
might be trying to cloud seed a revolution here and that's a fascinating concept when
you're down to your last few cards.
If India went sideways on the British, you would have a circumstance where the great
supply center for the entire Asia war from the British Empire would be unusable or cut
off according to Brigadier Peter Young in his book A Dictionary of Battles, it's already
happening with sabotage and everything else.
Now as a guy who'd rather swing for the fences at this point in the war, if I'm the one playing
the Japanese geostrategic card hand or throw a Hail Mary pass or put all of my chips on
one last roll of the die or one spin of the roulette wheel, this idea appeals to me a lot
more than the Ichigo offensive, the problem of course is the way it's carried out.
The Japanese do something here that once again I try to figure out an American equivalent.
If an American army went into battle without enough supplies and the plan was to take a
chance on them starving to death, I wonder how the American people would react to that
and the reason I bring it up is because the Japanese are going to do this multiple times
in Burma.
There's a diversionary attack that they launched before the Yugo campaign in a place called
Erikan and the Japanese plan on not providing enough supplies for their troops.
I guess that's a good way to get away from a supply problem.
I just don't supply enough, but the country is difficult to supply regularly.
The Japanese will do the same thing in this Burma campaign where they send their troops
to attack infall and Kohima or the places and only give them something like 20 or 21
days worth of supplies.
The goal they say is to take what you need to live, the bullets you need to fight, the
food you need to eat, the medical supplies you need to take care of your wounded from
the enemy after you defeat them, which of course leads to the very interesting question,
what happens if you don't?
Or what happens if you don't defeat them in time to have what you need before the supplies
run out?
Well, it's a catastrophe, right?
And while General Mutaguchi is issuing press releases saying that this giant offensive
is going to change the whole complexion of the war, real ra-ra stuff, some of his divisional
commanders clearly see what's about to happen here.
In his book, Herohito's War, Francis Pike talks about one of the Lieutenant General
and I hope the name pronunciation is correct, Sato, and Sato's troops are going to have
to cross the Chindwin River, which is sort of one of these big dividing lines in order
to make these attacks.
And Pike writes, quote.
Lieutenant General Katoku Sato, commanding the 31st Infantry Division, had to transport
his troops a thousand miles before the offensive was launched.
He was deeply pessimistic about the plans for the campaign, though he was partially
mollified by promises of 250 tons of supplies before March 25th, and then 10 tons per week
afterwards.
None of these supplies actually arrived.
Before leaving the Chindwin, Pike writes, Sato toasted his fellow officers with champagne,
telling them, quote, I'll take the opportunity, gentlemen, of making something quite clear
to you.
Miracles apart, everyone is likely to lose his life in this operation.
It isn't simply a question of the enemy's bullets.
You must be prepared for death by starvation in these mountain fastnesses, end, quote.
Pike then says they were prophetic words, end, quote.
Now you don't see a lot of starvation.
I mean real like dying from hunger starvation amongst modern armies.
But in fairness to the Japanese, part of the problem here is the terrain.
It is awful country to try to get supplies to troops through.
So much of the Asia Pacific Theater is, isn't it?
And we'd used a line from several of my history books, sort of a saying amongst Japanese troops
comparing the relative merits of places they might find themselves serving in, like one
of them was that heaven was Java, hell was Burma, but no one returns alive from New Guinea.
And we were trying to point out when we said that how terrible a place to fight New Guinea
was.
Burma, if it's better, is only better by the nth degree, it has the same combination of
wonderful terrain types that make a place like New Guinea so difficult to fight in.
Heavy jungle with really high mountains, it's actually on the way to the Himalayan range.
So you get these 7,000 foot mountains with heavy jungle.
And the jungle is so heavy the British commander makes a mistake in thinking that the Japanese
won't be able to get large numbers of troops through it.
He's wrong about that.
But the Japanese won't be able to get lots of supplies through it, which contributes
to the starvation problem.
The other issue with terrain like this is it is absolutely made for disease.
New Guinea is one of the wettest places in the world, Burma's wetter, up to 5 inches
of rain a day during the monsoon season, and the monsoon season lasts half the year.
It pretty much shuts down military operations, which is part of the reason why you haven't
seen as much action in Burma, although there's been skirmishing and some things going on.
I mean, you really only have half a campaign season.
But the disease is as bad as the worst places in the Asia Pacific Theater.
Start with malaria and work your way down an exhaustive list.
The majority of casualties are caused by disease and not by enemy bullets.
And sometimes some of these units reach disease casualty rates of like 600%.
And 600% means that people are coming back from recuperation and getting it again, that
new people are being brought in as replacements, and then they're getting sick.
It is completely muddy once the rain starts, and there's only a few good modern roads.
And those places become the key points that are fought over.
The army that the Japanese are fighting is one of the most diverse in the world.
And I often try to imagine myself as a Japanese soldier during this time period from a small
island nation.
You find yourself in Burma and in the North, you're fighting Chinese troops and American
troops.
Sometimes Chinese and American troops together.
In this campaign, you're fighting the British Empire whose armies are some of the most diverse
ever fielded.
So you have your troops from Great Britain, of course, your Englishmen, your Scotsmen,
your Welshmen.
I'm sure there are some Irish guys there.
There always seem to be.
But then you have a ton of Indians from all over India.
You have the famous Gurkhas from Nepal who fight with the British, and then you have
a bunch of people from Sub-Saharan Africa, East and West Africa, the colonial regions
are called.
But those form a multitude of modern-day African countries.
The poor Japanese person is getting like a visual representation through the diversity
of the army that they're facing, of the depth of Allied power and resources right here.
Here's the way Yasmin Khan in her book India at War describes the kickoff of this campaign
when the Japanese in the first week of March push across the Chindwin River and start this
offensive.
Quote, The Japanese did make an ambitious incursion into Indian territory.
But by 1944, the Allies were fully prepared for it.
In March 1944, the Japanese pushed into the Northeast and advanced along the Imphal Dimapur
Road in an attempt to cut Imphal supply lines and to capture the strategically pivotal Kohima.
The 14th Army, an eclectic collection of nearly half a million troops, including British infantrymen,
Canadian and American pilots, the Assam Rifles, the King's African Rifles and troops from
the Gold Coast, had been trained, equipped and honed into a modern fighting force by
now.
During the infantry, morale was high, there was an effective organizational esprit de
corps, and a powerful air support gave the Allies a distinct advantage.
Nonetheless, the Japanese made a massive thrust, sending in 85,000 men, far more than had been
expected, and for a time it looked as if they might cut off and occupy Northeast India at
Kohima.
But in stark contrast to 1942, she writes, the Japanese quickly became overstretched.
As their supply lines were bogged down over hundreds of miles of difficult terrain, winding
back into Southeast Asia."
Basically what happens is the British are ready for this assault, but it just happens
sooner than they thought it was going to happen, in greater strength than they expected, and
more quickly than they'd accounted for, which puts them at a disadvantage initially.
The Japanese are able to get around the flanks of a bunch of units, they cut one major force
off that has to fight its way out, and then they basically surround their two areas that
they're after, Imphal and Kohima.
Kohima is a mountain village that's heavily jungled about 80 miles north of Imphal, and
the Imphal plain is a large, relatively open area.
The Japanese will basically put both of them under siege and several times try to assault
them and overrun them.
Part of the reason for the heroism here is that not only are they cut off, but the British
Imperial forces are badly outnumbered.
I think there's 15,000 to 20,000 Japanese attacking Kohima, for example, and something
like 1,800 defenders at Kohima.
This is actually, it's funny, this is both a little known affair, especially outside
the British Empire and the Japanese homeland today.
And yet it was voted in 2013, I believe, Britain's greatest battle of the modern era, beating
out such famous encounters as Napoleon's defeat at Waterloo and the British landings
at Normandy on D-Day.
And yet the victory was won by an army that's known as the Forgotten Army.
So does that tell you something?
There's a couple of reasons that might explain this.
Starting with the terrain, I mean, jungle and mountain terrain has a way of frustrating
large forces being used.
And in an earlier discussion when we were talking about Guadalcanal and places like
that, we quoted from Eric Bergeron's book, Touched with Fire, where he talks about how
so much of the fighting devolves down to like squads and companies and patrols and things
like that that are very different than what the large armies in, say, North Africa or
the Western or Eastern Front in Europe or even in Italy are dealing with.
In his book, Japan's Last Bid for Victory, The Invasion of India in 1944, author Robert
Lyman describes it this way, quote.
When Field Marshal Sir Archibald Wavell, the viceroy of India, visited headquarters 14th
Army in August 1944, he was perplexed by the nature of the fighting, describing it in a
letter to London as taking place strangely in what he called penny packets.
He was right.
The battle did not involve mass brigades and divisions, fighting in carefully choreographed
coherence on a perhaps traditional model, if a normally chaotic battlefield could ever
be described thus, but was instead, Lyman writes, a confused and disparate section and
platoon, sometimes company-level, struggle, fought at many different points of the compass
in the jungle, matted hills and valleys encircling the infall plain and the swampy terrain around
Bishonpur.
None of the land battles were directly interconnected.
The struggles for the North and Northeast, the South and Southeast being conducted largely
independent by both attacker and defender, end quote.
And that the fact that battle is a very strange term to use for 20th century large scale conflict,
because it's so different than all the previous eras that came before it, when a battle usually
meant one really horrible day.
The really terrible battles in human history up until the modern era are two or three days
long.
Now we're not talking about sieges, which can go on for months or even years, but a battle
is generally something on a small enough area where if you can get above the fray and the
dust and the commotion and the chaos, get up to a hill, maybe with a little spyglass,
you can usually see the whole thing, not here, not in the 20th century.
You're better off referring to these things to avoid confusion, and they often are referred
to instead of battles as operations.
Operations that are the sum total of thousands of potentially fatal tasks.
So when you read the accounts of a veteran in these modern operations, their entire war
experience may be when they ran into a concealed gun in a hill a mile away from the road that
they're on that shuts down road traffic until they can figure out a way to outflank the
gun and take it out, right?
That's one of those thousands of little potentially fatal tasks that when you add them all together
equals an operation like the Yim Falkohima campaign.
But it sure makes it less dramatic in the big picture sense and much harder to follow.
But in the small unit sense, it is as dramatic and horrifying as any encounter you'll find
in the war, maybe worse.
If you look at the big picture timeline in the first week of March, the Japanese crossed
the Chinwin River, as we had said, they blow past the flanks of one major unit surrounded
and it has to fight its way out.
Then they advance on Infall and Kohima and manage to put those places under siege.
If this had been an earlier war, those places would be cut off and the British and imperial
troops in those places would begin to run out of ammunition.
They wouldn't have any reinforcements.
They would run out of medical supplies.
They would run out of food.
And that would be that.
The difference here, though, is, and this is what frustrates the Japanese, the Allies
have the ability to supply the cutoff areas by air.
This is huge and it's a new development, right?
It was only really in the Second World War that the capability existed to even try this
and past attempts had been hit or missed to say the least.
I mean, when the German army is surrounded by the Soviets at Stalingrad, the Luftwaffe
tries to fly in supplies and they can't manage to provide anywhere near enough for a starving
army running out of ammunition that has to surrender.
But here there are American air assets that have been flying supplies over what's called
the hump, which are a bunch of mountain ranges, into China.
It's also called the Skyway to Hell.
And the British are able to borrow some of these big, heavy supply planes to add to their
Spitfire and Hurricane fighters, which they're using in a mostly ground attack role, to change
the entire equation and begin to supply their cutoff troops with what they need to keep
fighting.
And recall, the Japanese have only a limited amount of this stuff themselves.
They can't do the air supply thing.
And if they can't take the supplies of the people that they cut off and are fighting
at Imphal and Kohima, they're going to run out of supplies themselves.
I like the way the British general in charge of this operation describes it.
His name, by the way, is Lieutenant General William Slim.
He's a very fine general.
He cops to his mistakes initially here, underestimating the Japanese speed and size and whether or
not they can get through the jungle with their troops, but then explains really the entire
battle in the terms that will decide it.
And he says, quote,
As I struggled hard to redress my errors and to speed by rail and air, these reinforcements,
I knew that all depended on the steadfastness of the troops already meeting the first impetus
of attack.
If they could hold until help arrived, all would be well.
If not, we were near disaster, end quote.
So that's what has to happen and the air supply helps.
But bottom line, it's a question of heroism.
And I am not a glory guy when it comes to war.
Put me in the camp of the William Tecumseh Shermans, the American general who had said
that war's glory is all moonshine, I don't think killing other people's glorious.
But I think surviving against incredible odds, putting up with the privation and the hardship,
enduring the unendurable for the sake of whatever is motivating you to do so can often be heroic.
And it's a shame that things like the colonial overtones, or if you're the Japanese or the
Germans, the evil cause in which you're fighting, that that somehow or sometimes overshadows
the heroism of the troops involved.
Rarely do you read combat accounts where the troops are talking about things like a German
soldier saying he's ready to fight and die for more Laban's realm for Germany, right?
Or an American who's fighting and dying for the larger cause of freedom for the world,
or a Japanese soldier who's fighting and dying to conquer and control other Asian peoples,
or even a British soldier from Kent, maybe, or a place like that ready to lay down his
life so Britain can maintain its colonial dominance of a place like India.
That's generally not what it's about.
At bottom line, of course, it's about kill or be killed.
But above that, you'll read so many accounts where soldiers are fighting for their comrades,
or their unit, or the esprit de corps of the group that they belong to, or maybe just
to not let down those other people that are depending on them.
I mean, it's very baseline stuff.
Your worldview and your horizon shrinks and the lens you view things through is very narrow
and immediate.
So I don't like the idea that, and this is a problem in India.
I read that the Indians have a hard time sometimes trying to figure out how to portray
this whole affair, because it's so overshadowed with the colonial question, where Indian troops
fighting with the British mercenaries, fighting for the colonial master, or were they heroes
fighting for post-war Indian independence?
I mean, it's a complicated question.
And as John Toland wrote in his book, The Rising Sun, this whole Burma campaign is an
ideological and geographic nightmare, but that shouldn't overshadow what was done there
by all the soldiers on all sides.
I mean, read some of the accounts.
First of all, the Japanese threw themselves at the enemy, wave after wave, sometimes
suicidally.
The British general Slim was very critical of the throwing away of Japanese lives.
He also had a true admiration for the Japanese as a fighting people, because, well, let me
just quote what's said in Robert Lyman's book, Japan's Last Mid for Victory, quote.
With the difficulties posed by the climate came a stark reminder to any British Commonwealth
troops who had not yet experienced the toughness of their adversary, of just how extraordinarily
fit and physically hardy were the Japanese, how committed they were to achieving their
objectives, how apparently unconcerned they were with regard to human comforts, and how
determined they were to do with the emperor through their officers demanded or die in
the attempt.
Repeated, fanatical, and suicidal attacks were thrown at the British, Indian, and Gurkha
defenders, and counterattacks had to face the toughest defensive positions imaginable,
prepared by men whom General Slim was to describe as warrior ants.
As the days went by, the battlefield became one large charnel house, littered with bodies
in various states of decomposition, as it was rarely easy to recover and bury the dead.
You can even look, by the way, at the photographs, and as the battle goes on, the areas that
are highly fought over go from heavy, lush jungle where you can't see five feet in front
of your face to terrain that looks like First World War battlefields, especially the ones
that used to be forests but have been shelled into wasteland.
General Slim actually says that the battle for Kohima is the only one he'd seen in the
Second World War that reminded him of the First World War.
Hard to know which is different.
Kohima, the British forces, the imperial forces were so badly outnumbered that they eventually
get pushed onto one hill, something like 350 square meters, and they will be fighting
over a tennis court, an actual, it's called the tennis court, where the Japanese are on
one side of the tennis court fighting British imperial forces on the other side of the tennis
court and they're throwing grenades at each other for days and days and days.
It's not glorious, but it's heroic on both sides.
In his book, Hirohito's War, author Francis Pike tries to give a sense of what the fighting
was like and writes, quote,
Most famously, there was a five day tussle across the tennis courts belonging to the
deputy commissioner's bungalow.
Soldiers dug in on either side, had to live through torrential rain, and eat, shit, and
sleep in their trenches.
The courts were covered in the bloated bodies of slain Japanese soldiers.
Enormous black flies filled the air.
The stench of death was gut-wrenching.
Major John Nettlefield observed, quote,
The place stank.
The ground everywhere was plowed up with shell fire, and human remains lay rotting as the
battle raged over them.
Flies swarmed everywhere and multiplied with incredible speed.
Then wretched as they dug in, end quote, Pike continues, quote.
Hand grenades rather than tennis balls criss-crossed the courts.
The resilience of the defenders proved the morale that General Slim had instilled in
his troops.
In one notable engagement, John Harmon, son of the millionaire owner of Lundy Island, a
Lance Corporal with the Queens Royal West Kent Regiment, single-handedly charged a Japanese
trench, killed its five occupants before being fatally shot returning to his own lines.
Dying in his company commander's arms, he gave his last words,
I got the lot.
It was worth it, end quote.
But this is unsustainable for the Japanese, because unlike their opponents, they are running
out of supplies, and not just food, but ammunition, bullets, shells, medical stuff, everything.
When you look at the numbers that the Japanese units were reduced to, I have a hard time
finding similar numbers in any conflict anywhere, because normally units break and run before
they hit those kinds of numbers.
I mean, in one situation that Pike recalls, one soldier says that the losses had been
dreadful, the regiment had started out 3800 strong, and now just had a few hundred men
left and many of them invalids.
General Sato asks his superior, General Muduguchi, a man often referred to as a blockhead by
some of his subordinates, permission to retreat, he's denied.
He asks again, and he's denied, and then says quote.
This is shameful, Muduguchi should apologize for his own failure to the dead soldiers and
the Japanese people.
End quote.
General Muduguchi's response is to sack General Sato and send a subordinate with a sword to
him so he can kill himself, which Sato refuses to do.
Muduguchi will do the unthinkable here and sack three of his divisional generals, one
for incompetence, one for ill health, and Sato for disobedience.
Sato doesn't care.
He orders his troops to retreat right around the same time that the monsoons open up.
The Japanese on the defensive are just as difficult for the allies to deal with as they
are on the offensive, and they have to be dug out position by position at huge cost
to the allied soldiers who have to do this.
Author Robert Lyman tries to give a sense of how hard it was to dig the Japanese out
of these defensive positions.
He says that the British imperial forces ate away slowly at the Japanese defenses and said
quote.
Nowhere were sudden gains made, but by gradual perseverance and the application of focused
firepower, the Japanese were destroyed, bunker by bunker, trench by trench.
Rarely did the Japanese run or retreat, remaining to die where they fought.
Lieutenant Lindhorn Heiget of the Dorsets considered the Japanese to be magnificent
trench warriors.
Quote, every army in the world talks about holding positions to the last man, virtually
no other army, including the Germans ever did, but the Japs did.
Their positions were well-sighted and they had a good eye for ground.
They relied on rushing and shouting in the attack.
We thought they were formidable fighting insects and savages.
We took few prisoners, about one or two in the whole war.
We wanted prisoners, but wounded men would have a primed grenade under them, so stretcher
barons were very careful, end quote.
Whatever his thoughts about the capabilities of Japanese commanders, Slim was profuse in
his admiration for Japanese troops, quote, there can be no question of the supreme courage
and hardyhood of the Japanese soldiers who made the attempts.
I know of no army that could have equaled them, end quote.
Reading of the Japanese experiences in the retreat is horrifying.
They literally are starving to death.
When the skies open up and the rains start, it turns into a wetter version of Napoleon's
retreat from Moscow.
The troops are committing suicide left and right.
The Japanese referred to the road out as the road of human remains.
It's often translated into the road of bones.
There are many stories of soldiers taking grenades, sometimes in pairs, and they will
embrace their comrade and blow up a grenade between them.
There are medical orderlies injecting wounded troops with something to kill them quickly.
The eating grass, potatoes, snails, lizards, snakes, monkeys, anything they can get their
hands on.
It's one of the worst retreats I've ever read about.
When it's over, the Japanese between the fighting and Kohima, infall, infall was under siege
by the way for like 88 days before it was broken, and the diversionary attack in the
Arakhan area, about 65,000 Japanese die.
Most of those fatalities occurred during the retreat, and were caused by either suicide,
disease, or starvation.
The Allies suffered a fraction of the number of deaths, and according to author John Toland,
quote,
In all, 65,000 men died, more than two and a half times the number lost on Guadalcanal,
and about as many as fell on Leyte.
Muduguchi, his chief of staff, and senior staff officers were relieved of their posts,
as was Kowabbe and his chief of staff.
The command shakeup, and the destruction of the 15th Army, the Japanese 15th Army, infected
every other unit in Burma, and by the end of the year, Japanese rule was at the point
of collapse, end quote.
This is one of the worst defeats in Japanese history.
Some historical sources call it the worst defeat they'd ever suffered up till this time.
And yet interestingly enough, this is considered to be a subsidiary front in the war, because
it's not a decisive one.
As we said, if you're going to play a bunch of cards, what can this card do to forestall
Japanese defeat, which is coming at an increasingly rapid pace from the other geographic direction
entirely from the Pacific.
The Pacific was the last thing we were talking about when we left off the last segment.
We were in mid-1944.
The Americans had just taken Guam, Saipan, Tinney, and the Mariana's Islands.
And before the last Japanese snipers are cleared out of the trees, the American naval construction
engineering people, the Seabees, are out there building airfields.
And this means the Japanese are on the clock, and they know it.
They can do the math.
They realize these islands are probably in range.
Round trip of America's brand new super bomber, the B-29, never used against Germany, by the
way, looks like an early 1950s Cold War bomber, rather than a Second World War bomber.
As soon as they can get them to these islands, get all of the necessary support materials
together, and these airfields finished, the bombing starts, and the Japanese do not have
to imagine what it might be like to have their cities bombed.
They can look at real photographs of what's happening to their Axis partner Germany right
now.
By 1945, by the end of the war, I believe amongst mid and large-sized German cities,
only Heidelberg is significantly untouched.
I'm going from memory here, but as I recall, Heidelberg, special in that regard.
You want to go see what Germany used to look like?
You got to go to Heidelberg unless you want to see a recreation.
I was in Munich, and they've rebuilt some of it to look just like it looked before,
but it has a feel to me when you're used to the old buildings of like a movie set.
But what are they supposed to do?
That generation in Germany created the conditions where the cultural, architectural heritage
of Germans forever into the future is gone, and they're not the only ones who suffer.
It's a cultural monument that we all suffer because it's gone.
It's significant that one generation of human beings could cost... I mean, it's the same
thing Churchill looked at when he saw the films of the German cities and rubble and
wondered if this was a bridge too far to win the war.
But if you look at how events unfolded, it all is pretty understandable.
You can see how people got sucked into this idea that anything's better than losing this
war, total war, and anything means using everything you have.
And there are a lot of people arguing that this bombing stuff shortens wars.
And as we've seen, the human being lawnmower is at work at all times every day, racking
up its daily totals.
If you shut the war down months early, well, that's that many daily totals that don't go
into the fiery furnace.
It's logical insanity is the way it's been described.
If the Japanese were reasonable people, they would surrender now.
See, there's many points in 1944 where you go, okay, now would be a really good time
to spare your cities and the cultural heritage of the Japanese people, and all that for the
future, but part of what makes the Japanese so compelling, I mean, 500 years from now
when the young people are reading the history and getting interested in the subject, Japan
is going to be, I think, compelling the way that many other people throughout the past
who were willing to fight for their country, right?
This is a kind of a patriotic sort of a feeling taken to extremes and then becoming poisonous.
And we talked about this earlier in this series and we call it super patriotism.
The Japanese are going to go to lengths that you admire because it shows how far the human
spirit can be pushed, right?
It's interesting to see some of our extremes.
At the same time, it's debilitating to watch because it's often being used in a way that
seems wasteful, doesn't have to happen.
And that's why sometimes you'll read these books about the kamikaze, for example.
And they will make it beautiful in a Japanese cultural sense and talk about the falling
of the cherry blossoms and all these sorts of things in order to put some sort of an
artistic or spiritual coating on the idea of a young man with his whole life ahead of
him flying his airplane, extra loaded with bombs into an allied ship.
Now, I've read the letters from kamikaze pilots and you get all sorts of different people
who do that for all sorts of different reasons.
It's not this monolithic fanatical robot image we thought of them when I was growing up,
not at all.
But there's a number of people out there that think that this is what you should be doing
if you love your country, right?
Same thing these Japanese soldiers did when they would strap themselves and put a mine
on their back and then run under an American or a British tank and blow themselves up.
Most armies don't do that.
The Japanese are like everyone else only more so, right?
And the B-29 countdown has begun once these Marianas Islands have fallen into U.S. hands.
The question of what to do next is paramount at this particular time and the high command
of the allies disagrees over what this should be.
And the main disagreement is within the United States chain of command.
The Army and the Navy have different ideas on how the rest of the war should go.
Both sides would like to sort of end up at least off the coast of Japan as the end destination.
But the path to get there, well, the Navy has one idea under Admiral Ernest King who's
a tough customer.
And the Army in this situation, he's not the general of the Army, that would be George Marshall,
but the guy whose opinion matters in this situation is our old friend Douglas, the situation
MacArthur, who comes to Hawaii in mid-1944 for a big strategy conference over what to
do next.
And Franklin Delano Roosevelt's going to be there, which is a huge deal.
I mean, when you look at how really, really sick Franklin Roosevelt is in mid-1944, I
mean, it is not too much to say that he is dying.
I've read a bunch of good books lately that talk about how pretty much everyone who hadn't
seen him for a while is shocked when they do.
Even MacArthur wrote that after seeing him, he just knew he didn't have a long time left.
And by the way, Roosevelt is running for office at this time for his fourth.
No other president has ever been elected more than twice or run more than twice.
I mean, Roosevelt is dying and he's going for his fourth term.
I love the whole sort of reality series mood that is cast when this conference kicks off
because Roosevelt arrives, the Navy's waiting for them, because when the president shows
up, everybody salutes a lot and everything's been prepared, everybody's ready, and Douglas
MacArthur is not there at the meeting with the president.
He doesn't show up for 40 minutes.
And I love the way, author Jonathan W. Jordan describes it in his book, American Warlords.
President Roosevelt is on the USS Baltimore with the Navy guys and they've been waiting
for like 40 minutes and that's where the narrative picks up, quote.
40 minutes after Baltimore's gang plank was lowered to the pier, the air was split by the
shriek of a police siren, a motorcycle escort appeared, leading what Sam Rosenman remembered
as, quote, the longest open car I've ever seen.
In front was a chauffeur in khaki and in the back, one lone figure and, quote, Jordan continues,
quote.
That figure wore a crushed generals hat and a brown leather jacket.
Mr. Ketch had arrived.
Let me stop the narrative real quick.
Mr. Ketch was the code name or something like that for MacArthur that the president and
the other side had.
So this was Mr. Ketch.
Mr. Ketch had arrived.
MacArthur's car drove to the gang plank to the wild applause of the crowd.
He bounded up the ramp, stopping halfway to acknowledge another round of applause, then
strode onto the cruiser's deck.
He saluted the commander-in-chief before shaking Roosevelt's outstretched hand.
Hello, Douglas, said Roosevelt, what are you doing with that leather jacket on?
It's darn hot today.
Well, I've just landed from Australia, MacArthur said with a smile.
It's pretty cold up there, end quote.
Jordan points out that MacArthur had actually had time to shave and get ready and the whole
thing.
He wore the leather jacket for effect.
That's his branding, like the corn cob pipe and the crushed hat and he's in Hawaii and
he shows up in the whole garb because he's in costume, I mean, uniform.
He's an interesting...
See, and we've said this before, you have to acknowledge, I think anyway, Douglas MacArthur's
military talent.
Sometimes he does extraordinary things, but he is an interesting guy.
Talks about himself in the third person, as we said before.
No one who talks about himself in the third person is your normal kind of customer.
Just gonna make a broad brush statement about that.
George likes spicy chicken, little Seinfeld joke there for you Seinfeld fans.
MacArthur's favorite pronoun is I and it's the one he used when he was forced out of
the Philippines by the Japanese way back in 1942, I shall return.
It's one of the most famous phrases of all time, but as we pointed out at the time, there
were a bunch of historians and contemporaries who were saying, he should have said the United
States will return or something, but he made it personal and because he made it personal,
it's one of the things that goes into his argument that he makes at the strategy conference
about what should happen next, well, he says, we should go back to the Philippines, I'm
going to return and he gave a whole host of good reasons why that should be the way to
Japan.
Let's take the Philippines, we promised those people, we have POWs in there that the Japanese
will kill, a lot of good reasons, but part of it was he made a promise and this was wrapped
up in his destiny somehow and he wanted to go through the Philippines and then you go
up toward Okinawa, which is, it's Japanese but not Japanese, it depends on who you talk
to, talk to an Okinawan, they have a different opinion sometimes, but it's considered a
home island and then from Okinawa you keep going, but what the Americans need is a place
that can serve the same role that Great Britain serves in the Normandy landings, you know
on D-Day you had a big place where you could get all your troops together and all the supplies
you need and build up and then boom, cross the water and you're there and your supply
hubs right off the shore, the problem is there's nothing right off the shore from Japan, so
if you take the Philippines and you decide that this is going to be your big supply hub
where you can gather troops together for the eventual invasion of Japan, it's still a
long sea ride to Japan from there.
The Navy, Ernest King, Admiral Ernest King has sent, he wanted to come himself but maybe
the actual face-to-face meeting at a strategy session between a guy like MacArthur and a
guy like King, and we talked about what they were like earlier, might have been too many
sparks for Franklin Delano Roosevelt to keep from blowing up, so he sends a subordinate
since Admiral Nimitz, who he then accuses of not having a spine, he'll never represent
things against him, he'll get eaten up by Douglas MacArthur was basically the gist
of his statements and Douglas MacArthur prevails in the strategy session because the Navy wants
to go take Formosa, which is modern-day Taiwan, and use that as the big supply base that they
can start the Japan attack from, MacArthur wins out though in the long run on this deal,
but that doesn't stop the Navy advance, the island hopping that's been going on now for
a long time, and the Marianas Islands campaign we just talked about is the latest island
hop, so that's going to continue through the Central Pacific too.
So think of two routes of approach to Japan, MacArthur's going to go up through the Philippines
and that route, the US fleet and the Marines and some Army help is going to go through
the Central Pacific, you know, next major stop on the list, Iwo Jima, but there's going
to be a little quick thing that the Navy wants to take care of first, or I've actually read
a lot about this because it's controversial, how an island chain like the island chain
that contains the island of Pellilou, how that ends up on the to-do list eventually,
because there's a lot of history that suggests that it was supposed to be crossed off or
that it never should have, it's interesting, and the reason it actually matters is because
what will happen on Pellilou is not what is expected to happen on Pellilou, and when things
go wrong, people ask questions for a long time afterwards, right, when you lose a lot
of Marines, people start going, well, was this trip really necessary?
And Pellilou is controversial that way, Pellilou is a little island, it's a coral reef basically,
sort of off the coast of the Philippines a ways, and one of the arguments for why this
was necessary is it was going to take these islands so they couldn't use air bases against
MacArthur when he lands in the not too distant Philippines.
Well, the prediction is that they'll go in there, they'll take these islands in two days,
maybe four days, should be a sharp little fight, a little like Tarawa, so it's going
to be rough for a very short period of time, but maybe really rough, and instead the situation
on Pellilou turns into a kind of disaster.
It turns into, I've seen it called the worst combat that the U.S. Marines ever saw.
I think that's arguable, but the invasion of Pellilou is something that reminds me of
what the Japanese had wanted to do in terms of their grand strategy of taking all these
islands and then forcing the Americans and the British and the Australians and the New
Zealanders and the South Africans on and on and on to take them back at super high cost,
because the Japanese were going to reinforce these places, have guns everywhere and steal
doors and it was going to be like something of a James Bond film, but they never really
did that on the outer islands very much.
On Pellilou though, it's sort of, let's call it the model home for what the Japanese would
have liked to have seen, all these islands built up to a level of.
I mean, when you have metal doors that open up and a gun pops up and fires and goes back
inside and the metal doors close, I'm calling that James Bond-ish, that's the kind of stuff
that the people who landed on Pellilou got to deal with, that and the fact that they're
on an absolute coral atoll, it is not dirt, it is rock, and it is usually around 110 degrees
or more in the daytime on a rock.
This is one of those campaigns, by the way, that you wish there was more visual material
to see, you know, photographs, movies, those kind of things, but I read that because the
military had told the media that this was going to be over in two or four days, write
a quick, short, sharp fight.
Most of them chose to go elsewhere, right?
There's lots of other stories in the Pacific, how about MacArthur planning to come back
to the Philippines, right?
We can go cover that, and so you don't get Pellilou because you didn't know Pellilou was
going to be what Pellilou is.
One of the Marine Corps, the U.S. Marine Corps' toughest battles ever, and when you see the
lineage of the U.S. Marines from the Second World War, it is one of those place of honor
sorts of battles, but it wasn't supposed to be.
There's lots of good accounts.
The Marines land on September 15th, 1st Marine Regiment of the 1st Marine Division.
The 5th is there, the 7th is there, the 11th is providing artillery support, and they're
expecting the Japanese to do what the Japanese have done on the other islands, and the Americans
are doing what they've done just better, right?
Using the beach with heavy-duty weapons from the cruisers offshore and the battleships
offshore, and then the bombers come in, strafe the beaches, bomb the heck out of everything,
but the Japanese don't do what they've done in their other battles.
No bonsai charges on the beach to waste away their strength, none of that sort of stuff.
They're going to oppose the American landing on the beach lightly, but then require the
Americans to go and get them in their prepared positions in what is one of the better fortresses
you will ever see that was designed by Japanese engineers, more than 500 tunnels on the island,
many of which had been used for mining purposes, so they're interconnected and they go to logical
places and they're designed in a sort of strategic sense.
There are going to be times on this island where the Americans can hear and know that
the Japanese are under them, in the ground, and they just can't even get to them.
In his book Eagle Against the Sun, Ronald H. Specter has a good overview of the start
of this thing, and he writes, quote, by the way, the island, like two miles wide, I think
it's six square miles overall, tiny, quote, the Americans had little information about
the terrain on Peleleu, except some inadequate aerial photos.
As a result, they failed to recognize its potential for defense.
The northern peninsula of the small island was a series of jagged coral ridgelines, honeycombed
with natural caves, which the Japanese had improved into almost impregnable fortresses.
Blast walls of reinforced concrete or oil drums filled with coral protected the entrances
to the caves, which often faced each other from the sheer walls of twisting gorges and
were thus mutually supporting.
In the larger cave fortresses, he writes, the Japanese had installed electric lighting,
ventilating systems, stairs, telephones, and radio communications.
One large cave was discovered, now he's quoting somebody, quote, to have nine staggered levels
and so many entrances that it was all but impossible to count them, end quote.
The marines are going to land and assault right into the teeth of defenses that remind
me of the kind of defenses that the British and the French soldiers sometimes had to assault.
Head on on the Western front in the First World War, you know, prepared German trenches
that had had the guns sighted and crossfire set up and barbed wire put up.
I mean, this is, it's not the sort of fight you want marines in necessarily because they're
fast moving, lightly armed and equipped people designed to, you know, get in quickly, bypass
strong points.
This is going to throw them the right into the teeth of all this.
This is where some of the criticism, by the way, of Pellilou comes in.
And this is where the war memoirs take over.
There are some fantastic accounts of Pellilou.
The best, of course, is one of the best war memoirs of all time.
It's called With the Old Breed at Pellilou in Okinawa by E. B. Sledge, Eugene Sledge.
They've made movies from Sledge's writing now, but it was never intended for this.
This was therapeutic for this Marine, wrote it for himself from notes he took during the
fighting for his family.
He's one of the most attractive, maybe that's a better way to put it, sort of individuals
you will ever meet.
He's dead now, but he became a biology professor after the war, soft-spoken southern guy.
You can't, in your mind's eye picture, the old man, Eugene Sledge, doing the things the
young man, the young Marine, Eugene Sledge had to do and live through.
But that's part of what his war memoir is all about.
That all these people were like him, and that the war made them do and live through the
most outrageously extreme things.
Sledge talks about the hitting the beach moment, which he says is like cinematic, says, you
know, the Amtrak is moving from the ships toward the shore, and one of the other soldiers
pulls out some whiskey and says, well, this is it, boys, and then Sledge says, just like
in the movies, but once they hit the beach, it's not like the movies at all.
Sledge writes quote, shells crashed all around, fragments tore and word, slapping on the sand
and splashing into the water a few yards behind us.
The Japanese were recovering from the shock of our pre-landing bombardment.
Their machine gun and rifle fire got thicker, snapping viciously overhead in increasing volume.
Our Amtrak, the amphibious vehicle, spun around and headed back out as I reached the end of
the beach and flattened on the deck.
The world was a nightmare of flashes, violent explosions, and snapping bullets.
Most of what I saw blurred.
My mind was benumbed by the shock of it.
I glanced back across the beach and saw a duck, a rubber-tired amphibious truck, roll
up on the sand at a point near where we had just landed.
The instant the duck stopped, it was engulfed in a thick, dirty black smoke as a shell scored
a direct hit on it.
Plants of debris flew into the air.
I watched with that odd, detached fascination peculiar to men under fire as a flat metal
panel about two feet square spun high into the air and then splashed into shallow water
like a big pancake.
I didn't see any men get out of the duck.
He continues.
Up and down the beach and out on the reef, a number of Amtrak's and ducks were burning.
Japanese machine gun bursts made long splashes on the water as though flaying it with some
giant whip.
The geysers belched up relentlessly where the mortar and artillery shells hit.
I caught a fleeting glimpse of a group of marines leaving a smoking Amtrak on the reef.
Some fell as bullets and fragments splashed among them.
Their buddies tried to help them as they struggled in knee-deep water.
I shuddered and choked.
A wild, desperate feeling of anger, frustration, and pity gripped me.
It was an emotion that always would torture my mind when I saw men trapped and was unable
to do anything but watch as they were hit.
My own plight forgotten momentarily.
I felt sickened to the depths of my soul.
I asked God, why, why, why?
I turned my face away and wished that I were imagining it all.
I had tasted the bitterest essence of war, the sight of helpless comrades being slaughtered,
and it filled me with disgust.
End quote.
In Matthew A. Rezel's book, The Things Our Fathers Saw, where he interviews veterans
throughout the book, he interviews Pelaloo veterans, including 19-year-old Marine Dan
Lawler, who was also in the wave that attacked Pelaloo and says this, quote,
We hit the island, which was only four miles long by two miles wide.
I was in the first assault wave.
It was hell, and everyone was scared.
It was an awful feeling.
As we disembarked, I looked up and down the beaches, and all you could hear was screaming,
and men were falling and dying.
There was artillery, mortar, and machine gun fire constantly.
We fought all day, and by evening we reached the airstrip about a half-mile from the beach.
We set up for the night along the sides of the airstrip.
The temperature was from 102 degrees at night to 120 degrees in the daytime.
We went in with two canteens of water, that's a gallon of water.
This island was two degrees off the equator.
By noon time, we were out of water.
End quote.
Rizel also quotes another Marine from that day named John Murray, who says that the first
thing he saw after he landed was a Japanese machine gunner chained to his machine gun,
and he says they were not going to give up.
In the last segment, we had quoted a line from Paul Fusel's wonderful book on war called
War Time, and he had a whole chapter called, The Real War Will Never Get Into The Books.
It was based on a saying that soldiers had, and the problem with the real war getting
into the books is that no country likes to show their own soldiers getting chewed up.
I have a book called Life Goes to War, and the second war awards this book of all the
Life Magazine photos, and you'll occasionally see dead Americans tastefully shown, but they
have no problems showing thousands and thousands of dead Japanese after a Banzai attack.
But what hit me as a child, who was interested in war, was the first real stuff that I ran
into that didn't sanitize it from the American side, right?
You go around playing in your army helmet, in your army clothes, and it looks all glorious,
and then you run into some of the artwork of a guy like Life Magazine's Tom Lee, Lee's
a famous artist, and he was in the second wave at Pelaloo.
He landed about an hour after the first wave, and Lee had up until this time been doing
the same sort of artwork that we could call today sort of propaganda artwork, but Pelaloo
changed him.
I have an account from author James Jones, who was in the Pacific War, and he's talking
about these artists, and he says this about Tom Lee, quote,
Lee was one of the artists put into the field by Life Magazine after their takeover of the
defunct army program.
Various of his works appeared in the magazine, and up until the time he went into Pelaloo,
most of them could be pretty well classified as excellently done, but high-grade propaganda.
There was very little American blood, very little tension, very little horror.
Clearly it was what could be called the Bravo America, and this is your boy, type of war-art.
His almost photographic style easily lent itself to that type of work, as did the styles
of Rockwell and others.
But something apparently happened to Lee after going into Pelaloo, Jones writes.
The pictures painted out of his Pelaloo experience show a new approach.
There is the tension of terror in the bodies here, and the distorted facial expressions
of the men under fire show it, too.
If his propagandistic style has not changed, his subject matter certainly has.
End quote.
I ran into this as a kid seeing a couple of Lee's most famous pieces of work.
One was called the 2000-yard stair, where Lee had done a piece of art showing what soldiers
look like after combat for a long time.
Today we would recognize it as what's sometimes called combat neuroses.
Tom Lee wrote about the painting that he did of the Marine with the so-called 2000-yard
stair, and said quote.
He, meaning the Marine, left the States 31 months ago.
He was wounded in his first campaign.
He has had tropical diseases.
He half sleeps at night, and gouges japs out of holes all day.
Two-thirds of his company has been killed or wounded.
He will return to attack this morning.
How much can a human being endure?
End quote.
Lee also is the one who painted a painting called The Price.
This was a very controversial piece.
When it was published by Life Magazine, E&W Toll says people complained and canceled
their subscriptions because it showed a Marine suffering what a Marine really suffered.
Lee was accused of embellishing and over-dramatizing something which, if you think about it, sounds
silly.
He's over-dramatizing war, and Lee fought back saying every single painting he did showed
what he really saw.
The painting, The Price, I'm not the only guy, by the way, I was doing research on this
and found that other people were similarly affected.
If you're not used to seeing your own side as war victims, when an artist paints it and
this showed a photo, almost photorealistic quality, of a Marine who had been hit by
mortar fire on the beach at Pelallu as Tom Lee watched and his arm is destroyed, and half
his face is gone, and Lee described it this way.
He said, quote, I fell flat on my face just as I heard the whoosh of a mortar that I knew
was too close.
A red flash stabbed at my eyeballs.
About 15 yards away on the upper edge of the beach, it smashed down four men from our boat.
One figure seemed to fly to pieces.
With terrible clarity, I saw the head and one leg sail into the air.
I got up, ran a few steps, and fell into a small hole as another mortar burst through
dirt on me.
Lying there in terror, looking longingly up the slope for better cover, I saw a wounded
man near me, staggering in the direction of the LVTs, the landing vehicles.
His face was half bloody pulp, and the mangled shreds of what was left of an arm hung down
like a stick.
As he bent over in his stumbling, shock-crazy walk, the half of his face that was still
human had the most terrifying look of abject patience I've ever seen.
He fell behind me in a red puddle on the white sand.
End quote.
But to me, this isn't gratuitous to say these things.
This is what makes what these marines did, and yes, let's be fair, what the Japanese
resisting them also did, what it is.
If you have some easy run and nobody gets hurt, well, it's a different style of thing,
isn't it?
The reason Pellilu elicits the kind of admiration and horror that it does is because that's
not what happens.
These men have to see things like this or experience it and then keep going.
And as I said, I'm not a glory person.
I don't think shooting and killing other people is glorious, but there is something heroic
about being able to keep going when assaulted by these sorts of sights, sounds, and possible
damage to yourself.
And I break, by the way, the heroism down to two separate categories.
The heroism while these soldiers and marines, and yes, Japanese soldiers too, while they're
actually fighting and dying in combat, and then the different kind of heroism that comes
with trying to reestablish some sort of a normal life when you go home and have to live
with all of this stuff in your memory banks for maybe decades.
As I believe I mentioned earlier, I used to talk to American veterans of the Second World
War, and specifically the ones that were the most difficult nuts to crack were those from
the Pacific, and a bunch of them wouldn't talk at all.
The ones who I was told had seen the most combat.
But look at what they're trying to grapple with, and how could they ever explain it to
you?
The things in Sledge's book, there are three or four things that when you read them you
go, okay, this is something that's going to stay with you the rest of your life.
I mean, all of it will be, but there are certain things where you just go, holy cow.
And Sledge had said once that if you were 100 yards behind the front line, you didn't
understand it, you know, you could be a rear support person and still be in great danger
in the Second World War, but it's different.
And we said this in the last segment, the last part of the show, I'm sure, where it's
different when you're in the meat grinder, and you absolutely every single day are going
from one position to another position to another position rooting out and killing the people
in each of these positions.
Sledge says the worst experience he ever had in the Second World War was on Pellilu, trying
to cross an open airfield, which a lot of the soldiers remembered, under artillery and
mortar fire.
He said, quote, to be shelled by massed artillery and mortars is absolutely terrifying.
But to be shelled in the open is terror compounded beyond the belief of anyone who hasn't experienced
it.
The attack across Pellilu's airfield was the worst combat experience I had during the
entire war.
It surpassed by the intensity of the blast and shock of the bursting shells, all the
subsequent horrifying ordeals on Pellilu and Okinawa, end quote.
That sort of mirrors what Ernst Junger in his fabulous book on the First World War,
The Storm of Steel, had said about artillery.
He said that being under artillery attack was like being tied to a stake and having
somebody swinging at your head with a sledgehammer over and over again and just missing by a
little, but you were sure that the next shot of the sledgehammer was going to get you.
Holding that artillery barrage while you run and trying to avoid getting hit is the sort
of thing that will give you nightmares the rest of your life.
But he has two other incidents in the book that fall in my mind under the category of
this is not what you're ready for when you go to war.
You're ready to take on the enemy and deal with shooting at somebody or being shot at.
But he talks about, for example, one incident where they're all on patrol at night on Pellilu
and it's dark and they're trying to maintain quiet and secrecy and then one of their guys
cracks up and starts raving and screaming and threatening the whole unit.
And they don't know what to do.
They're panicking.
What do we do with this guy?
He's our friend.
He's our buddy.
So first they try to give him morphine, then they try to knock him out with a punch to
the jaw, then more morphine and nothing is working.
And eventually one of the officers or the sergeant says, use an entrenching tool, knock him out
and they hit him in the head with basically a shovel.
And instead of injuring him, he dies.
And the person who hit him in the head with the shovel has to live with that the rest
of his life.
You know, it's one thing to say, I killed the enemy and they were a bunch of fanatical
robots and they did terrible things to our troops, so I don't feel bad about it.
It's another thing to hit your own guy in the head with an entrenching tool and kill
him.
Sledge tells a worse story than that later on when he's talking about, and this is like
horror movie stuff, like Freddy Krueger jump scare horror stuff, but the Japanese at night
with their infiltration tactics drove the Americans crazy and over and over you read
veterans saying, I hated the night.
They would be in two man foxhole so one person could sleep while the other person watched
and stayed on guard.
But the problem is, is at night you thought every single sound was the Japanese and they'd
come close to the foxholes and scream things at you to keep you on edge.
But sometimes they do more than scream.
They grab a couple of edged weapons and jump into some of these foxholes.
And not only did the people in the foxholes, who all of a sudden had Japanese in their
foxholes with them, have to deal with them, but so did every American around that foxhole
who could hear what was happening.
I read this over and over again with different marines and different books talking about
the sounds.
I mean, what does it sound like when one guy is gouging out another guy's eyes and kills
him by doing that?
I mean, Sledge says, quote, with a wild yell, the Japanese jumped into the hole with the
two marines, a frantic, desperate, hand-to-hand struggle ensued, accompanied by the most gruesome
combination of curses, wild babbling, animalistic, guttural noises and grunts.
Sounds of men hitting each other and thrashing around came from the foxhole.
End quote.
Okay, again, though, that's combat, right?
You're gonna wake up with some nightmares from that, but it's what happens next that
gives a different sort of vibe to the whole thing when Sledge says a man jumps out of
the foxhole and starts running in the dark toward the other marine foxholes.
So a marine stands up, uses his gun like a club and smacks the figure in the head, knocking
him down.
That figure stays around in the dark, groaning and thrashing around until another marine
goes up and shoots him in the head.
And in the morning, they find out that it wasn't a Japanese soldier that they shot
in the head.
It was one of their own.
Sledge says, quote, a few hours later, as objects around me became faintly visible,
with the dawn, I noticed that the still form lying to my left didn't appear Japanese.
It was either an enemy in marine dungarees or leggings, or it was a marine.
I went over to find out which.
Before I got to the prone body, its identity was obvious to me.
My God, I said in horror.
Several men looked at me and asked what was the matter.
It's Bill, I said.
End quote.
He then is asked by the officer, who shot him, did he get killed by one of the Japs,
he said, and Sledge Hammers, which was Sledge's nickname, says, quote, I didn't answer.
Just looked at him with a blank stare and felt sick.
I looked at the man who had crawled past me to check on the groaning man in the dark.
He had shot Bill through the temple, mistakenly assuming him to be Japanese.
And then he says, as the realization of his fatal mistake hit him, the man's face turned
ashen, his jaw trembled, and he looked as though he were going to cry, end quote.
This is something above and beyond what you expect when you go to kill the enemy.
And I understand so much better after reading Sledge's book, why it was so hard, sometimes
impossible to get these Pacific war veterans, especially these Marines, to tell you much
about their experience, because how could you have understood what sort of context did
you have to properly assess what this person was trying to make you understand?
And Sledge addresses this too and says, quote, to the non-combatants and those on the periphery
of action, the war bent only boredom or occasional excitement.
But to those who entered the meat grinder itself, the war was a netherworld of horror,
from which escape seemed less and less likely as casualties mounted and the fighting dragged
on and on, time had no meaning, life had no meaning, the fierce struggle for survival
in the abyss of Pellilou eroded the veneer of civilization and made savages of us all.
We existed in an environment totally incomprehensible to men behind the lines, service troops and
civilians, end quote.
When you look at the casualties on Pellilou, it's like 8,000 Americans, roughly about 16
or 1700 dead, which doesn't sound like a lot until you realize the size of the island,
right?
It was like Tarawa, the numbers of Tarawa and the Gilbert Islands earlier don't seem
like that much until you realize it's like three days of fighting for another little tiny
spit of nothing land-wise.
If you could divide the casualties by the square footage of the battlefield, you could
see how particularly nasty these Pacific battles were, and you don't even have to do that for
the Japanese because they lose between 11 and 13,000 men, their commanding officer of
course near the end of the campaign burns the regimental colors, kills himself, and
the only people who surrender are the normal small, small handful of mostly Korean and
Okinawan laborers, the last organized Japanese units to surrender on Pellilou don't do so
until 1947, two years after the war is over.
Does that tell you how committed they were to resisting and how hard an opponent they
were?
The 1st Marine Division, especially the 1st Regiment, severely chewed up.
The 1st Regiment I believe suffers twice as many casualties as is normally considered
to be a unit that's just completely out of commission, it would take them months to recover.
It's some of the worst, if not the worst, casualty rates the Marines suffer ever in
their history, and Pellilou doesn't get enough attention.
It's not hard to see how an event like Pellilou though gets downplayed.
After all, what country in the 2nd World War was not exercising a high level of censorship
when it comes to showing their public back home what the war was really like.
I mean most Americans got their visual impressions of what the war looked like through newsreel
footage in the movie theaters, often show it in between two halves of a double feature.
You go to see your escapist entertainment, you buy your popcorn and your Coke, you sit
down in the theater, and you're confronted with Pellilou, how's that going to make parents
of a Marine somewhere in the Pacific that they just get occasional cards from?
You're wondering how's Junior doing?
And then you see the footage of Pellilou, or you're a 15 or 16 year old American boy
thinking okay in the next couple of years I'm going off to war and then you show them
what a two or three or four day battle estimations were, what that looks like when it turns into
a 73 or 74 day battle instead, with the highest casualty rates Marines have seen, I mean that's
the kind of thing that not only does the public not want to really see that, the government
doesn't really want to show it to them.
Once more, we should point out that there's a giant, giant historical news event happening
only about 700 miles away that overshadows this whole thing and overlaps it time wise
because while Pellilou's being fought over, Douglas MacArthur's returning to the Philippines.
And if you didn't know how big of an historical event this was, Douglas MacArthur's press
relations people would see to it that you did.
But Pellilou is hardly the only thing that gets overshadowed by all of these big exciting
historical occasions that are much more positive and would look much better in the movie theater
and the newsreel between the two halves of the double feature.
I mean how about submarine warfare and what that's doing to the Japanese, the non-sexy
side of war as we've been calling it, the logistics, the supply.
And what's fascinating to me is not only are things like logistics and supply not all that
interesting to people like yours truly or the people who want to war game the Second
World War.
I can honestly tell you, I've war-gamed many times Japanese naval combat.
I have never once in my life war-gamed a submarine trying to sink a merchant vessel while some
escort ship tries to catch the submarine first.
I mean not only do I not do that but the Japanese cadets at the Naval Academy don't want to
do that.
There's a book called The Japanese Navy in World War II edited by David C. Evans and
what it really is is sort of a debriefing of the Japanese admirals after the war.
And they all but say that.
Nobody cared about this.
They blame it on the Japanese pensions for the offense, right?
They want the colorful offense.
They want the big decisive naval battles, which by the way the Americans and the Japanese
both subscribe to the to the mayhem idea of the decisive naval battle.
So neither one of those countries' navies were really excited about things like commerce
rating, but the Japanese didn't put any effort into it at all.
One admiral had said that if they had thought the United States would use their submarines
the way the Germans were using U-boats in the Atlantic to go after merchant shipping,
they might not have launched the war at all.
That shows you how unprepared they were to deal with it.
And as we had said earlier, one of the things about naval warfare is in general if you find
out that you haven't built the right ships, that is a problem that takes at least a couple
of years to solve.
Like when you find out because of experience in the Second World War that aircraft carriers
are going to be the new queen of the seas and not battleships, well, you don't magically
have aircraft carriers.
You've got to go and make some and that takes years.
So if you find out that you don't have enough escorts for your merchant ships, that's a
problem you can't solve all that quickly.
And it took the Japanese a while to realize it because it took the Americans and the other
allies a while to really make a dent in the enemy's commercial shipping.
There's lots of reasons for this and we mentioned one of them earlier in the series.
We talked about the absolute terribleness of American torpedoes.
And I've read all kinds of accounts where I mean it's called a scandal, a national disgrace.
People should have gone to jail.
I mean, the stories from the Japanese about ships coming back into port with unexploded
American torpedoes sticking out of the side of the merchant vessels or all the American
pilots who dropped their torpedoes right right close by an enticing Japanese naval target
only to watch the torpedoes go right under it.
Well, that will impact your submarine success rate until you fix that.
But by mid-1944, the Americans have fixed that.
And now you start to see the tonnage totals of Japanese merchant shipping skyrocket.
And submarines will account for about 60% of the Japanese merchant ships that are sent
to the bottom of the sea with aircraft, allied aircraft of all kinds and from all allied
countries accounting for most of the rest.
But when you look at the numbers, you get an idea of how the impact is affecting the
Japanese ability to do anything.
When we had talked about the supply problems in Burma, how did the Japanese get supplies
over those mountains through those jungles on those terrible roads?
Well, the Pacific's even worse.
The Japanese at the time of the Pearl Harbor attacks had about 6 million tons of merchant
shipping and no nation in the Second World War has enough.
Merchant shipping is always in short supply for everyone, including the United States,
who can build merchant ships faster than anyone ever thought possible.
The Japanese will build another 3.5 million tons of merchant shipping during the war.
But by December 1944, even with all that, they're down to 2,500,000 tons.
And the Americans are sinking hundreds of thousands of tons a month.
And the only way that that number will slow down and they'll start sinking less merchant
shipping is because eventually they're so successful, they run out of targets.
Essentially, by late 1944, American submarines are doing to Japan what German U-boats were
hoping to do to Britain, another island nation back during the Battle of the Atlantic in
1942, starve an island nation of the resources that it needs to continue to fight the war,
bring them to their knees.
But the German Navy's idea of bringing Britain to its knees in 1942 in the Battle of the
Atlantic would have involved some sort of peace arrangement, right?
What if you are dropped to your knees as a nation, but you still don't give up, right?
We know if these were reasonable people, they would have surrendered long ago.
What if you cripple them and they don't give in anyway?
There's a fantastic anecdote, and Ian W. Tolle, by the way, as an author, is so good at finding
these historical anecdotes that helps dramatize both where the supply problem has the Japanese
in terms of options by October 1944, but also the mood amongst the leadership and the decision
makers.
And I have to say, there's a little bit of a sickness, I think, to finding this so interesting,
but I've always been fascinated with that mood that you find.
Well, we always say the extremes of the human experience, but think about the people in
Hitler's bunker, you know, as the Battle of Berlin is ramping up.
So Hitler during the last month and what it's like in that room and all those people's
psychological states under that kind of crushing pressure, I'm fascinated by that.
You have a similar dynamic going on in Japan at this time period.
And in this anecdote, Ian W. Tolle brings you into a conference between army heads and
navy heads in Japan.
And these guys are putting the finishing touches on their plan to respond to this great historical
event we mentioned earlier that's going to overshadow Pallilou, right?
The return of Douglas MacArthur to the Philippines.
And the plan is the Americans are going to land October 20th on the Philippine island
of Leyte and it's going to be on, right?
The Japanese know by that time that the Americans are going to land in the Philippines and probably
on Leyte.
And so they have a plan that's been ready for a little while to go disrupt this.
And they're basically going to throw in everything the Japanese fleet has left in order to accomplish
this goal.
But before the plan can happen, there's this conference that Tolle talks about.
And a general in the army, Sato, who we mentioned earlier, basically turns to the navy and says,
you know, how is this going to be worth the fuel that we're going to use for the navy
to conduct this operation, right?
He says that there's a fleet of merchant ships, six of them carrying 60,000 tons of
oil to Japan right now.
And that the fleet would basically use all of that, whereas we could use that 60,000
tons of oil to do a lot of things for the civilians, for the other war effort areas.
And it's funny because 60,000 tons of oil a couple years ago would not have been anywhere
near this important, but we understand that scarcity makes things valuable, law of supply
and demand and all that.
But when the general says this to the navy, he essentially exposes the fact that this
is less about the Japanese navy trying to make a war winning difference here, although
they'd like to.
Then it is about making an honorable end.
Tolle says that their plan here boils down to like a naval version of one of those suicidal
bonsai attacks the Japanese have been doing on land where thousands of their soldiers
will run into machine gun fire with bayonets.
But that's where we are in this story and one of the things that Tolle's antidote deals
with is the fact that these hard-bitten old military guys who are in a room with their
sister service and the Japanese navy and army don't much care for each other.
So if the one place you don't want to wear your emotions on your sleeve is in a room
full of these kind of people, but everybody's crying, Tolle writes quote and he begins this
anecdote right after the Japanese general says to the navy, how are you going to be
able to accomplish anything worth this fuel, the 60,000 tons of oils more important and
Tolle writes quote.
The speech brought the entire room, including Sato, to the brink of tears.
He had put Japan's predicament into stark relief.
The honor of the once mighty imperial Japanese navy now mattered less than six tankers and
the oil that they carried.
And the general could see that the fleet's diminished status was a portent of doom quote.
This was the saddest feeling I had ever experienced end quote Sato wrote.
Tolle then points out that everybody's weeping quote sobbing freely rear Admiral Tasuku
Nakazawa of the naval general staff replied on behalf of the navy.
He was grateful to the general for his kindness, but now quote and quoting the admiral.
Now the combined fleet of the empire of Japan wishes to be given a place to end her life.
End quote.
Tolle then says that there's talk of this being a last chance so that the fleet can
have a glorious death.
And then the admiral points out that this is the navy's earnest wish.
Tolle continues quote.
After a choked silence with tears streaming down his face, Sato agreed that the sixty
thousand tons of oil should be offered as a quote end quote parting present to the navy.
End quote.
Tolle then quotes Sato writing that as he walked out of the meeting to the sound of
air raid sirens, he had prayed for the heroic end of the combined fleet.
This idea of a heroic death is one of the fascinating parts of this story.
Because if you read the accounts of this affair, it's interesting that the Japanese fleet,
even though they know they're being sent on one of these things that's probably a one
way mission, do they rebel?
How many fleets around the world in world history would have just rebelled?
You know, struck the colors, put up some red flag say we're not fighting.
And all the Japanese sailors have a problem with this too if for different reasons entirely.
If they're going to go down in the blaze of glory, they want it to be glorious.
They want to be fighting the best the United States has so that if they do manage to land
some lucky or divinely inspired punch, it can do some real damage.
Put us against the U.S. carriers.
They're mad that the plan calls for them to go after cargo ships and supply vessels and
oilers and the stuff like that, the boring logistical side of war, right?
The non-sexy side, as we've been talking about.
That's going to be the target so that MacArthur's recently landed troops are starved right on
the beaches of bullets and food.
But no sailor wants to lose his life trying to fight a cargo vessel, right?
That's a no win situation.
If you win, there's no honor.
If you lose, you lost to a cargo vessel.
And in Masanori Ito's classic book, The End of the Imperial Japanese Navy, he says the
admiral here, whose name is Kurita, is being bombarded with, and that's not usual in Japanese
Navy, from notes from average sailors to being stopped by his officers and asked about this.
And Ito quotes one of the notes that the admiral received from just a Japanese sailor.
And the note says, quote, we do not mind death, but we are very concerned for the honor of
the Japanese Navy.
If the final effort of our great Navy should be spent in engaging a group of empty cargo
ships, surely Admiral's Togo and Yamamoto would weep in their graves, end quote.
And Ito says, it prompts the admiral against his will, really, to call his underlings around
him and he addresses them.
And he gives another one of these speeches that just to me, it's a tone thing.
You get a sense of the mood here.
And as an American, we have no historical analogy, certainly not within living memory,
to allow us to put ourselves in the emotional shoes, if you will, of someone who's on the
losing end of a war that's not necessarily near over.
I mean, you have to continue to fight after the decision has happened.
And how do you do that?
Well, the admiral's got to rally his sailors and he said, quote, I know that many of you
are strongly opposed to this assignment.
But the war situation is far more critical than any of you can possibly know.
Would it not be a shame to have the fleet remain intact while our nation perishes?
I believe that Imperial General Headquarters is giving us a glorious opportunity.
Because I realize how very serious the war situation actually is, I am willing to accept
even this ultimate assignment to storm into Laity Gulf.
You must all remember that there are such things as miracles.
What man can say that there is no chance for our fleet to turn the tide of war in a decisive
battle?
We shall have the chance to meet our enemies.
We shall engage his task forces.
I hope that you will not carry your responsibilities lightly.
I know that you will act faithfully and well, end quote, and then Ito says, the assembled
officers raised their arms in unison and yelled, Bonsai.
Well, I'm not going to say that that admiral is misinforming his staff, but maybe he's
being a little disingenuous because the plan is to go after cargo ships and supply ships
and those kinds of non-heroic targets.
But there's an understanding, might be a good way to put it, that if you run into any American
aircraft carriers, you can attack them.
So maybe we'll call that an out clause in the plan.
The plan, by the way, is one similar to a naval plan the Japanese tried earlier in the
war essentially in order to get to these cargo ships and these oilers and these supply ships.
The Japanese have to lure the warships that are protecting them away.
So if you think about a defenseless flock of sheep, the Japanese plan here calls for something
to be used as bait to try to attract the sheepdog and take them away from the flock.
And then the Japanese divided into several separate flotillas coming from several different
angles will pounce on the beachhead area.
And each one of these separate flotillas has its own destiny and its own story in the giant
battle of Leti Gulf.
That's why it's really best thought of as three to five, depending on who you're reading,
separate naval battles, smaller ones.
They all have their own names, by the way, but they're all the separate fleets and their
destinies.
The Japanese flotilla that is designed to be the bait in this plan is using the very
best sort of lure that you can have if you're trying to attract late 1944 admirals.
Also happens to be the one ship you normally don't want to let the other side find under
any conditions.
It's the Japanese aircraft carriers.
They're going to be the equivalent of the Matador's cape in this plan to attract the
attention of a bull.
Just so happens that the American Admiral's nickname is Bull, Admiral Bull Halsey.
And while if the plan goes as planned, the bull is charging up to the northeast area
of Luzon, far away from the beachheads, the other Japanese flotillas can come in from
multiple angles and destroy the Americans, either best case scenario while they're actually
landing, but even a couple of days afterwards, you could probably cause great damage, right?
You got big ships coming in here, although no aircraft carriers.
But that's the plan.
Whatever chance these sailors had in this upcoming event has been whittled away in the
previous couple of weeks, because as part of the softening up campaign that happens
before the MacArthur landings, American carrier planes have been savaging the entire region.
I mean, certainly everything that floats on the ocean, but I mean, going far inland and
hitting facilities, especially airfields, taking out Japanese aircraft at an alarming
pace, and it's easy to understand why, by the way, at this point in the war, all of
the advantages that the Japanese pilots and planes had earlier in the war are tipped on
its head, and the Americans have all of those same advantages now.
They've got the veteran pilots, the Americans have the better machines now.
So the kill ratios are remarkably one-sided, but I mean in one air battle that goes on
for several days in the airspace above Formosa, which is now Taiwan, in the days leading up
to MacArthur's return to the Philippines, the Japanese lose something like 700 planes.
That's according to my encyclopedia of military history.
In Masanori Ito's book, he quotes one admiral as saying, you know, we lost 205 planes on
Palau right after we lost 345 planes over truck, and you just get this sense of an intense
level of grinding at this point in the war, and the Japanese industry can't possibly keep
up with these kind of losses, and forget about the machines that you're losing for a minute.
In most of these cases, you're losing the pilots too, and the pilots that are going
up in these air battles are often very, very green, and they're going up against American
carrier pilots that are some of the best aviators the United States has ever produced.
So when it comes to equipment, the Japanese are now very outclassed in the war.
The one place they can actually put up a good fight is when it comes to their own people's
willingness to fight to the death, and I mean the land battles, even with Japanese equipment
being inferior, with their logistics shattered, are still going to be horribly difficult opponents.
But all the Bushido spirit in the world doesn't make your aircraft better, right?
So they suffer terribly, and if the Japanese fleet's actions here in the Philippines was
a long shot before you lose 700 planes that are supposed to play a very big role in this
affair, how much more of a long shot is it after you lose them?
Winston Churchill in his history of the Second World War said that the enemy's air force
was broken before the Battle of Leyte was joined.
This whole affair is part of the trifibious operations that surround the great MacArthur
return to the Philippines, the giant news story that we talked about earlier.
That happens on October 20th, 1944.
The Americans launched this whole campaign early, MacArthur arrives early.
The good news is it catches the Japanese wrong-footed, I guess you could say.
The bad news is the Americans aren't exactly as prepared as they like to be either.
But even with all the problems, they still manage the absolutely unbelievable task of
landing more than 100,000 people by midnight on the first day.
That's amazing.
I've actually seen a couple of histories say D plus one, which would be the next day.
But most of them say on the first day, compare and contrast that with the earlier landings
in the war, places like Tarawa, which were a chaotic mess with far fewer people having
to be landed.
Now, we should point out there wasn't much resistance on the beaches.
The Japanese strategy here is to confront MacArthur more inland, where you're out of
the range of all the big guns that were firing on the beach heads and the planes.
But there's some resistance, but 100,000 guys by midnight on the first day.
That's a well-oiled machine at this point.
And the great factory assembly line and the logistic supply chains and all that boring
stuff that the United States is so good at in its corporate peacetime economy really
coming in handy at events like this.
And MacArthur's total invasion force will number something like 175,000 to 200,000 men.
And boy, what a difference a couple of years in the Pacific war makes, doesn't it?
It's no longer the little brother to places like Europe where the numbers are smaller.
We're starting to creep up to numbers that they wouldn't sneeze at on the Western front.
The Japanese resistors, by the way, who are spread out over a bunch of the different Philippine
islands, they're estimated to be between 300 and 350,000 men.
So a large battle indeed.
One thing that is worth pointing out is that there are really two kinds of island battles
in this war, the kind that have a relatively free area without a civilian population to
worry about and the kind that don't.
Pellilu, Tarawa, Iwo Jima, not a big civilian population to worry about, Saipan, Okinawa,
the Philippines, just the opposite.
And we had just talked in the last segment about the disaster, the humanitarian nightmare
that Saipan was with civilians jumping off of cliffs and getting caught in the crossfire
and the high level of civilian deaths, well, Saipan's miniature compared to the 15 to 16
million people that live in the Philippines, and Okinawa is very populated, too.
So in the distance, you can see these areas that the human being, Launmar, is going to
just crisscross.
And when we had given those numbers at the beginning of this segment, where we were talking
about every month in 1944, what did it say, 200,000 to 250,000 civilian, innocent civilian
casualties in Asia?
This is in Asia, but you can see these numbers in the distance, right?
I mean, wait till the Japanese and the Americans start fighting over the urban center that
is Manila in 1945.
MacArthur, by the way, will show up himself on the first day, step out of the landing
craft of the whaler, I read in one account, with his pressed khakis, aviator sunglasses,
his completely non-regulation, and I don't know how he gets away with it, Philippine
Field Marshall Cap, as he called it, steps out of the craft, gets his pants wet from
the knees down in a photo that is so good, you can't believe it's not staged.
I mean, it looks like a poster, the camera people on the shore get him striding back
onto Philippine soil a couple of years after he was unceremoniously thrown out of it.
At some point, he'll get his hands on a microphone and say, people of the Philippines, I have
returned, rally to me.
And he'll begin his campaign to, along with the help of the Filipinos, throw the Japanese
out of the Philippines.
The first Japanese fleet is not sighted for three days, and two submarines in the late
night hours on October 23rd, I think it is, spot one of these flotillas.
And this is traditionally the beginning of the battle of Laity Gulf, the naval battle
of Laity Gulf.
Put me in the category of those who think that this is a highly overrated battle, although
people differ, Francis Pike in Hirohito's war says the reason it doesn't get the attention,
some of its more vigorous proponents wish that it would is because the stakes aren't
that high.
And he mentioned several other very famous naval battles throughout history and talks
about how the decision which way that battle went, one way or the other, had huge war-changing
ramifications.
And this doesn't.
I would even suggest that a battle that I've done 45 minutes on before the battle of Jutland,
which if it were a boxing match, you would say it ended as a no contest.
I would say that that counts as a much more interesting affair because if one side had
had an overwhelming victory and that was possible, well, that would have been a huge war-changing
sort of event.
The best the Japanese can hope for here is to lengthen the war, and if they lengthen
the war, maybe get better peace terms, so anybody that is giving their life in this
contest is doing this in order to establish, well, in this case, keep the imperial system
in the emperor, right?
The imperial polity is it's sometimes called, because that's the sticking point.
But there are a lot of people who look at this battle as something more than an execution,
and I don't think I'm one of them.
And by that, I mean the battle of late golf has a couple of things associated with it
that sound really like a big deal.
For example, you'll hear that it is the greatest naval battle of all time or the largest naval
battle of all time, which might be true.
But what that kind of conceals is that the United States outnumbers the Japanese in warships
four or five to one.
They outnumber them in aircraft five to one.
The Japanese have almost no aircraft capability.
They certainly have, I mean, it's just, this is a very one-sided affair from the get-go.
The only reason though it has some drama, it reminds me, I have to say, of one of those
early Mike Tyson fights where he was knocking out guys in 45 seconds, but you bought the
pay-per-view, so they always had to have a post-fight analysis segment where somebody
would have to try to find a way that the other guy might have won.
You know, oh, he tapped him on the chin at the 16-second mark, and if that had hurt Mike,
we'd have had a whole different fight right here.
And that's kind of how I feel about the battle of late golf.
It's a disaster for the Japanese, except a mistake happens at some point in the affair
that allows one Japanese flotilla to get into the backfield, you would say, if this were
football, begin tearing up some escort carriers.
And if the escort carriers had all been torn up, could have broken into the landing area,
which might have been vulnerable.
I mean, there's a lot of mites and what-ifs, and that is history, right, especially military
history, but I think sometimes the idea that this would have been catastrophic is overplayed.
There's a case to be made that if all the worst things that happened in the Japanese
fleet started tearing up the beachhead areas, that that just would have made them stationary
when the American planes eventually came back and found that, and they would have lost even
more ships.
The bottom line is when the battle of late golf goes over though, the Japanese lose four
aircraft carriers, three battleships, 10 cruisers, 11 destroyers, and they sink, you know, like
a light carrier, they sink an escort carrier.
I mean, it's just a disaster.
One of their fleets gets wiped out in one of the greatest ambush attacks in naval history,
and it's sort of a little karmic retribution, a bunch of the battleships were old World
War I type battleships that were damaged at Pearl Harbor were razed, refloated, refitted,
and were here and participated in the ambush and did a lot of damage.
But I mean, from an American standpoint, you could look at it as a raw, raw moment because
it really inflicts a defeat on the Japanese Navy that they never recover from, and the
Navy will be reduced to impotence after this.
American air power just shredded Japanese naval assets whenever it found it, a lesson
that had already been learned several times in this war is reinforced and that by October
1944, if one side has powerful naval air assets and the other doesn't, the way the battle
is going to go is pretty much a foregone conclusion.
So with the exception of the one fantastic night ambush where the American battleships
from Pearl Harbor ended up crushing that one Japanese flotilla, the damage is pretty much
done by American aircraft.
Just as the Japanese admirals assumed they would be.
The Battle of Leti Gulf is famous for something else though too.
It's considered to be the battle where the suicide attacks known as kamikaze attacks
first happen in real numbers.
There may have been some early attacks earlier and there were definitely suicide attacks
with the Japanese all throughout the war, but as an organized effort unleashing trained
and tactically organized for maximum effect suicide squads, you first see this at Leti
Gulf and John Toland in his 1970 book The Rising Sun chronicles one of these early famous
attacks and it's famous because the kamikaze came in and did some damage and I try to imagine
the Americans watching this as it unfolds trying to figure out what it is they're seeing
and trying to come to grips with are these guys deliberately trying to smash into us
and take their own lives?
The event happens in that one moment in time at the Battle of Leti Gulf.
Do we say that the enemy flotillas, you know, enemy if you're an American, get into the
backfield right and they're fighting with these escort carriers and you do have the
rather interesting moment where you have the super battleship Yamato for the first time
in the war I believe firing its guns in anger, it's 18.1 inch guns, shells the size of vaults
wagons at American carriers 18 or 19 miles away, escort carriers, it must be said they
were called Jeep carriers and then about an hour after these Japanese battleships inexplicably
turn away giving the escort carriers after having lost a ship and others damaged a reprieve
from the governor and then something else shows up and Toland writes quote and by the
way I'm going to add the word escort carrier in front of all these ships that are escort
carriers where he just gives the name it gets confusing quote.
For over an hour all was quiet then at 1050 General Quarters was again sounded on the
five surviving Jeep carriers nine enemy planes were approaching at mass level so low that
radar had failed to pick them up they climbed to several thousand feet as American fighters
tried to intercept them five zero fighters with bombs lashed to their wings emerged from
the milling mass and slanted down toward the Jeeps they were led by a recently married
lieutenant commander I hope I pronounce his name correctly Yukiyoseki one zero Toland
writes headed for the bridge of the escort carrier Kitkun Bay its machine guns winking
onlookers expected it to pull up instead it drove into the port catwalk exploded and
tumbled on into the sea two others roared straight at the escort carrier Fanshawe Bay
also with obvious intent to crash into her only to disintegrate at the last moment the
final two veered off from the heavy fire thrown up by the escort carrier white planes one
trailing smoke banked toward the escort carrier saint low in a right turn as if intending
to land but the pilot pushed the little plane over slamming it into the flight deck fires
spread throughout the hangar deck setting off a chain of violent internal explosions
after having survived the running battle unscathed saint low sank end quote I've been fascinated
by this phenomenon of the kamikaze since I first learned about him as a kid and I know
many of you have been fascinated with them too and like me if you've continued to read
up on them your views on them have probably changed 180 degrees to when I was a kid we
were basically taught these were fanatic you know kool-aid drinkers who would give their
lives up without even giving it a second thought for the emperor very non complicated robots
and now when you read their last letters and their diary entries the whole time that they
were training for these missions but knowing that they were dead men walking or dead men
flying or dead men piloting the human torpedo whatever it might have been your heart breaks
in a lot of these cases first of all these are not your hard-bitten military men which
I found very interesting when the program was first developed they asked military men
to volunteer and you know how many military men did according to anthropologist Amiko
Onuki Tierney who wrote the fabulous book kamikaze cherry blossoms and nationalisms
the number of hard-bitten military men that said yeah I'll volunteer for that suicide
mission was none and she italicized the word none this is a bit of a problem if you're
trying to kick start a brand new program and get people interested in it so apparently
the military just decided to then point to some people and say okay you're volunteering
you're volunteering you're volunteering and one of them was this pilot John Toland had
used in his book Yuki Oseki portrayed as this willing you know ready to die for the
emperor guy turns out not so willing but that was not news that made it into the propaganda
at the time before he flies off to crash his plane into an enemy ship he does an interview
with a reporter whose job it is to get the good story for the Japanese propaganda and
instead gets a whole bunch of stuff from this pilot that he can't release he talks about
it in a letter decades later but the great Yuki Oseki early kamikaze pilot spat this
out to the reporter at the time quote there is no more hope for Japan if it has to kill
such a skillful pilot like myself I can hit an aircraft carrier with an 1102 pound bomb
and return alive without having to make a suicidal plunge Onuki Tierney then says quote
at that time Seki had been married for only six months to a woman with whom he was passionately
in love he explained to the reporter quote if it is an order I will go but I am not going
to die for the emperor or for Imperial Japan I am going for my beloved wife if Japan loses
she might be raped by Americans I am dying for someone I love most to protect her end
quote this mirrors what you read from a lot of these pilots although it should be noted
there were thousands of them and they run the gamut in terms of the differences in their
background and some of them do seem a little like the robotic figures who seem to have
been brainwashed into just dying for the emperor and happy to do some of those people fit that
mold but most of them don't what's more since they can't get the professionals to volunteer
to do this they go after like cadets and training pilots and students at the university this
is one of the really weird things about this program you could see the Nazi Germany regime
for example maybe picking up the derelicts off the street or the people the undesirables
that they thrown into concentration camps or those kinds you know the discredited people
and making them the suicide pilots the Japanese instead make a lot of these suicide pilots
come from their best and their brightest the kids at the elite colleges really if you look
at them and you read the accounts they almost seem like the people that were picked on by
all these macho you know military types who when they finally show up to be kamikaze
are picked on even more treated like nerds the four eyes the the brainiacs of them it's
interesting to read who these people were though and in w toll in his book twilight of the
gods has a quick rundown and he writes quote about half of the kamikaze pilots of 1945
have been drawn from the ranks of university students many were cosmopolitan intellectuals
who had been exposed to foreign ideas and influences including western philosophy and
literature these traits had not endeared them to their officers and nco's in military
training camps many young scholars had been singled out for special abuse including vicious
beatings leaving them with feelings of contempt and loathing for military authority and for
the tyrannical regime that held the nation's fate in its grip in diaries and letters many
of these future kamikaze's identified themselves as political liberals and democrats some found
much to admire in the american model of society and government others harbored radical utopian
pacifist or even marxist views and quote on nuki tyranny runs down the backgrounds of
a lot of these people most of them speak multiple languages their reading list would shame an
english professor this is these are the very people you look at is the people who are going
to have to rebuild japan right instead they're being thrown into the meat grinder reading
the accounts from these people's fascinating first of all they all seem to be patriots
even if they disagree with the government some of them specifically are looking forward
to helping the post war japan emerge a lot of them think about themselves as helping
their families back home and trying to make a difference to see that they don't end up
bombed or occupied some of the pilots expressed all sorts of worry and remorse about the way
their own army were treating captive populations this is not what you expect i was thinking
how very different this is right how you couldn't expect any other military major military in
the second world war to do something like this but then i was doing some research and
i came across i think it was like a letter to the editor or something like that by a
person who identified themselves as a u.s. marine they didn't say in what era all they
had written though was if they had found themselves in a situation where their country was about
to be occupied where their government or their military superiors said that they could reduce
the chances of that happening if they'd be willing to sacrifice their lives you know flying
their plane into an enemy ship this person who identified as a u.s. marine said he would
be happy to do that and then i thought to myself the japanese are just like everyone
else only morso right i mean you can kind of see where all this hails from they just
took it to levels that in most societies are theoretical the one part that really got to
me the most well there were several i mean there was the one about the christian pilot
you forget that there's a sizable christian population in japan and you think of suicide
as being prohibited by the religion but there were japanese kamikaze pilots who brought
their bibles into the cockpit with them taped the photo of their mother to their chest and
when i was reading about this one person that said well isn't suicide frowned upon by the
church and someone else explained that they just didn't see it as suicide they looked
at it as the war bringing death to them rather than they seeking it out some of these other
people were making very rational calculations because as another historian pointed out they
weren't making a choice between a suicide attack that killed them and a wonderful world of
rainbows and unicorns right that wasn't their other option their other option was probably
dying somewhere else maybe anonymously your corpse left in a decaying jungle somewhere
your family never known what even happens to you or you could die a hero and i think i
read don't quote me on this that they got the kamikaze pilots got an immediate increase
in two ranks two military ranks and if that's the case well now it's even a financial decision
right you can die in a jungle somewhere and your family's at one level of poverty or you
could increase the amount of money that the state pays to you know grieving families
and widows for upkeep and all that sort of stuff if you get your rank right i mean so
you start to see actual maybe thinking going on in some of these decisions and then one
other thing that just moved me was how the they were supposed to be volunteers but many
historians will use the word volunteer with quotation marks because the circumstances
these twenty to twenty four year old guys were put in were such that they were forced
into moral quandaries and the only people that passed the moral quandaries and became
the kamikaze pilots in other words the only ones that the strategy worked on were sort
of the most moral amongst them for example a lot of these volunteer sessions were framed
in a way that you understood that if you said no that you wouldn't volunteer that meant
that your refusal was consigning some other person to death and a lot of these people
couldn't handle that but the part that moved me the most because it's one of those things
i wonder about i wondered in a show we did on executions once what goes through your
mind the night before your own execution this is similar you wonder okay if you're a kamikaze
pilot and you don't you know tomorrow's go time what's your last night like and apparently
the last nights were not spent alone you spent it with the other people that were going to
go with you and in um onukiturni's book she quotes a guy who wrote all this in a letter
decades later to somebody else whose job it was to cater to these pilots on their last
night of life and he writes what that was like he is identified by the way as kasuga
takeo and he wrote quote at the hall where their farewell parties were held the young
student officers drank cold sake the night before their flight some gulp the sake in
one swallow others kept gulping down a large amount the whole place degenerated into chaos
some broke hanging light bulbs with their swords some lifted chairs to break the windows
and tore white tablecloths a mixture of military songs and curses filled the air while some
shouted in rage others cried aloud it was their last night of life they thought of
their parents their faces and images lovers faces and their smiles a sad farewell to
their fiance's all went through their minds like a running horse lantern although they
were supposedly ready to sacrifice their precious youth the next morning for imperial japan and
for the emperor they were torn beyond what words can express some putting their heads
on the table some writing their wills some folding their hands in meditation some leaving
the hall and some dancing in frenzy while breaking flower vases they all took off with
the rising sun headband the next morning but this scene of utter desperation has hardly
been reported I observed it with my own eyes as I took care of their daily life end quote
now I don't know how representative that account is of the kamikaze last night experience
there may be different experiences I would imagine there were and we should also point
out that it was hardly just as pilots that these young people who the government could
count on to reliably kill themselves trying to kill the enemy wasn't just airplanes I
mean they had something known as a human torpedo they had bombs that they dropped I think they
may be rocket propelled bombs they dropped from from aircraft that have a human pilot
they have motor boats that they load with explosives that are designed to be driven
into the enemy ships I mean there's a whole bunch of ingenious ways to utilize the willingness
of your young men to kill themselves for the cause but it's this regardless of their positions
on the issues and regardless of how much they might dislike the government or whatever it
might be there's a strain of patriotism that runs through these people that's noticeable
in all their writings a love of country that did not always mean a love of emperor or government
or any of these things sometimes it was just the concept of Japan or what Japan might be
in the future after the war but one kamikaze quoted in um omiko onuki tyrney's book said
that he found quote our love of country to be a frightening intensity end quote I think
that's a great way to put it frightening intensity what what happens when you take something
that most countries have you know patriotism on the part of their people and turn it up
to an above maximum level turn it up to 11 the fact that you would embark on this program
though in 1944 late 1944 it's a sign of the desperate times if you needed to be reminded
of that in late november 1944 the japanese will be when the clock finally runs out on
them on the marianas islands airfield construction timeline because the cbs working on airfields
in the recently conquered islands in the marianas gets them operational and b29 super fortresses
the new bombers that are so new they've not been used in europe although there are other
reasons they were not used in europe but not used in europe they will land on these islands
and the bombing attacks begin japan has been bombed before the du little raids were more
of a pinprick for morale purposes but the b29s were taking off from areas around the
indochina theater but just barely able to reach the edge of japanese soil the raids
were not enormous in late november the attacks begin and the japanese will find themselves
bombed at times in the capital by more than a hundred of these big planes at a time these
are not known to be particularly effective attacks going after airplane facilities and
things like that sometimes they get lucky but most of the time the bombing is inaccurate
but here's here's the thing from a civilian standpoint let's just acknowledge something
i don't think any of us well there's probably some of us actually have been under a bombing
attack before and these kind of bombing attacks are in some ways scarier than ones you might
face today although it depends on whether you're the target or not because these bombing
attacks have a lot more planes and a lot less accuracy and part of the reason you have so
many more planes is because you are so much less accurate you need lots of planes and
lots of bombs over a wide area to even hope to hit your target which they don't often
for all sorts of reasons the jet stream and a bunch of other ones included but that doesn't
lessen the fact that if you're a japanese civilian maybe a japanese civilian who's had
heavily filtered news reports about how the war is going if you have bombs all of a sudden
falling on your capital city and most of the planes that drop those bombs are getting
away that puts the credibility of the government's accounts on how the war is going in rather
stark relief doesn't it that having been said in terms of concrete results the early air
war here from the marianas the bombing of japan somewhat underwhelming in terms of results
the us idea about precision bombing seems to founder on the rocks of japan's cloudy weather
and high winds there's all sorts of reasons that that might be an issue and in addition
to that they're losing a decent number of planes so early on a lot of pressure on the
air service to be more effective because things are heating up as you know we transitioned
from the year 1944 to the terrible year half year really of 1945 the monthly totals of
which we led this segment off with if you recall because they were so awful a lot of
pressure on the air service to figure out a way to increase the pressure on the japanese
to put an end to something that's already over they just haven't admitted it yet and
the problem here is that even though it's almost over it's getting worse and this defies
what's supposed to happen when you have an enemy who's for all intents and purposes beaten
who's a devoid of the natural resources they need whose troop I mean starving troops I
mean all all over the place you look the japanese just look like they're just been battered
from pillar to post so this should be getting easier for the allies fighting them but it's
not the casualties are getting worse the civilian casualties are starting to absolutely go through
the roof and if we wanted to think of what's about to happen here in 1945 it's worth thinking
about it as a whole instead of this happened then this happened then this happened because
if you're waking up reading your morning paper in the middle of Iowa one day and you're trying
to get a handle on the world situation you're going to have updates on the front page from
each of these places either something about to begin and preparations going on or fighting
continuing in this other spot or mopping up operations in this other place there's there's
a bunch of things that are not only happening at the same time but drawing and competing
for resources with each other there will never be enough us fleet assets in the area MacArthur
will be wanting them just where they'll be wanting them in the central Pacific I mean
so all of this is happening at the same time and if you're in the Japanese high command
you are being battered with incident after incident after incident and it seems to be
having no effect on the main leadership's opinion on whether or not the war should continue
which is surprising to say the least start with MacArthur at the beginning of 1945 MacArthur
makes the leap to the island of Luzon which is where Manila is in the Philippines MacArthur
is moving quickly because he's convinced and he appears to be right I think that there
are POW camps on the Philippines that have had American and Filipino troops there since
MacArthur left years before who are waiting for him to come back and he wants to rescue
them before the Japanese kill their prisoners which they are doing once again with alarming
frequency the situation in Manila will become an unbelievable nightmare the Japanese general
who is awesome by the way MacArthur is really up against a good guy but he decides not to
defend the city but there's a naval commander there who's got what we would call if they
were United States Marines they'd be Marines a naval infantry there something like 15,000
of them and he says well I'm staying and he defends the old city which is you know sort
of a colonial concrete stone I mean it's a rather impregnable place and he gets nailed
down in there and will have the US fighting house to house in urban combat of the sort
that they have not seen in this war at all and will not see again it's probably the sort
of fighting they could have expected though had they gone into Japan in 1946 and invaded
the home islands forget about the military side of this for a minute because as expected
right the US will win here the Japanese will die almost at the last man and something like
a hundred thousand Filipino civilians will die when I first saw that number I knew the
new was large I thought they were talking about maybe all the civilians that died in
the Philippines during this time period and I actually have seen an account or two that
sort of insinuates that but most of them say in this fighting over the city of Manila hundred
thousand Philippines civilians ladies and gentlemen that's in a month and the stories
are amongst some of the worst I've ever encountered there's one that I it's funny you know I mean
I know we're all a little weird if we listen to this maybe I don't know but I have certain
eyewitness stories that stay with me and they stay with me in part because regularly I have
to go back and reread them and I have no idea why there's one story and I'll have to do
a show on this someday if you know the the mental health will allow me to get through
something like that but there's a story involving the Einsatzgruppen and an eyewitness who was
watching lots and lots and lots of Jewish civilians being lined up and killed over and
over again and it involved a young woman and as she passes by the eyewitness on the way
to her death she just says to him while pointing to herself 24 meaning I'm 24 years old that
one kills me I looked it up last month again but there's some scenes from the Philippines
that just as a listen as a human being I was gonna say as a father but let's not patronize
everyone else there were certain experiences one can imagine living through and then ones
that one can't imagine going on afterwards and the best way to describe and I don't mean
this for I'm not trying to be gratuitous here it's important to understand what's going
on though and when we use that euphemism of the human being lawnmower what that means
in reality because this is as we said something that is remorseless it's month to month it's
it's a reliable tally of people and this is what those statistics boil down to on the
ground in the book rampage John M. Scott tells the story of well I guess ultimately of a
family who are rounded up by the Japanese right as their troops are starting to torch
the city of Manila and this is the sort of stuff MacArthur was worried about when he
was worried about the POWs having something happen to them so Scott's piece starts with
these men being rounded up taken to this school and then eventually moved out to this canal
at night and they have their hands tied behind their back and the Japanese has a flashlight
and they start cutting off the heads of the people in this group that's been taken to
the canal by flashlight and then when it is the turn of this gentleman that in Scott's
book is identified as 25 year old Ricardo San Juan when they get to him they chop his
head off but not quite and they have a picture of him I believe it's him in the book showing
you him years later and he clearly looks like somebody whose head was almost chopped off
that's what it looks like after it heals but he plays dad and he lays there and you're
thinking to yourself as he's laying around a lot of other decapitated people who were
with him alive just one second ago you're thinking okay this is the kind of experience
that will ruin the rest of your life don't you but this is where his experience begins
to get horrific and like I said this is not meant to be gratuitous this is meant to put
some context on these enormous numbers like a hundred thousand civilians die in a month
while Manila is being fought over and I do not count these sorts of incidents as collateral
damage at all this is intentional on someone's part at some level of the command structure
so Scott talks about everything that this poor guy goes through personally and then
says quote but the night's terror had only begun the Japanese return to the same spot
with a second group of captives on his belly in the brush Ricardo San Juan counted 19
women and 27 children among them he saw his 25 year old wife Virginia and the couple's
three children four months pregnant at the time Virginia held the couple's youngest
child in her arms one year old Jose the Japanese had tied the adults together with a long strand
of rope looped around the upper left arm of each woman guards herded the woman into a
circle around the children the Japanese then formed a perimeter around them to San Juan's
horror Scott writes the soldiers began to bayonet the children and even the infants
including two month old Celia Fajardo wrapped in a gray flannel sleep suit now quoting the
eyewitness quote some of the babies were grabbed from the arms of their mothers and were held
by their two hands in midair by one of the Japanese soldiers he later told investigators
at that instant he says the executioner would stab them in that position Scott continues
quote the orgy of violence escalated hidden in the dark thicket barely eight feet away
San Juan watched a soldier plunge his bayonet into the chest of his five year old son Crescencio
he heard the boy cry out before he collapsed and died the same soldier then snatched up
his infant son Jose that baby of mine San Juan recalls was thrown into the air and then
caught with the point of a bayonet those were his words the author continues quote soldiers
likewise killed his three year old daughter Corazon her name Spanish for heart but San Juan
did not see it that was the only mercy he experienced that night with the children littered on the
ground dead the Japanese pounced on the mothers with blood-soaked bayonets the same soldier
who had tried to cut off his head ran his blade through the belly of San Juan's pregnant wife
and quote so if one death is a tragedy and a million deaths a statistic stories like that
put a little bit more flashback on the bones of who these numbers were and while I wish these
were completely isolated examples they're all too common both in your history books and amongst
the Japanese and here's the thing is if we were talking about something that happened in
the biblical era and you said that one army treated the civilians in areas that had held
captive or other soldiers that fell into its hands this way you'd hardly blink but it's
very unusual behavior in the mid 20th century by a major power and while you can certainly
find examples that are easily as off the charts as this with say the Germans certainly but
I mean even the Red Army maybe even the allies in certain circumstances the non-Soviet allies
but those are just that they're outliers the Japanese do this over and over and over again
in Scott's book he has a section you know in the index and under the heading of massacres
and atrocities it goes down a whole page in small print and this is just mostly in the
Philippines it's things like behind-the-shell service station there's a massacre behind
the shell service station against civilians suspected of guerrilla ties De La Salle massacre
Fort Santiago's sealed dungeon mass starvation German club massacre Philippine General Hospital
killing of men POW's on Palawan Red Cross massacre Santa Domingo church massacre over
and over and over again it's fascinating to wonder about this isn't it there's a book
called embracing defeat that is about Japan's coming to grips with losing the war right
afterwards 46 47 1948 and one of the things I found interesting when reading it was that
there was a big backlash amongst the civilians to returning soldiers when these sorts of
stories of this kind of behavior filtered down to the public after the war obviously
they were not getting this during the war and there was a backlash that one might compare
to the way some Vietnam veterans were treated over the whole you know taunting at the airport
when they would arrive back in country for being baby killers I was the epithet yelled
at them MacArthur will find himself occupied in liberating the Philippines for the rest
of the war now he will declare at certain times that the fighting has ceased in order
to basically say I have liberated the Philippines but when the war actually ends there's tens
of thousands I think it's like 50,000 men still under the same Japanese general who
have to give up their arms and surrender so I would say that the island wasn't pacified
but MacArthur will continually be fighting there in hard slogging for the rest of the
war as I said so while that's going on you now have the determination to take the island
of Iwo Jima and right afterwards Okinawa these places if you look in the mapper are
the Japanese in Hirohito's war Herbert P. Bix says that the emperor looked at those areas
as a moat and the idea of course of the moat is to absorb the force of your enemies charge
and weaken them before they get to the castle walls and Okinawa is like a southern area
of the moat and Iwo Jima is like a eastern area of the moat he was a tiny little place
little volcanic island eight square miles it's a nothing little place but it can hold
a couple of airfields this is as we've said in this whole war airfields I mean a lot of
this fighting is over airfields having or not having an airfield can make a huge difference
they're the ultimate strategic location in the middle of the vast distances of the Pacific
so the Americans want to take Iwo and the Japanese are once again ready for them so
what happened in Pellah Lou begins to be the new trend to have these places be built up
and they've had more time right the outlying islands they hadn't had as much time or ability
to really get the defenses the way they hope to get them at Pellah Lou you had the guns
peeking out from behind steel doors Iwo takes it the next step higher than that one of the
most fortified places in the Second World War in terms of places that any of the allies
had to overcome and Iwo Jima is one of the most if not the most famous battle that ever
involved the U.S. Marines but the reason for that is because it was so nightmarish that's
how you make a reputation is you go through something that is like walking through hell
and when you read the accounts of the survivors and the veterans from Iwo it's it's interesting
how often and many of these people had been on other island fights before and so had something
to compare it to how often they would say I can't even describe it to you it was like
nothing I'd ever seen there's a few of these in Patrick K. O'Donnell's fine book into
the Rising Sun where he interviews veterans I marked a couple of them Mike Vinnich from
the Fifth Marine Division said quote I can't hardly even describe it to you the misery
and the difference between this and all the other island fighting I'd experienced coming
to Iwo was a different kind of fight end quote he has the remembrances of the last surviving
person who was on the flag raising team on Mount Surabachi a famous incident won all
sorts of awards maybe the most famous photograph taken in the Pacific War of these people on
Mount Surabachi Charles Lindbergh and he said of the island quote Iwo Jima was a massacre
I never expected anything like that people were dying left and right Japanese were in
caves and bunkers you had to route them out end quote Dean Void of the Fifth Marine Division
said quote Iwo Jima was as close to hell as you could get I can't even begin to describe
it to you it was always hot meaning active gunfire all the time and explosions going
off people getting killed left and right end quote we should remind ourselves that these
people had been to other places that are considered to be very bad fights as well so when they're
saying that Iwo Jima is on another level clearly it is and the Japanese had eight months to
prepare for this and this does go back I mean you know in many ways everyone's critical
of Japanese strategy during the war and many other things but they kind of did keep their
eyes on the goal of making the allies have to take these islands position to position
to position and take huge casualties doing it in the hopes that they'd get tired of it
after all how many Americans even could find Iwo Jima on a map how many American boys is
it worth to take a place like that especially if the people back home aren't thinking of
many of the larger strategic implications I mean Iwo Jima's halfway between Saipan and
Tokyo great place for an airfield lots of reasons you might want it how many boys is
it worth the Marines are going to give more than they thought they would have to and that's
partly why it becomes this great battle in their history it's a crucible the island
has more than 800 positions pillboxes bunkers gun emplacements the tunnels on this island
stretch from miles underground and I've read different accounts I've heard it's three miles
seven miles ten miles sixteen miles I have no idea which of those is true but some of
them are big enough to drive a fully loaded truck into the commanders is 75 feet deep
has electric lights is completely protected from all those giant battlefield shells and
his plan is to let the Americans get on the beaches with their three divisions and something
like 70,000 plus men and then when everything was crammed and crowded into what would become
one of the most congested battlefields in world history if you look at the numbers right
how many people are on an island eight miles square then you start dropping giant mortar
rounds on these crowded beaches which have sand so fine and volcanic that no one can
dig in it to give themselves a little shelter you start tearing up the people on the beaches
I mean it's something like 2000 casualties right away bam the Marines are going to suffer
8,000 casualties in the first week remember casualties means a wounded missing killed
prisoners right all of it here's the thing it's easy to sort of forget the whole wounded
thing until you start reading these accounts of these veterans and you realize how long
ago they're talking about when they talk about being wounded in a place like Iwo Jima and
yet they're still blind or they're still in a wheelchair or whatever the injury back
then did to them they've lived with the rest of their lives so whereas one might think
about killed and wounded on a very different level and whereas wounded might mean anything
from slightly wounded to grievously wounded we should recall the toll that that takes
on people's lives forever afterwards also and in addition to that and they mean needless
to say when you think about it for two seconds but combat produces all sorts of injuries from
the physical to the emotional to the spiritual and often all of them together in Patrick
Kay of Donald's into the Rising Sun he quotes Iwo Jima veteran from the Fifth Marine Division
Dean Winters who talks about some fighting that goes on and then he begins to talk about
the next day and he says quote the next day we were attacked again losing several men
killed or wounded every hundred yards there was another canyon where you had to dig the
enemy out one of our comrades was captured by the Japanese and pulled into a cave where
they tortured him by splitting his finger webs up to his wrists he was screaming uncontrollably
our lieutenant got so angry he went in after him and was killed in the process there was
hardly any of us left in the entire company for me I was hit on March 14th my hip joint
was shot all the pieces four Marines from the Marine Corps band were moving me to the
rear and one of the men was killed in the process since the war he says I've been confined
to a wheelchair and have tried to live a good life however I relive the war every day and
to quote that's an example of what the wounded in action statistic often boils down to worth
bearing in mind that's a man who thinks about the war a war from 70 plus years ago every
single day right when he wakes up if you read a lot about these various battles in the Pacific
as many of you have I know you begin to notice similarities and differences and the differences
begin to stand out so you can differentiate one battle from another at Iwo it's interesting
how many of the people on both sides talk about how terrible the wounds are and how unlike
many of these other island battles they were and I've seen all sorts of reasons suggesting
why that might be a lot of mortars used for example in the Japanese were using these massive
ones I mean a lot of times mortars are like 60 millimeter mortars which are they're kind
of light mortars these Japanese are using ones that are like 12 inch mortars shooting 750
pound projectiles that have been declared ash cans flying ash cans is the way one veteran
described them many refrigerators going so slow as they arc up in the air you can see
them and watch them and then when they blow up they leave a giant hole on the ground and
whatever was anywhere nearby is gone and there's no place to hide on an island this small everything's
within range at no time does the commander allow although there are some people who do
it anyway the suicidal charges that the Japanese have launched all throughout the war that
use up so much of their manpower for no good reason he's keeping his people hiding and
their job is to kill Americans not to get killed charging them they have to be methodically
taken out one Japanese survivor had said that it was like watching people try to exterminate
insects it was just methodical and if you ever watch film I was gonna say a video film
with this stuff that's what it looks like it looks like workmen a lot of the time ceiling
up caves blowing up stuff lots and lots of flamethrower usage which turned out to be
very important for this because a lot of the time you couldn't get the Japanese out any
other way but the wounds caused by all this equipment are terrible and remarked upon life
magazine reporter Bob Sherrod had said and he's quoted in many of my sources E&W toll
add some context though when he writes quote in the first five days of the battle the Marines
suffered an average of more than 1200 casualties per day the beaches and the flat terrain around
the airfields were strewn with dead shell craters left records of direct hits some contained
the mashed up remains of 10 or 12 Marines exploring the terraces above Red Beach Bob
Sherrod observed quote nowhere in the Pacific war had I seen such badly mangled bodies many
were cut squarely in half legs and arms lay 50 feet away from anybody in one spot on the
sand far from the nearest cluster of dead I saw a string of guts 15 feet long and quote
another Sherrod narrative or the same one later I don't know is picked up by Francis
Pike in Hirohito's war Francis Pikes account by the way picks up after the Marines get off
the beach on the first day and start moving inland and Pike used a word I'd never seen
before so I looked it up and I'm substituting the the more commonly used term let's put
that way and Pike gives his own version of context on the first day and writes quote
advancing towards Chidori Airport the leading Marines were suddenly cut down by concealed
underground positions General Kurabayashi's death machine roared into action it turned
into a battle like no other in World War Two Japan's defenders had the advantage over
attackers mobility which characterized the advantage usually afforded the attacker in
this situation was entirely nullified in a fight that had to be one hole by hole pillbox
by pillbox and cave by cave by the end of the first day of fighting 600 Americans lay
dead and a further 2000 more had been wounded unusually some of the highest casualties were
engineers of the 133rd Seabees the Western beaches he writes were strewn with wrecked
machines body parts and mangled bodies at 5 p.m. a second Keith Wheeler told Robert
Sherrod of Life magazine quote there's more hell in there than I've seen in the rest
of the war put together end quote the noise was almost unbearable Sherrod noted now quoting
Sherrod who was an eyewitness to this quote as the shells burst as they crashed and shrieked
one of the wounded rose from his stretcher he rose slowly bending at the waist his head
was bare and his arms were straight and rigid at his side he sat mouth open and screamed
oh my god my god good god almighty the corporal sobbed into the dirt end quote in the book
a tomb called Iwo Jima by Dan King he quotes a Japanese veteran named Omigari who comments
on the fact that the Marines named one part of Iwo Jima the meat grinder and King says
that Omigari could easily understand why the Marines called it that saying quote men didn't
just die on Iwo Jima they were ripped apart torn to shreds and scattered I saw torsos
with no limbs dismembered legs arms and hands and internal organs splashed onto the rocks
end quote the author then says Captain Fred Haynes later Major General Fred Haynes the
operations officer for the 28th combat team he says he may have summed it up best when
he said quote each day we learn new ways to die end quote these are the American accounts
the Japanese accounts are of people who are living and this is the word you'll see so
often like troglodytes underground with virtually no water the island has virtually no water
people who know they're going to die are living amongst the dead and are dealing with any time
they come out of their holes just absolutely overwhelming firepower but their job we should
recall was always to die and victory or defeat will be measured by how many Americans they're
able to take with them and they take enough Americans with them to influence public opinion
back in the United States which was a large part of their goal right to get the home front
asking the questions of whether or not all this is worth it reminds me of the Tet offensive
in the Vietnam War that wasn't intended to have some stunning victory over South Vietnamese
and US forces in the field it was intended to influence public opinion back on the home
front to tell those people that you've been told the war is almost over well you've been
lied to otherwise how could we do this still the Japanese are kind of sending the same
message back to the United States and the Americans on the home front are hearing it
loud and clear the Americans take almost 29,000 casualties and need more than a month to take
an island that's four and a half miles long and two miles wide that most Americans don't
even know where it is the Japanese of course as is their trademark now and that's something
that no one else does on a regular basis lose almost everyone again they had between twenty
one and twenty two thousand guys on the island slightly over two hundred will be taken prisoner
and most of those as usual are Korean and Taiwanese workers who are generally impressed
into service and don't want to be there to begin with so here we are with the war seemingly
you know she certainly in the end stages here right we're approaching Japan proper and yet
the fighting is getting harder and the people back home notice and they want answers in the
wonderful book implacable foes historians Waldo Hendricks and Marco Lickio write this quote
the toll in lives lost on Iwo Jima produced a strong reaction at home and weighed heavily
on the minds of those who directed the war on March 15 in the midst of the battle the
Navy released an anguished letter it had received from an unidentified woman pleading quote
please for God's sake stop sending our finest youth to be murdered on places like Iwo Jima
she continued in the letter quote it is too much for boys to stand she wrote too much for
mothers and homes to take it is driving some mothers crazy why can't objectives be taken
in some other way it is most inhuman and awful stop stop end quote it's interesting that
the Navy released that isn't it but according to these historians and others a lot of it
has to do with an effort to begin to gird the public for what is to come they are starting
to almost celebrate in advance because the war in Europe against Nazi Germany is clearly
winding up right and the defeat is imminent over there so the tendency is to think yeah
victory is near and we can celebrate and we can stop all this rashing and the boys can
come home and the killing can stop and all that not so fast the Japanese just inflicted
29,000 casualties for tiny little volcanic rock in the middle of nowhere and they're
not showing any signs of being willing to surrender and uh henricks and galic here right
quote and by the way uh forestall is the secretary of the navy quote forestall's willingness
to publish the unidentified woman's letter and his acknowledgement that many others like
it had been received suggests that he and his advisors recognized that they were reaching
a critical moment in the war as the letters made clear a significant segment of the public
was beginning to find the war's cost intolerable just as American forces were drawing closer
to Japan harder fighting lay ahead and that reality had to be confronted directly forestall
seemed to say towards that end they write the armed forces were aiding newsreel companies
in producing more realistic reports of the fighting in europe in the pacific during the
battle for iwo jima raw footage was dispatched back to the newsreel companies in new york
and was ready for distribution within two weeks of the initial landings the newsreels produced
from the film displayed the horror of war with disturbing candor bosley krauthor a writer for
the new york times observed that quote the newsreels thank heaven are getting tougher
they're letting us have it right between the eyes and quote and the historians finished by saying
quote of particular note krauthor added was pacific fury the name of a film a forthcoming
film on the capture of pelaloo and nearby anguar i think it's anguar that looked closely
into the faces of the men who fought these battles and thus personalized the strain
and suffering they endured end quote that was a long quote and i apologize for that but i wanted
to get the historians to weigh in on this because trying to gauge what a public mood might have
been like at a time like this is something that historians are particularly well suited to do
and you know it's funny how this dovetails though to the original japanese concept here when you
factored it down to the basic question of who was going to win the war it was going to be whoever
was willing to suck up more casualties for a bunch of places that really didn't mean that much to
americans it's not like we're talking about the japanese conquering a us state in north america
right then you got to fight to the death for that but do americans care about iwo jima that much
because the japanese care for it a lot but it's a lot closer to them isn't it not only is it the
american public by the way who's starting to fume a little bit about this and get a little impatient
especially amongst people who've lost people or people who are going to lose people in the future
if this continues uh you're starting to see discord being sewn by some of the media outlets i mean
the san francisco examiner and newspaper that's owned by william randolph hurst makes the predictable
criticism here that this is bad leadership right it's a little monday morning quarterbacking where
they're saying well if macarthur was in charge of this this wouldn't happen right he's a genius
he's known for saving his troops lives if if he was here you know in other words sort of casting
blame on this idea that command should have been divided at all and that anybody but macarthur
should have been in command now we should point out though hurst is a guy who would probably
gladly support douglas macarthur for the republican nomination for president in the next election so
this is maybe not all it appears to be on the surface but it's a sign it's a sign that people
aren't happy with the level of casualties that are being taken and people are wondering whether
or not it's worth it either we're not fighting it right or maybe we shouldn't be fighting it at all
this is a worrying sign for a country about to see a skyrocketing in the amount of casualties
that you have to have in this theater to get this over with look at what the russians are starting
to take um the soviets in their last push towards berlin it's horrifying and what the germans take
you know in the process as well that's what those numbers we started off this segment we're all
about it's a meat grinder and um and they're getting it done in the european theater a couple
of months before it's going to happen here in the pacific is there a way out of hell here well
well maybe maybe is the key word here because there are different views on ways that the war
can be shortened but because there's not enough data for one side or another to whip out there in
support of their argument that it becomes sort of a he said she said wartime situation there's
a group of people who believe that a weapon already exists that would make the dreaded 1946
invasion of japan scenario go up in a puff of smoke become moot instantly and you wouldn't
have to have any more of those iwo jimas this is the sort of weapon that the mother writing that
we couldn't take any more of sending our flower of our youth to go die for these meaningless places
well what if you had a way around that problem right what would that be worth to you or to your
country or to the allies there are people who are proponents of the idea that bombing
from the air can be decisive in a war the theory can go either way it's got proponents
and opponents but the best short enunciation of the hypothesis i've ever seen i ran across in
gwen dyre's book war and he quotes the british head of bomber commands or arthur harris who said
during the war quote there are a lot of people who say that bombing can never win a war well
my answer to that is that it has never been tried yet and we shall see end quote
aerial theorists in multiple countries both axis and allied had been thinking about this
sort of stuff for a while now in germany you're starting to finally see bombing make a difference
it kind of looks in the statistics and these arguments are still ongoing too that the bombing
was sort of something that was a pinprick for germany for a long time or that they could work
around and then all of a sudden late 1944 early 1945 you reach like all of a capsized moment
where it starts to be having a huge impact on things which let's be fair there were other
things happening to the german military uh that that also would have played into what turns out
to be like a you know systemic failure at a certain point but let's remember for contextual
reasons what aerial weaponry is doing to germany late in the war in the book choices under fire
moral dimensions of world war two historian michael bass writes quote on february third 1945
the us eight therefore sent 937 bombers and 613 escorting fighters over berlin they leveled large
parts of the city and killed some 25 000 persons on february 14th and 15th 800 british and 400
american bombers flew in over dresden igniting a firestorm that burned for a week and killed at
least 60 000 non-combatants end quote now i've seen a much lower casualty figure for dresden than
that but even if it only killed 25 000 only 25 000 and this in a country that has relatively
sophisticated civil defense facilities i mean these people are mostly in bomb shelters and
you get those kind of casualties how horrible would they be they were running out in the open
germany is getting hit multiple times a week and by the end of the war i believe heidelberg is the
only mid to large-sized german city that is not decimated by the bomb damage or really completely
wiped off the map go look at photos it is shocking you are not seeing those kinds of results in the
pacific asia theater yet this is how total war turns things morally topsy turvy right is that
the people who are running the b29 super fortresses out of the marionis island since 1944 bombing
japan they're in trouble for not doing the sort of damage that we just mentioned in europe but
today people look on that is horrifying but in a war if you had a i mean i guarantee you when the
allied populations woke up in their newspaper and read about those bombing raids in germany that i
just quoted from michael bess's book those are good things to them not bad things there's a
difference between you know they say in cold blood or in hot blood with murders and crimes
war is hot blood us today trying to make sense of their decision making is done in cold blood and
it's a very different thing the idea that the commanders of the american air assets in the
marionis are in trouble for not doing more damage to japan not being more effective gives you an
idea though of what the priorities are and in january 1945 they bring in new leadership to see
if they can you know shake up the results here and the guy who comes in to do that is one of the
famous proponents of aerial bombing he is a guy who is much who is as much of a caricature as
macarthur is or general patent is and he's a lot like patent the kind of guy who has those sort of
can do um almost heartless toward the enemy uh sorts of attitudes in wartime and then when we
go from hot blood to cold blood they look horribly out of place uh there are a couple of figures in
the famous movie doctor strange love where if you mash them together you get one general
curtis lemay and that's who gets brought in to shake things up with the b29 super fortresses
oh incidentally the most expensive weapon the us paid for for this war i mean it's the most
expensive weapons program and you'll win a trivia contest against people with a line like that but
that puts a lot of pressure on the people that were out there risking their reputations to promote
this thing right this is gonna this is gonna have a decisive impact on the war well in a couple of
months of bombing japan it hasn't done squat lemay said after he took over the air assets in the
marianas quote this outfit has been getting a lot of publicity without having really accomplished a
hell of a lot in bombing results end quote so he changes strategies adopts doctrines and ideas
that have been percolating in the us um air thinking might be a good way to put it for years now all
the way back to 1939 they were noticing that japan might be extra vulnerable to the setting of fires
from the air uh they do experiments in 1943 where they build mock-up cities of both german and
japanese cities so they can test stuff out lemay had spent some time in indochina with another
american um air general named shinalt who was a proponent of incendiaries right using mixing
incendiaries in your in your bomb loads which is a pretty common thing for most countries to do by the
way and they burned down the chinese city of hankow to deny it to the japanese and and learned
quite a bit about how the asian construction materials like lots of wood for example how they
could best be set on fire so when lemay gets to the marianas and sees the meager results and the
high casualty rates that they've been suffering on these raids to japan he changes things up and
he puts a bunch of different things in place some his own sorts of ideas others that he grabbed from
years of thinking about this amongst american thinkers and he launched a couple of preliminary
raids using these new methods and then he puts it together looks at the data from those smaller
raids and then launches one in march that is what nightmares are made of
it was called operation meeting house march 9th 1945 about 330 some b29 super fortresses take
off from the marianas islands heading for tokyo they carry a bomb load that it would take a
thousand b17 flying fortresses the big american bomber that flew over europe it would take a
thousand of them to carry the bomb load of these 330 ish b29s and the bomb load has been tweaked
a lot more incendiaries added a certain particular incendiaries with napalm which is a relatively
new development certainly in terms of deployment i think they discovered it back in 1942 but it's
jelly gasoline kind of and like so many of the incendiaries used by the major powers in the
second world war if it splashes on you it just continues to burn phosphorus is like that too
you can't put it out very difficult so these planes are going to come in low which is against
everything they were designed to do this is a fantastically high-level bomber the b29
that offers protection and all kinds of other benefits to bring them in low is to go against
the design ideas but the winds over japan are crazy the cloud cover is almost constant and
if the plane's going at 5000 feet instead of 25 000 feet you avoid all those problems
the americans had learned um that it is suicidal to do that in a place like germany with their
air defenses but lamea believes you can do it in japan especially if you do it at night because the
japanese air defenses at night are significantly worse than they are in the daytime the problem
with going in at night is you kind of expose the fallacy of the basic idea that americans celebrate
with their bombing doctor and the americans are a precision bomber country they have these great
bomb sites and optics and these uh tactics that have been developed to try to hit installations
and factories and railway yards and infrastructure and things that helped the war effort but not
target civilians not bomb indiscriminately over whole areas but in the mid 20th century precision
bombing in the daytime is hit or miss if you'll pardon the pun at night you're just kidding yourself
i mean you're not even trying it's an area attack at night and to use incendiaries in an area attack
at night is to decide that you want to burn down a city how do you measure the effectiveness what's
a good outcome for you if you launch a bombing raid on a city with the goal of burning it down
you get congratulated if you burn it down and there's not a country in the war that would
use in their propaganda or their public statements the idea that they're deliberately trying to kill
civilians so everybody has um you know a sort of a rationale a logical insanity i think we called it
for um why they do what they do and what they're targeting uh the americans never ever
waiver from the public pronouncement that they're going after military targets and they can defend
that in japan because the military targets have all been um decentralized i mean they have a lot of
little workshops aiding the defense effort mixed all over tokyo one author that i read had called
the bombing raid target a classic mixed target meaning that you had infrastructure industry
and civilians with homes and schools and hospitals all mixed together but in a flammable city if you
can set it on fire and burn everything down you'll get all those military targets but you'll get
everything else too the march 9th which will continue into march 10th almost three hour raid by these
more than 300 bombers takes out 16 square miles of tokyo remember this is an experiment uh wondering
how this is all gonna work i mean for all the manos he's gonna get tons of planes shot down
and when the results come back in everyone's overjoyed because this is the most
effect these b-29s have been able to have so far i think in all the raids up till now they'd killed
less than 2000 people in tokyo but in this three hour less than three hour raid they kill a hundred
thousand the u.s strategic bombing survey said that quote probably more persons lost their lives by
fire in tokyo in a six hour period than at any equivalent period of time in the history of man
end quote let that sink in for a minute the worst military attack ever the most costly the most
damaging and that hundred thousand number is an estimate marius b jensen thinks it's closer to
120 000 no one knows the very records that might help shed some light on that burned up in the very
fire that took all those lives the number of official injuries of people seeking help and
documented was over 40 000 many of the statistical surveys i was looking at triple that number
and if you look at photographs of the 16 square miles something like 40 percent of tokyo's main
area it's ash i mean you have brick and stone and metal buildings sprinkled here and there
and you can see the outlines of the roads but everything else looks like the bottom of your
barbecue including the people the people inside those buildings by the way did not find sanctuary
those buildings turned into ovens and the accounts that are available i mean it sounds
like gratuitous stuff to even mention it i've always wondered about what i always like to call
the worst places to be in the world at any given time right this battlefield that disaster site
whatever it might be and i always you know darkly joke that the worst place to be is like a tie for
a hundred different incidents but how is this not on it in his biography of general curse lemay
author warren kozak gives you the rundown of how this goes and the weapons and the technical side
of this right because remember the americans are trying to figure out how to be effective
with this weapon system they're trying out different mixes of things different tactic
strategies altitudes bomb loads and and the composition thereof and kozak writes quote
each plane would fly individually in three staggered lines between 5000 and 7000 feet
the first planes to take off would fly at slower speeds in order for the later planes to catch up
it would be unlike anything yet seen in the war three long lines of bombers coming in at very low
altitude the bombardier's job would be greatly simplified because a small group of planes coming
from a different direction would drop incendiaries in the front and back of the target zone before
the lines of bombers arrived similar to lighting up both ends of a football field at night the
planes coming after them from another direction would see the fires that the lead bombers had set
and then bomb the area in between the plan he writes was brilliant in its simplicity the human
cost he says would be determined later end quote he continues quote lame decided to drop e46 clusters
meaning cluster bomb let's the witnesses said they look like um bananas all clustered on a tree and
then when they were dropped they would all the bananas would split off separately i'm sorry he
says lame decided to drop e46 clusters that would explode at 2000 feet above the ground each cluster
would release 38 incendiary bombs of napalm and phosphorus creating a rain of fire over the city
in all 8 519 clusters would be dropped releasing 496 000 individual cylinders weighing 6.2 pounds
each resulting in 1665 tons of incendiaries to be dropped on tokyo that night end quote
if there's one thing that has been learned about strategic bombing to this point in the war
is that sometimes you get lucky or unlucky depending on whose point of view we're looking at this from
sometimes the climatic conditions are perfect sometimes you have some wind in the region
if everything were to conspire against the civilians in the city the bombs mixed with the
wind mixed with the climate and all that could create something called a firestorm this happened
in germany several times dresden we just mentioned hamburg's a famous one and what that does is um
take the casualties from something that might be a 6000 or an 8000 or a 12 000 dead civilian night
which sounds horrible and convert it into something amplify it into something like a 25
000 30 or 35 000 dead civilian night in his book war military historian gwen dyer had said
that if the british bomber command could reliably create these firestorms you know whenever they
wanted to the war would be over in six months that sounds like an opinion to me but uh it's
an interesting idea being able to create these equivalents of a natural disaster right a global
weather-oriented disaster for example a flood um a volcanic eruption a tsunami something like that
right a freeze whatever it might be um to be able to do this as a weapon of war well it's
interesting to speculate what that might mean for the war effort and that's exactly what people do
i mean how do you order a raid that might kill a hundred thousand people how does one live with
oneself the way you do it though is by telling yourself that you saved even more than that
now as an aside here i've done more than 10 hours of talking about the logical insanity
the moral logic of strategic bombing as the proponents of that theory see it and i would
suggest that the jury is still out nothing has been decided yet on whether the people who suggest
that a shorter war that is nastier is actually more merciful and humanitarian than a longer war
that isn't right the the idea of being throwing the monkey wrench into the human being lawnmower
right that anything that short circuits the uh ever functioning conveyor belt of death here
is the greater good in the minds of people who can manage to sleep at night ordering the deaths of
that many people blame said over and over as did a lot of the people he worked with that this was
going to shorten the war and that shortening the war was the most important thing it is so hard
to not judge this sort of action by the standards of now but what i constantly try to remind myself
is that 1945 by then they're not operating by our moral standards anymore they're six years into
total war a war of survival extermination the the very highest possible stakes and all sorts of
terrible things done up until this point i mean how do you order to burn a hundred thousand people
well you know a little at a time you work your way up to it we shouldn't forget that the side
that's being bombed here were some of the early proponents of bombing cities i mean the germans
did it to Warsaw they did it to Rotterdam they did it to britain for nine solid heavy months and
killed more than 40 000 non-combatants in britain earlier in the war in 1945 they're launching v2
rockets at britain killing more than or sometimes around 10 000 people with the v2s add the v1s it
is more than 10 000 people so nothing has stopped the japanese were bombing chinese cities and
killing civilians before the second world war even started for most countries they were dropping
let's remember i mean this is a war where the japanese are are infecting fleas with the plague
the plague bacillus and then dropping that on chinese cities from the air to see what happens
when someone says how can you drop incendiaries that kill a hundred thousand civilians you say
you work up to it by 1945 the war is at a kind of an insane sort of level but nobody feels that
all of a sudden killing a hundred thousand people in tokyo is you know tons worse than killing 60 000
in hamburg or 35 000 in dresden see what happens when when it gets insane we're in crazy territory
by 1945 it's easy to forget too that these numbers which are impossible to conceptualize
involve real people with human experiences on the ground of the sort that are unimaginable listen
to the eyewitness accounts or what the historians have to say historian conrad c crane in his book
bombs cities and civilians writes about operation meetinghouse the march 9th 10th raid on japan and
says quote the selected zone of attack covered six important industrial targets and numerous smaller
factories railroad yards home industries and cable plants but it also included one of the most densely
populated areas in the world end quote he goes on to say 135 000 people per square mile he continues
quote before operation meetinghouse was over between 90 000 and 100 000 people had been killed
most died horribly as intense heat from the firestorm consumed the oxygen boiled water in
canals and sent liquid glass rolling down the streets thousands suffocated in shelters or parks
panicked crowds crushed victims who had fallen in the streets as they surged towards waterways
to escape the flames perhaps the most terrible incident he writes came when one b29 dropped
seven tons of incendiaries on and around the crowded i believe it is coca toy bridge hundreds of
people were turned into fiery torches and quote splashed into the river below in sizzling hisses
end quote that's from an eyewitness one writer crane says described the falling bodies as resembling
tent caterpillars that had been burned out of a tree tail gunners crane says were sickened by
the sight of hundreds of people burning to death in flaming napalm on the surface of the sumida
river a doctor who observed the carnage there later said quote you couldn't even tell if the
objects floating by were arms and legs or pieces of burnt wood end quote crane then says quote
b29 crews fought superheated up drafts that destroyed at least 10 aircraft and wore oxygen
masks to avoid vomiting from the stench of burning flesh by the time the attack had ended
almost 16 square miles of tokyo were burned out and over one million people were homeless
end quote quendire had quoted an eyewitness of one of the fire storms in Germany who had said
that the sound that you hear during it was like a an old church organ that was very loud
and playing all the notes at once as we said generally the conditions have to contribute
to create these sorts of fire storms and there was already something like a 30 gusting maybe
to 40 mile per hour wind in tokyo when this happens so that makes it a fire danger already
in tokyo was known as a city prone to fires and japan had a problem with that tokyo had
a very specific problem with that that's why the u.s had identified it years before as prone
to incendiaries and it really burns it creates its own weather just like the fire storms in
dresden and in hamburg where the winds start turning into almost a tornado when you read
account after account of people being swept away by an invisible hand of wind that just pulls them
away and it's it's so bad that you can't see anything because it's blowing pebbles and rocks into your face
the accounts from some of these german attacks talk about the asphalt melting and that happens
everywhere so you try to run down the streets and you find yourself sinking in molten asphalt
they talk about the wind sucking all the oxygen out of things you'll find these
um air raid shelters in germany where everybody's just suffocated
the temperature reaches 1800 degrees in the center of some of this fire area and people
just start exploding in flame you'll read over and over by people just like matchsticks explode
a lot of people who found them their their avenue of escape cut off in every direction
just sat down in the street one of my sources said faced the imperial palace and waited to die
and were found there the photographs are there are not many but it and the photographs to be
honest the photographs of the bombing bodies in in europe too are hard to handle we're talking about
large piles of bodies and in the tokyo raid they're they're all burned carbonized in the rising sun
author john tolan follows one person who lived through this a father bundles his four children
and his wife up in uh something that he hopes will protect them from the fire and they take
off trying to get away and tolan writes quote they pushed their way across the bridge to escape
the roaring blaze that was pursuing them quote end quote like a wild animal a strong wind sucked
into the flames swept a stinging storm of pebbles into their faces they turned back to the gale
and plotted slowly away from the conflagration fascinated at the site of oil drums rocketing
through the roof of a cable factory near the river and exploding into balls of fire a hundred
feet in the air the center of tokyo he writes was as incandescent as the sun billowing clouds of
smoke surged up illuminated below by orange flames thousands crouched terrified in their
wooden shelters where they would be roasted alive end quote an author whose name i absolutely
can't pronounce in a thousand apologies i couldn't find anything online hoito edwin i'm going to go
with uh he wrote a book um the night tokyo burned many years ago where he took some eyewitness
accounts and put them together of people who have visualized something that i don't think any of us
can imagine it's both fascinating and repellent at the same time
so he has one eyewitness encountered by a captain um the author says they had just gone to this
bridge to check out conditions there uh because people were running towards water wherever they
could find it the author says quote and there they were stunned by the sight of countless dead
bodies that lay everywhere around they were in a forest of corpses in every direction bodies were
crumpled so closely together that they must have been touching when they died they lay there now
mute evidence of the fury of the american attack on tokyo's civil population the captain looked out
over the ichido river and shook his head what a pitiful situation it was so appalling that it
exceeded the imagination's ability to deal with it what could rescuers do in a situation like this
there was no one to rescue touch one of the roasted bodies and the flesh would crumble in the hand
humanity reduced to the essential turned into carbon end quote
the account continues and this is not to be gratuitous this is to give us an idea
of exactly what mankind's capabilities what our human capabilities have finally
achieved what levels now of damage we can do this is the sort of thing you read about after a giant
you know act of god natural disaster type thing not something that someone targeted at someone
he then talks about the captain looking at the bank of the river and seeing how the waves that
had been wind driven had pushed all of the corpses he says tens of thousands of them
up against the beach and stacked them like cordwood it was this weird sight
when you read the accounts of operation meeting house and the result afterwards it
sounds like the american secretary of war henry stimson and the general of the army
george marshall were both quite bothered by the civilian casualties and the bombings in europe
and the pacific but they seem to be amongst a very small group of people who are not only
is this considered to be a better than expected result but lame will turn the bombers around
two days later and do it again and then turn around a couple days after that and do them again
and will continue to fire bomb japanese cities until he runs out of incendiaries to use on them
and there's a temporary lull while they try to you know get more to his plane they'd underestimated
how many bombing runs that he could do but he's a task master and he's a guy who gets things done
but he's also very blunt about what war especially modern war mid 20th century war boils down to
and he's again i had said earlier a caricature but not a caricature like a cartoon character
a caricature like a two-dimensional figure that doesn't seem like a fully fleshed out human
being because the caricature isn't but the caricature said about the bombing in tokyo quote
this is quoted in conrad cranes book by the way quote we were going after military targets no
point in slaughtering civilians for the mere sake of slaughter of course there's a pretty thin
veneer in japan but the veneer was there it was their system of dispersal of industry all you had
to do was visit one of those targets after we'd roasted it and see the ruins of a multitude of
tiny houses with a drill press sticking up through the wreckage of every home the entire population
got into the act and worked to make those airplanes or munitions of war men women children we knew we
were going to kill a lot of women and kids when we burned that town had to be done end quote
so how do people that order those kind of things done sleep at night well maybe if they have a
problem sleeping at night if they don't figure out some way to end this whole thing by throwing a
monkey wrench into the assembly line of death in warren kozak's biography lame he describes a letter
that lame described in his memoirs a sticking in his head something he thought about and kozak says
quote in his memoirs lame makes more than one reference to a letter that continually weighed
on him now quoting the letter quote dear general this is the anniversary of my son nicky being
killed over hamburg berlin tokyo you killed him general i just wanted to remind you of it i'm going
to send you a letter each year on the same date the anniversary of his death to remind you end
quote kozak then says this quote lame's only way to stop these types of letters from coming
was to end the war he rationalized the potentially significant loss of japanese life on the ground
with the following logic marines were suffering horrendous casualties on iwo jima in a slow
agonizing fighting evidence that the japanese were becoming even more ferocious the closer
americans came to the home islands and unlike the us or german industry which was factory centered
japanese manufacturing was greatly decentralized individual parts for airplanes tanks and bombs
were produced in homes and in backyards quote this is lame talking now no matter how you slice it
you're going to kill an awful lot of civilians thousands and thousands but if you don't destroy
japan's capacity to wage war we're going to have to invade japan and how many americans will be killed
in an invasion of japan 500 000 seems to be the lowest estimate some say a million we're at war
with japan we were attacked by japan end quote in 1939 pretty much every major country in the
second world war decried the idea of bombing civilians by 1945 none of those countries have
a moral leg to stand on anymore because either they've already done it themselves or they've
done things you might even see and call worse now it is unfair to judge the moral sensibilities
of a guy like kurtis lame in a vacuum i mean you have to really try to figure out where he was on
the scale of his age and day how did the general public in the united states feel about this
they overwhelmingly supported it just like the british public overwhelmingly supported
their bombing campaigns just like the german public overwhelmingly supported their bombing
campaigns just like the japanese public overwhelmingly supported their bombing campaigns
all of these populations of course are having their information constantly pruned and redacted
and um filters so that they just get what the government wants them to see and they're being
heavily propagandized to feel a certain way and adopt a certain view that's uniform it's happening
in every country for example the hundreds of newspapers in the united states that celebrate
and tout this firebombing of japan they don't show mounds of charred human corpses they don't play
that side of it up they may not even know how many people died it's all about how many structures
were burned uh how much damage was done to the war effort and all those kind how many of our own
planes got home safe this is exactly how other countries would portray a similar situation
involving their forces what's more we have to recall the amount of propaganda out there making
sure that people were prepared for this level of commitment and nastiness in his book bombs
cities and civilians conrad crane quotes a little bit of the dialogue from one of these
movies they made in 1944 that's one of those partnership deals between hollywood and and the
government right these are propaganda films or films that have a message that bolsters up the
you know home front and it involved a film with dana andrews who was playing a do little pilot
one of those pilots that symbolically bombed japan back in 1942 got captured and was going to be
executed and so they put these words into his mouth just before they're leading him away to have
i guess his head cut off the film by the way was called the purple heart and this is the kind of
dialogue that preps won for an air campaign like this quote it's true we americans don't know very
much about you japanese and never did and now i realize you know even less about us you can kill
us all of us or part of us but if you think that's going to put the fear of god into the united
states of america and stop them from sending other flyers to bomb you you're wrong dead wrong
they'll blacken your skies and burn down your cities to the ground and make you get down on
your knees and beg for mercy this is your war you wanted it you asked for it and now you're
going to get it and it won't be finished until your dirty little empires wiped off the face of the
earth end quote and then they lead the hero off execute him make you feel extra angry and
you're ready to go burn down some japanese cities yourself those who actually had to do that though
are to be pitied uh there are a lot you know you never get the stories of people who returned
just fine never thought another day about it and and moved on but you do hear the stories of those
who were traumatized by it lots of tales of people returning back to their base with their clothes
smelling like burnt human flesh pilots and crew members turning in after action reports with shaking
hands um in matthew a rezzel's book the things our fathers saw one of the crew members said this
quote we had to kill in order to end the war we heard about the thousands of people we killed
the japanese wives the children and the elderly that was war but i know every b-29 air crewman
for the next two or three years would wake up at night and start shaking yes the raids were
successful but horribly so end quote general lumay and the air course position here is basically
that we are going to continue to do this to you and you can't stop it until you say you've had enough
and you end the war and yet as crazy as it sounds as bad as things already are for japan
they're not gonna end the war and herbert p bigs historian herbert p bigs writes in
hero hito and the making of modern japan quote two days after emperor hero hito's inspection
of bomb damage in the capital that means after the big tokyo firebombing no less a person than
retired former minister shidehara kijiro once the very symbol of cooperation with britain in the
united states gave expression to a feeling that was widely held by japan's ruling elites at this
time namely japan had to be patient and resist surrender no matter what shidehara had earlier
advised foreign minister shigemitsu that the people would gradually get used to being bombed
daily in time unity and resolve would grow stronger and this would allow the diplomats quote
room to devise plans for saving the country in this time of unprecedented crisis end quote
bigs then goes on to quote a letter from the same foreign minister 10 days after the tokyo
firebombing which said quote if we continue to fight back bravely even if hundreds of thousands
of non-combatants are killed injured or starved even if millions of buildings are destroyed or
burned and then bigs finishes his thought by saying there would be room to produce a more
advantageous international situation for japan end quote that's the same line we've been hearing
for a long time now isn't it that if we can just shift the momentum here change our luck a little
bit get lucky i have one victory we can go to the negotiating table then and not be without
something to use to bargain with right but way back in february some of the people who
who um it's very hard to divine who was really for peace and who wasn't but some of the people
that are often credited with being more in the peace faction had tried to sway the hardliners
knowing that the hardliners biggest fear over any eventuality was communism by saying if this keeps
up you're going to get the people overthrowing the government and the emperor and everything
else and that'll be worse than what the allies would do to us if we surrendered
surrendered and even with all that hanging over the um heads of the japanese leadership
and the elite here like a sword of damocles with more fire bombings you know to continue
japan fights on and on april first allied troops land on japanese soil on the island of okinawa
and not only the americans are in on it this time but elements of the british navy the british
pacific fleet are there now i mean germany's almost had it no reason to keep the fleet
in the mediterranean italy's out of the war no reason to keep it in the north sea or the atlantic
bring it here into the pacific with those aircraft carriers with the armored flight decks that'll
be useful against kamikaze attacks and help us take the first of the japanese home islands
although it's you know ify whether you would consider okinawa one of the home islands some of
the okinawans wouldn't consider it one of the home islands but it turns out to be a battle
that acts as a preview a version in miniature of what the allies can expect as they continue to
move toward japan and you know islands like kyushu right okinawa has something similar to japan
also that the allies will have to deal with lots and lots of non-combatants civilians
and they're not running off to some refugee camp they're not fleeing to another part of the country
they're stuck there on an island 60 miles long but only about 10 to 12 miles wide in some spots
and you're talking hundreds of thousands of people more than a hundred thousand japanese soldiers
more than a hundred thousand american troops okinawa is going to produce the highest casualties of
the pacific war and some of the worst casualty rates in american military history and by the
end of the ordeal of okinawa both the japanese and the us military will be showing cracks in
their psychological facades at first it goes better than anyone on the allied side has a right to
expect the invasion as we said kicks off april first and there is seemingly little to no resistance
you still have the big american bombardment of the beaches the entire choreographed military
ballet goes the way it has for several islands now but the japanese are in the interior staying
away from where the big guns can hurt you and are planning to let the americans come to them
and then they're going to take as many of them with them as they can but for four or five days
the americans don't run into anyone by and large i mean the marines will sweep up toward the north
of the island and take a little feel the smaller islands just offshore of okinawa the army units
for the most part will sweep south and it's not until like the fourth or the fifth of april
till they run into the prepared defenses on both ends of the island especially the south
and around the time they do is when the big japanese suicide air and naval suicide attack
that's meant to be the answer the response to this us okinawan invasion hits you get a chance to see
um how things are going to be amplified as you get closer to the japanese homeland which is
less than 400 miles away from okinawa by the way and what was a trickle for example of suicide
planes earlier in the war when they first showed up becomes an absolute flood at okinawa and there's
all kinds of suicide things ready at okinawa the americans find several hundred speed boats
loaded with explosives before they can be used against the americans the japanese will be using a
guided bomb where a person guides the bomb after they drop it from a giant aircraft in this encounter
but but the main assaults and damage is going to be carried out by your standard kamikaze planes
and the new tactic is going to be or the tactic i'm not sure how new it is to mix kamikaze planes
in with planes that are doing conventional attacks you know normal bombers and so if you're an american
anti-aircraft gunner how do you know the difference and who do you shoot at it becomes confusing and
there's going to be i think 10 full-on kamikaze assaults during the whole okinawan campaign but
in between the big assaults you have a single kamikaze here or there a couple of them attacking
and in one 40 day period the us fleet will be hit by some kamikaze attack every single day
can't relax for one minute and it's hard not to look at this as perhaps the first real test of
what modern naval combat is going to look like because there hasn't been modern naval combat
between two first-rate naval powers since the second world war the little bits that you've
gotten have shown how important missiles are going to be in naval combat well we haven't had a war
where where hundreds of naval missiles have been launched at fleets of ships the closest comparison
you can find is what's going on you know off the coast of okinawa when sometimes hundreds of kamikaze
mixed in with hundreds of bombers will show up an attempt to get through the american defensive
screen and sink american ships they have far more success setting them on fire than outright sinking
them but they begin to whittle down the american strength and not in a way where you have a danger
of the whole fleet being sunk or anything like that but it's costing a lot of sailors lives who
are getting horribly burned the ones who survive it's taking out a lot of smaller ship and a
bunch of american carriers end up getting injured enough to go back for repairs i read one observer
who was comparing the fact that the most countries have wooden flight decks including the japanese
and the americans but the british who we had just mentioned had shown up here with their fleet
or one of their fleets their pacific fleet and their uh aircraft carriers have armored flight
decks which cuts down i guess on the number of aircraft you can keep on board so that's a downside
but when the kamikaze's hit it the observer had said that if this happens to an american vessel
it's back to port for six months of repair if it happens to an english or a british vessel you just
call the sweeper squad in when i come on and just hose off the deck here and send this kamikaze
what's left of this kamikaze plane right into the ocean the japanese will lose thousands upon
thousands of aircraft in the okinawan campaign i've seen numbers all over the map and uh just
going by the encyclopedia of military history though they claim somewhere north of seven thousand
somewhere south of eight thousand aircraft chewed up in this campaign but they also manage
to sink 36 of the us fifth fleet's ships and damage another 368 more that is not insignificant
and we should recall that the japanese are stockpiling all these kind of things on the home
islands for future assaults there was a surface component that was supposed to work with these
kamikaze attacks and the interesting aspect of that is that it involved the super battleship
yamato whose sister ship was sunk a few battles ago the musashi and neither ship having done much
in this war both ships had every right to be the queen of the seas when they were launched and
commissioned only the technological wheel of fortune had passed them by and over the course of
several hours the american aircraft sometimes a hundred at a time will sink her just as easily
as they sunk her sister ship the musashi lots of bombs lots of torpedoes but there was nothing to it
the americans lose between 10 and 15 aircraft sinking not just the yamato but the cruiser and
the destroyers with it it's nothing you look at the disparity between what those 10 or 15 aircraft
cost the united states in time labor resources opportunity cost everything else versus
what the yamato cost the japanese technology has a way doesn't it of taking something that was
very valuable not that long ago and making it practically worthless now
now on april 12th just as things are really starting to get nasty on okinawa itself in
the land combat the american president who has served more time in office than any other president
in american history dies in that office roosevelt was famously trying to get a little of his strength
back in warm springs georgia when he's having his portrait painted and tells the people in the
room that he's got a terrible headache and succumbs very quickly to a cerebral hemorrhage stroke type
incident this is not a surprise to anyone who was around the man at all you read account after
account after account for a good year before his death that he looks like death is at his door a
lot of people thought it was irresponsible for the man to run for his fourth term in office as sick
as he obviously was what's more if you're in the middle of a war especially and you're a world
leader and you know how sick you are wouldn't you be really concerned with who your successor is
that's part of the interesting angle here the president of the united states has only recently
picked a new vice president so a guy who's in office for four terms so long that most of the
soldiers on the ground have no memory of any other president in their lives he's got a new
vice president as of january 1945 so it's april something like 82 or 83 days he's had this guy
and he's not someone that really anyone knows his name is harry truman
it's interesting isn't it that of the so-called big three allied commanders in the war you know
allied leaders uh roosevelt churchland stalling only stalling is still in power at the end of the
war church will famously gets uh well he loses the election in uh july 1945 so he has to give
up power and roosevelt dies and so harry truman who was said to have cried on someone's shoulder
saying you know that he's not big enough for the job when he hears that it is his job he'll
he'll say to elinor roosevelt franklin's widow is there anything i can do for you and she says
is there anything i can do for you you're the one in trouble now and truman himself has written
that when he found out he was president it felt like the whole world stars moon and universe fell
on top of him this is a guy who in his 82 or 83 days as vice president of the united states
met alone with the president of the united states a mere two times and oh yeah that guy the guy dying
where everyone knew he was dying didn't even mention to the vice president that they've
been working on a secret weapon that he might now inherit it's borderline negligent and truman
is no roosevelt if you're gonna take over in wartime and especially if you're gonna take
over at this kind of a critical moment in wartime you'd like to think you have some really august
figure and truman's opponents and and people who didn't like him would often call him a
failed haberdasher he is not someone that when you look at him you think okay this is going to be
one of the really powerful august um movers and shakers but it's going to be up to him on what to
do for the rest of the war and there's going to be some pretty darn big decisions as you can imagine
actually the end stages of the second world war not a good time to be one of the leaders in the
second world war on either side and as we said church will lose his an election he's gone from
power roosevelt dies um mu salini will be executed by partisans on april 28th hitler will die um in
early may and germany will surrender by the way in early may may seventh may eighth in there may
eighth really so things are clearly winding down but what this means is in the middle of the oka
now in battle japan becomes um the only one still fighting the only major power still on the axis side
fighting and the fighting is getting more vicious all the time the japanese have several lines cut
across the width of the island and they're forcing the americans to take them on head on
and you begin to see the kind of combat that reminds one more of the first world war than the
second in fact i think it was enw told that referred to okinawa as a pacific for done
if you look at a picture of the okinawan campaign especially one taken over at the shuri line in
the south after the fighting has been going on for a while you'd be hard pressed to say that
wasn't the first world war battlefield and it just looks like giant piles of dirt with some roads
cut through it i mean there's nothing green left anywhere no trees no stumps no grass no nothing
holes in the ground where the troops are trying desperately to not be killed by mortars or artillery
shells and just like the first world war because the situation is so dangerous that people can't
go about their business including things like going to the latrine in the rear area everything stays
where it is excrement trash bodies and that contributes to something which well in the first
world war it shattered the sensibilities of a lot of the people forced to live in those circumstances
and in with the old breed at pelaloo and okinawa eb sledge eugene sledge was at okinawa and describes
just what it was like over on the shuri line and remember sometime in this conflict the rain starts
and makes everything worse if you're already living in a latrine what happens when you add
water right and sledge writes quote everywhere lay japanese corpses killed in the heavy fighting
infantry equipment of every type us and japanese was scattered about helmets rifles bar's packs
cartridge belts canteen shoes ammo boxes shell cases machine gun ammo belts all were strewn around
us up to and all over half moon that's one of the battle areas he says quote the mud was knee
deep in some places probably deeper in others if one dared venture there for several feet around
every corpse maggots crawled about in the muck and then were washed away by the runoff of the rain
there wasn't a tree or bush left all was open country shells had torn up the turf so completely
he writes that ground cover was non-existent the rain poured down on us his evening approached
the scene was nothing but mud shell fire flooded craters with their silent pathetic rotting occupants
knocked out tanks and amtracks and discarded equipment uttered desolation the stench of
death he writes was overpowering end quote how does one deal with that well sledge says quote
i existed from moment to moment sometimes thinking death would have been preferable
we were in the depths of the abyss the ultimate horror of war during the fighting around umber
brogol pocket on pelaloo i had been depressed by the wastage of human lives but in the mud and
driving rain before shuri we were surrounded by maggots and decay men struggled and fought
in blood in an environment so degrading i believed we had been flung into hell's own cesspool
end quote sledge also describes what happens when they're out there killing lots of japanese
which they were and then the shells come in and chew up the bodies that were laying on the ground
which is the environment that the marines and the army troops have to actually live in and he
writes quote the situation was bad enough but when enemy artillery shells exploded in the area
the eruptions of soil and mud uncovered previously buried japanese dead and scattered chunks of corpses
like the area around our gun pits the ridge was a stinking compost pile if a marine slipped and
slid down the back slope of the muddy ridge he writes he was apt to reach the bottom vomiting
i saw more than one man lose his footing and slip and slide all the way to the bottom only to stand
up horror stricken as he watched in disbelief while fat maggots tumbled out of his muddy
dungaree pockets cartridge belt leggings lacings and the like then he and a buddy would shake or
scrape them away with a piece of ammo box or a knife blade we didn't talk about such things
they were too horrible and obscene even for hardened veterans the conditions taxed the toughest i knew
almost to the point of screaming nor do authors normally write about such vileness unless they've
seen it with their own eyes it is too preposterous to think that men could actually live and fight for
days and nights on end under such terrible conditions and not be driven insane but i saw much of it
there on okinawa and to me the war was insanity end quote the actual fighting and trying to get
people out of caves and defensive positions if you weren't actively involved in the kind of
combat sledge was just talking about was a kind of horrific and extremely dangerous
tediousness an e and w toll says quote it was slow bloody treacherous work involving flame
throwers grenades satchel charges small arms bayonets and even knives and bare hands general
buckner the american commander referred to these tactics as the blow torch and corkscrew method
end quote he then goes on to talk about how unbelievably brave and tenacious both sides
were in fighting for things like high ground positions which would often change hands then
change hands again then change hands again sometimes 1012 times toll writes quote
naval gunfire and air support were valuable on okinawa but they never superseded the bravery
initiative and grit of individual infantry units in the end the soldiers and marines had to dig
their enemies out of the ground and kill them there was no other way rarely could they gain an
advantage through flanking maneuvers on the constricted terrain around the sherry ridges
each battalion was wedged into a densely populated section of the line on average 1000 troops for
every 600 yards and the only way to hit the enemy was by frontal assault they might briefly
seize control of the top of a facing ridge but then be driven back by heavy artillery fire
from positions farther south or by japanese infantry counterattacks in superior force
that was a recurring pattern on okinawa the high ground often changed hands in a succession of
attacks and counterattacks sometimes as many as a dozen times american and japanese dead he writes
were splayed side by side on the battlefield all foliage had been blasted or burned away from the
once verdant landscape and the zones between the opposing lines were scarred and denuded wasteland
artillery and mortar shells fell relentlessly shaking the walls of the trenches and foxholes
Japanese infiltration attacks were a nightly horror more than on any previous pacific
battlefield infantrymen suffered psychotic breaks and had to be evacuated as quote end quote
psycho cases the war correspondent john lardner saw a soldier led away from the front line by
two medical corpsman he was uninjured but wide-eyed and shrieking they'll get every one of you
they'll get every one of you end quote but it's not just the conditions that would drive you crazy
here i mean the soldiers are putting the kind of positions that i remember and i think i've
mentioned before the the vietnam class which was all the rage when i was in college they were
taught on a lot of campuses and they would bring in these vietnam veterans to to talk to us military
history majors we military history majors and i'll never forget how often the problems happened when
the soldiers were forced to deal with civilians or people that did not fit the mold of what one
is preparing themselves to fight in boot camp and all these other things right and an enemy soldier
killer be killed it's different when the enemy soldier is 12 years old or a woman and the
hundreds of thousands of civilians on okinawa made it absolutely impossible to avoid
hurting these people and i had said earlier that there was nowhere to run that they hadn't been
evacuated actually some had been evacuated some something like 80 000 had been evacuated
there'd been others moved to other parts of the island by the japanese considered to be safer but
several hundred thousand were still in the way and in caves and trying to stay away from the
combat others had been drafted by the japanese because remember as far as they're concerned
okinawa has been under japanese control for a generation so they impress people into the
sort of the home guard they have a calling them hitler youth is perhaps not right but they have
sort of a militant youth organization that has boys 14 to 17 years old in it they get thrown
into things girls 14 to 17 year old who are nurses nursing students get thrown into this
and everybody's going to take casualties in his book the battle for okinawa survivor and
and higher command official colonel hiromichi yahara describes running into some of these and
girls is the young women i don't know what you would call somebody 14 15 16 running into them
who are doing work in one of these caves all of them very aware that they're probably on
a kind of a suicide mission here and colonel yahara writes quote during the construction
meaning of one of these places i often visited sukazan to encourage the workers young civilians
including many boys and girls had been conscripted to work on the tunnels and the airfield deep in
the tunnel on one of my visits i found several girls repairing a water leak when i praised their
effort one girl stood and said sweetly quote we'll do our best until the end end quote i was deeply
touched he writes by their devotion to duty the end of course means when they all die a lot of
those people will end up being killed by being stuck in the crossfire just like the soldiers
right dying from artillery or mortars uh they will sometimes be trapped in caves with military
people and so everyone dies sometimes they will be trapped in caves and too afraid that the
civilian population is absolutely terrified just like the people on sypan were the americans they've
been fed uh this idea that they're going to be tortured and raped and killed in the most horrible
ways and so they're trying not to surrender to the americans but that means that when some american
calls out into a cave and says you know come on out with your hands up and no one does they throw a
grenade into the cave and keep going a lot of people die that way but the worst is when the
civilians sometimes with japanese using them as human shields sometimes with the japanese dressed
up as civilians trying to get away in a crowd of civilians will usually at night rush american
lines and these soldiers had orders not to let anybody do that for obvious reasons you might
be able to live with yourself for a long time knowing that you killed an enemy soldier who
was trying to kill you it's a lot harder as i said about the vietnam veterans when it's someone
you're not ready to ever think of yourself having participated in snuffing the lives out of it's one
of the things that creates the extra tragedy in patrick hayard donnell's book into the rising sun
he interviews a bunch of marine veterans who talk about these incidents that they remember and you
can just see how the killing of civilians can sometimes um get through the psychological
defenses that these soldiers have that might have protected them had they been able to say
you know it was it was me against the other soldier fair fight it's a little different
when something like what happened to joe mac numera from the sixth marine division happens
and he's quoted in the book as saying quote one night there was a bunch of firing they passed the
word be alert they're coming through the lines the next morning we found out it was the civilians
that had tried to come through the lines and they were out in this open field all killed
jesus christ dead children women old men they said there were japanese among them forcing them to go
we were putting out pamphlets every day telling them the okinawan civilians to stay on the main
roads and not to come through our lines there were a lot of them killed it was horrifying to see dead
babies dead children we didn't have anything to do with it another group accidentally did it
just the thought of all those people you try to get them the civilians out of the caves also
as we were advancing we knew they were in there and we tried to get them out
if we couldn't we didn't know if there were soldiers in there and tossed in hand grenades
in a cave you don't know who's in there or what they're doing end quote
elmer mape's of the sixth marine division's also quoted similar situation says that they told the
people from okinawa stay away from the lines you're going to get hurt but he says that the
japanese would put on civilian clothes and try to blend in with the crowds or use them as human
shields as we said and he says quote things were quiet for a while when all of a sudden just
everything started machine guns rifles you could hear the screams i wasn't right next to it i was
in a foxhole 20 yards or so away after everything quieted down there was a solitary baby crying
just a little tiny baby no other sound the baby was crying in the night everyone was dead except
this poor little baby there the mother was probably dead end quote patrick allman is also quoted and
also remembered that same baby you can see how something like that might pierce the normal
psychological defenses that anyone who has to face another soldier in combat may have put up
right it has a way to get through your emotional armor one of the things allman said though was
running into a sniper who was just a child and he says quote the only thing i really vividly
remember was this particular sniper he killed three or four of my men we located him by the sound of
the bolt on his rifle they flushed him out with a grenade he was a 12 year old boy his magazine
spring was broken so he was only able to slowly fire one shot at a time he was a damn good shot
oh donnell says he sighs now and then says the range was only 50 feet the japanese had left him
there and he did what they left him to do we shot him right there end quote how does one
deal with this i was trying to figure out how i would deal with it and then while i was reading
soldiers remembrances of the situation i came across one who basically said he had to drink
he couldn't continue to exist like this and kill like this without something to numb his emotions
and in the mammoth book of eyewitness world war two edited by johnny lewis he quotes uh john
garcia from the seventh division of the u.s infantry so this is an army soldier by the way
he's talking about the japanese general who had committed suicide by the time the fighting is
over and he writes quote we buried general ushijima and his men inside a cave this was the worst part
of the war which i didn't like about okinawa they were hiding in caves all the time women
children soldiers we get up on a cliff and lower down barrels of gasoline and then shoot at it
it would explode and just bury them to death he continues quote i personally shot one japanese
woman because she was coming across a field at night we kept dropping leaflets not to cross
the field at night because we couldn't tell if they were soldiers we would set up a perimeter
anything in front we'd shoot at it this one night i shot and when it came daylight it was a woman
there and a baby tied to her back the bullet had gone through her and out the baby's back
that still bothers me that hounds me i still feel like committed murder you see a figure in the dark
it's stooped over you don't know if it's a soldier or a civilian end quote he continues right from
that point quote i was drinking about a fifth and a half of whiskey every day sometimes homemade
sometimes what i could buy it was the only way i could kill i had friends who were japanese
and i kept thinking every time i pulled a trigger on a man or pushed a flamethrower down into a hole
what is this person's family gonna say when he doesn't come back he's got a wife he's got children
somebody end quote he continues quote oh i still lose nights of sleep because of that woman i shot
i still lose a lot of sleep i still dream about her i dreamed about it perhaps two weeks ago end
quote and then the interviewer says he let out a deep breath something more turbulent than a sigh
those are the remembrances of a man who may have come home with no visible wounds on his body
but is clearly bearing some scars for the rest of his days how many more of those people are you
going to have when you have to invade the japanese home islands and maybe a better question to ask
although i'm not sure is what is an invasion of the home islands going to do to the civilians
because when you look at what it did to them on okinawa you stand back and a hair on the back
of your neck stands up no one knows how many died by the way i mean okinawa's got slightly
less than half a million people during this time period and there may have been as many as 150 000
of them killed the low numbers are way down by 30 000 so that shows you the range here but so many of
them die in circumstances that absolutely break your heart and if you want to read a very disturbing
book in the early 1980s that's my audience right want to read a very disturbing book yes of course
we do um in the early 80s a in okinawan newspaper went around and collected the stories of survivors
um sort of piecing together little bits of the mosaic that is this whole affair on a memory
by memory basis and the results are horrific and every story its own personal readers digest
survival or not story uh the story of the nurses 14 15 16 years old nursing students and what they
went through and how many of them died in the horror of that the killing of their own wounded
which was happening on a widespread basis and again maybe that's a little glimpse of the future here
when the japanese home islands are invaded one of the survivors um one of these nurses quoted
talks about one of those incidents and in the book it says quote
the american artillery bombardment continued throughout april and may
so at the end of may the naval units moved temporarily down south there were many seriously
wounded men in the shelter and those who were unable to move by themselves were euthanized with
potassium cyanide at the start it was mixed in with their food the wounded just lay there writhing
in agony after one of the group ate some of the food and died none of the others would eat it so
the next method they tried was injection many men dying from what were passed off as injections for
quote the good of your health end quote after watching one of the wounded men die from his
injection the other patients struggled violently and were held down by several staff while they
were given their injections to shiko who's uh one of the nurses who witnessed all this talked
about this as the most horrific of her war experiences quote they died almost immediately
after the injection they just let out a little sigh or groan before both hands started to twist
and contort end quote this was happening all over the island and in other circumstances the
soldiers are being recorded as being resigned to this fate but the part that if you're looking at
okinawa as a preview of the japanese home islands that most takes your breath away it's the group
suicides and i should point out that they you can find examples of this i mean there's a lot of
people in germany killing themselves uh as the red army approaches their territories and there's
whole books on that but the experience in the pacific is different those were spontaneous things
in the pacific it's not always clear whether this is what the people who are killing themselves
want to do whether they feel compelled to but would rather live whether they've been uh
fed a bunch of propaganda that makes them think they have no choice
but one of the most horrific things i've ever read in my life involves one of these caves
where these civilians are holed up the japanese soldiers give them all a bunch of grenades to
kill themselves but there's not enough grenades and a bunch of the ones they they get are duds so
they have to figure out a way without any weapons how they're all going to kill each other and
they're all relate these are family members and just to make matters worse by the way as soon
as the first grenades do go off and these people start committing suicide americans outside the
cave think that they're being attacked so they start shooting into the cave so the civilians
are caught between people blowing themselves up in one part of the cave and americans shooting
into the cave thinking that they're being attacked the man's name by the way is kinjo
who's having this memory and he says that between the americans shooting from one side and people
blowing themselves up from the other he was sort of in a state of shock but then as his eyes clear
he notices a former official who had picked up a piece of wood and who had started bashing
his wife and children with it saying that the bizarre suicidal environment in that cave had
obviously turned that man into a madman that he would bash his own wife and children to death
with a piece of wood but then they all realized that they need something if they don't have a
grenade to kill themselves and their loved ones with and this is where it gets mind boggling
i mean can you imagine having to kill your family members can you imagine having to do it by hand
can you imagine how hard it would be if they just sat there told you they loved you
and then waited patiently for you to do it quoting from the account in descent into hell now quote
those people who had not been able to take their own lives with grenades were worried about being
left alive they had to find other ways to kill themselves and the former ward chairman's behavior
the guy who bashed his family had set the example some used scythes and razor blades to slash themselves
while others strangled themselves with lengths of rope as the mayhem unfolded they found all
sorts of ways to kill including bashing others to death with rocks and sticks men bashed their
wives and parents bashed their children young people killed the elderly and the strong killed
the weak what they all felt in common was the belief that they were doing this out of love
and compassion end quote then kinjo and his brother have to do the same thing to their
family members quote kinjo and his elder brother also had to fulfill their role everything that
was happening around them made them understand that they had to carry out their duty as well
kinjo said quote i think it was our mother we hit first end quote as he and his brother began
bashing her in the head kinjo screamed out until she became a blur through the tears flowing from
his own eyes for the first time in his life he wept uncontrollably quote i have never wailed
like that sense end quote the account then says quote the brothers used sticks to rain blow after
blow on their mother watching her from behind as their pounding center step by step towards her
death is still a vivid image in kinjo's mind however it says he has no recollection of what he
did to his sister and brother after that end quote imagine finding yourself in a situation like that
and now think about how many more people are going to find themselves in that situation
are we to believe that this is going to somehow end on okinawa or is this a
a nastradamus like view of what's still to come for everyone i was fascinated by some comments
in hiromichi yahara's book the battle for okinawa he was a colonel and he in the book started to ask
real angry questions about japan's leadership and how they can let this happen and all throughout
this series we've been talking about that too this idea of the leadership has just immune
sometimes to the suffering of their own people their own soldiers yahara talks about how this
idea of the japanese not surrendering but killing themselves instead developed and then says by the
second world war the greater east asia wars they call it um this was sort of ingrained and you were
ordered to not be taken prisoner but he's asking what the point is and he writes quote japan had
never lost a war we had also never waged a war in which large forces were isolated from mainland
support thus not to be taken prisoner became a fixed principle part of our military education
since the middle of the greater east asia war most japanese garrisons in the pacific islands
adhered to this supreme japanese principle never surrendered to the enemy officers and men he writes
usually committed suicide as a last resort to avoid the ultimate shame of capture our 32nd army
was now faced with this situation must 100 000 soldiers die because of tradition from this
point on he writes it was but a battle to kill the remaining japanese soldiers for nothing
we could cause the enemy little damage they could walk freely on the field of battle
the war of attrition was over and we would simply be asking the enemy to use his formidable power
to kill us all indeed he writes it is a high ideal to fight to the end to maintain national
morale but were our leaders worth the sacrifice of an entire people with the end of the war in sight
they shouted us millions of people must die for our nation why are they really aware of the
entire war situation it was foolish he writes to force everyone to die simply because japan had
never before lost a war end quote he says the decision to surrender should have been made
as quickly as possible he says at least before okinawa was lost
cernoyahara also mentions the american propaganda efforts the attempts to get okinawans and japanese
to surrender to convince them that you know that the americans are not the terrible monsters
they've been told to be that everyone will be safe you may recall that these efforts were done on
syphan and they're going to be stepped up here enw toll says more than on any other previous
pacific battlefield the americans are trying to persuade their enemies to give up the fight
he says they'll drop tons of leaflets 30 000 in one day alone that they will mount loudspeakers on
jeeps trucks patrol boats they'll drop loudspeakers with parachutes hoping that the broadcast before
it hits the ground will reach people in caves he even says that they're using american japanese
citizens to create really good translations they're using cultural sensitivities to realize how the
word surrender might be a sort of a trigger might be the modern term for it so they don't use the
word surrender and cernoyahara writes quote american propaganda was transmitted from small
craft offshore there were daily broadcasts influent japanese now he's quoting the broadcast
okinawan civilians we will guarantee your lives we will give you food and medicine please move
toward minnetoga before it is too late alternatively japanese soldiers you fought well and proudly
for the cause of japan but now the issue of victory or defeat has been decided to continue the battle
is meaningless we will guarantee your lives please come down to the beach and swim out to us end quote
yahara continues by saying quote thus the enemy struck not only with broadcasts and shells but
also with countless propaganda leaflets dropped from the sky none of it showed the viciousness so
typical of propaganda they said candidly the japan's defeat was inevitable they spoke of
japan's leaders and their indifference to the lives of subordinates end quote
and perhaps one could argue that on okinawa they're working at least by the really tough
standards the japanese have set for the first time you're gonna see a decent number of japanese
soldiers surrendering and sometimes as units this is unheard of in the pacific war i think it's
something like 11 000 or so japanese surrender but as usual a nice proportion of those are really
korean and taiwanese laborers impressed into service but it's like 7 000 japanese soldiers
which is significant and you want to say that this is a sign that as we've pointed out the japanese
are like everyone else only more so it took them longer to get to the point of morale collapse
but here it is but other historians will point out that maybe that's the backwards way of looking
at it rather than noticing how many you managed to get to surrender look how many didn't the japanese
suffer something like 110 000 casualties in okinawa and 100 000 of those are people that either fought
to the death or took their own lives at the end that's terrifying if you're trying to extrapolate
data on what an invasion of japan's casualty rate might look like
maybe you think to yourself that you don't care what the enemy's casualty rate is well what about
the civilians the numbers of okinawans who died range anywhere from 30 000 to i've seen 150
160 000 his numbers thrown out there extrapolate that out for japanese civilians and maybe you
say well listen once again this is the enemy side i'm not going to worry too much about their people
okay what about your people and i don't know how many non-americans we're going to participate in a
eventual invasion of japan but the american casualties on okinawa are frightful the worst
in the pacific war so far 50 000 casualties basically almost 13 000 dead 5 000 sailors dead
author rigid b frank had said that the navy and marine losses at okinawa by themselves constituted
about 17 percent of all the casualties sustained by the navy and the marines for the whole war
so there's an idea of how nasty things are
oh yeah another sign maybe of sort of war fatigue is that you can see the casualties the
psychological casualties on the u.s. side spike i've heard all sorts of possible reasons for
this some saying that the battlefield in okinawa was sometimes so like a first world war battlefield
that you started to see a lot of the same sort of um combat fatigue battle fatigue uh psychological
casualties that they saw in the first world war i've seen others blame it on the flood of replacement
soldiers that the terrible casualties necessitated i mean the stories are legendary if you read them
about how quickly those people tend to die when they arrive in battle the first time they haven't
acquired the skills necessary to survive they always remind me uh when you read the stories of
those of those sea turtles that have to hatch on the shore and then run the gauntlet of predators
and threats to make it to the safety of the sea well those replacement soldiers if they if they
can last a little bit in combat will develop the skills necessary to survive but combat is so
unforgiving that tons of them get wiped out you know very quickly and the old soldiers don't ever
want to get to know them very well because they die so fast but it's not just in a military sense
at all that you're starting to see the the psychological tension mounting um earlier we
quoted a letter from a mother that uh navy secretary forestall had released to the public
which you know it cuts right through the emotion of a personal letter like that cuts right through
the names and dates and places and and uh all the other narrative uh and somehow reestablishes a
little bit of the emotional connection to the story and in uh Implacable Foes uh historians Waldo
Henricks and Mark Gallicchio do the same thing they use a a letter as part of trying to give a sense
of how done with this the American people are I mean Okinawa comes after Iwo Jima which comes
after Pelallu I mean these are um body blows in terms of a war that listen if you'd ever been
through a pandemic and you're just ready to take the mask off and go back to normal uh and not have
a lot of deaths that's how Americans and a lot of people in the rest of the world are feeling by
1945 and Henricks and Gallicchio writing this by the way while the Okinawan battle is still going
on right quote the battle for Okinawa dragged on as the casualties mounted so did the questioning
of American strategy in mid-May following one of his daily war journal broadcasts radio commentator
martin agronski received an angry letter from a mrs cjh the mother of a soldier on Okinawa asking
why the army war department and american leaders generally were not being held accountable for
quote all this slaughter of american boys end quote an anguished string of questions followed now
quoting the questions from the letter quote why haven't reinforcements reached those boys on Okinawa
why must the same troops fight for 45 days why only six divisions in the first place why must
every battle in the pacific be bloody it was bloody terroir bloody saipan bloody pelallu
bloody laity bloody iwo jima bloody okinawa bloody minna now all of three divisions there she writes
bloody louisanne not finished and it will be bloody borneo doesn't it ever enter anyone's
mind that we are paying a needless too high a price in human blood in the pacific end quote
and once again you get the questions over strategy over the which leader should be in charge
people go after general buckner and his decision to go head on into the defenses of the japanese
at okinawa rather than try an amphibious assault around the flanks but buckner can't much really
respond to that because he becomes the highest american general in the war to die in combat when
he's killed in an artillery attack and of course the japanese generals die too they all killed
themselves before the fighting on okinawa is even completed the brand new american president
still on the job for less than two months at this point gives a speech to the news media
you can tell that he seems uncomfortable at this point still with scripted
announcements and cameras and as we recalled earlier i mean he's the first american president
without the initials fdr that anyone's experienced in a dozen years but he gives a warning to japan
the japanese people in fact the entire world then if you don't want to have the same thing happened
to you that happened to germany give up now there can be no peace in the world until the
military power of japan is destroyed with the same completeness as was the power of the european
dictators to do that we are now engaged in the process of deploying millions of our armed forces
against japan in a mass movement of troops and supplies and weapons over 14 000 miles
a military and naval feat unequaled in all history substantial portions of japan's key
industrial centers have been leveled to the ground in a series of record incendiary raids
what has already happened to tokyo will happen to every japanese city whose industries
feed the japanese war machine if the japanese insist on continuing resistance
beyond the point of reason their country will suffer the same destruction as germany
our blows will destroy their whole modern industrial plant and organization
which they have built up during the past century and which they are now devoting to our hopeless
cause we have no desire or intention to destroy or enslave the japanese people
but only surrender can prevent the kind of ruin which they have seen come to germany
as a result of continued useless resistance the whole situation in germany is creating
all sorts of very interesting societal and economic problems around the world and especially
in the united states i mean when you have a war ending in europe with millions of men under arms
there what happens to them do some fight the japanese do some get demobilized and what happens to all
the domestic political concerns and labor and management issues and all these things that
have been put on hold as part of the unifying efforts that the country and many countries did
the same thing put together for the war effort a lot of this stuff is starting to rise up to
the surface again before the americans and the allies have reached the war's finish line here
right just because germany's defeated doesn't mean japan is and as we've said earlier the
americans really have to gird themselves for what's to come because the plans for the invasion of
japan are harrowing slated to start in late 1945 moved to the to the more important islands where
places like tokyo are by 1946 and the casualty estimates are horrific i'm not sure what the
proper adjective to use is when the high numbers begin to look like a million men maybe will be
casualties worth pointing out though that even today we argue over what the casualty numbers
would have been no one knew what's more the tendency in the pacific on the allies part has
been to underestimate the casualties that they'll suffer so no one knows the basic plans though
that are being batted around boil down to two main ideas some people want to blockade the country
which is already under a naval blockade to some degree but tighten that have ships just keep
everything from coming in fuel medicine food everything starve them to death and then keep
bombing them the way you're bombing them this may sound by the way like a merciful strategy
blockades often do sound like the lesser of two evils but ask anyone who's ever lived through one
when you start denying food and medicine to people you have a horrific circumstance
without any bombs exploding and in the blockade and bombing scenario you're still gonna have
Japanese cities burned out the other idea is to bomb them the way you're bombing them and then
invade both of those ideas have huge downsides the navy certainly understands after okinawa that
they're going to be facing constant and withering attacks from kamikazes when they invade the home
islands they had 40 straight days at one point on okinawa that's going to be something that
whittles down strength and kills a lot of sailors over a long period of time but an invasion with
ground troops this is a terrifying concept and no one knows how many people might die in something
like that in july 1945 a bunch of things happened that changed the situation somewhat and clarify
it somewhat two of these things overlap by the way there's going to be a very big conference
in potstem outside of berlin in germany the now you know in ruins germany where the leaders of the
allied camp stalin truman now and his first one of these things and churchill in his last one he'll
actually lose the election during it and be replaced by a successor midway through the conference
they had this conference that's mostly about what we do in europe what's the post war situation
look like oh yeah and what about the japanese who are still fighting when the conference is ongoing
something happens back in the united states that changes the whole equation and churchill has to
be informed about this uh the manhattan project proves to be successful and a atomic bomb test
in new mexico goes off without a hitch and the world enters into the nuclear era with very very
few human beings on the planet earth realizing it churchill finds out afterwards that the test
which no one knew how it was going to turn out how it went and he wrote about it in his history
of the second world war and said this quote the president meaning truman invited me to confer with
him forthwith he had with him general marshal and admiral lehi up to this moment we had shaped our
ideas towards an assault upon the homeland of japan by terrific air bombing and by the invasion of
very large armies we had contemplated the desperate resistance of the japanese fighting to the death
with samurai devotion not only in pitched battles but in every cave and dugout i had in my mind he
writes the spectacle of okinawa island where many thousands of japanese rather than surrender
had drawn up in line and destroyed themselves by hand grenades after their leaders had solemnly
performed the right of suicide is what he means to quell the japanese resistance man by man
and conquer the country yard by yard might well require the loss of a million american lives
and half that number of british or more if we could get them there for we were resolved to share the
agony now all this nightmare picture had vanished in its place was the vision fair and bright indeed
it seemed of the end of the whole war in one or two violent shocks i thought immediately myself
of how the japanese people whose courage i had always admired might find in the apparition of
this almost supernatural weapon an excuse which would save their honor and release them from
their obligation of being killed to the last fighting man end quote i have a hard time here
in the 21st century squaring the moral circle between the idea of a fair and bright vision
as churchill terms it and dropping atomic bombs on people but perhaps this should be taken into
account that i'm not living in the world where cities are being bombed and incinerated multiple
times a week and churchill and these allied leaders making these decisions are what to them
might seem a an incremental step up in nastiness to us seems like something that should never ever
ever be done now someone might say we're reacting to this emotionally and in the time period where
they're operating they're using logic right this is the human being lawn mower logic isn't it the
idea that anything that puts a halt to the conveyor belt of death and saves more lives long term
is the greater moral good but you got to do some really horrific things to get there i mean look
how it perverts the entire goals of this atomic bomb i mean in a way if the goal here and it is
is to shock a stubborn japanese leadership into finally seeing the light here that they've lost
the war a little like slapping a hysterical patient you know to get them to calm down enough to take
in reality you want this bomb to be as horrible and terrible as possible the worse it is the more
likely it is that it's going to do its job of being a monkey wrench into the gears of this conveyor
belt of death it's a really weird place that the logical chain of thinking can get you to arrive
at isn't it we called it logical insanity in the shows that we did on this evolution of the logic
of things like strategic bombing but this is a lot bigger than that this goes to the human
experience on so many levels i mean gwen dyre in his book war said that what's being done with
things like atomic bombings and fire bombings that this is just the natural extension of what human
beings have always done the weapons are just a lot more horrific than they used to be
but i can't stop thinking about the idea about personal experience all these people making
these decisions are doing so from a theoretical background as far as i know none of them have
ever lived through a fire bombing or god forbid an atomic attack what if they had would they still
feel like this was the right decision to make would they still feel like this was a bright
and fair vision and i can hear people saying well you know then you're just making decisions from
emotion rather than logic but look where logic has gotten us the emotional reactions to something
like an atomic bombing when you read them today they're the ones that sound saying it's the logical
decisions that seem crazy historian michael best in his book choices under fire moral dimensions
of world war two reminds us not to forget the equivalent of being on the ground rather than
making this too intellectual of a discussion and he writes quote sometimes as we engage in the
intellectual exercise of trying to understand the complexities of the war we can become a
newer to the underlying realities this psychological distancing from our subject no doubt reflects
in a small way the manner in which the wartime leaders themselves gradually became calloused
to the dreadful acts that were being perpetrated all around them and that they themselves were
perpetrating as we analyze the wartime decisions we catch ourselves to our shock tossing around
numbers of dead human beings ten thousand here a hundred thousand there almost as unfeelingly
as the participants themselves this tendency towards psychological numbing is understandable
and perhaps unavoidable but we need to resist it as vigorously as we can we must keep reminding
ourselves what it really means in practice to speak the words firestorm or Hiroshima for hidden
beneath the abstraction of the words words grown customary from heavy use lie the unimaginable
cruelty and madness of what actually happened end quote enw toll in his book twilight of the gods
gives one of the better overall descriptions of this went on august 6th 1945 the first atomic
bombing attack in human history occurs and he writes quote little boy the uranium bomb
dropped on Hiroshima that's the nickname little boy exploded at 8 16 a.m. 1870 feet above the
ground only 550 feet wide of its aiming point the nuclear chain reaction it triggered created
a core temperature of about one million degrees Celsius igniting the air around it to a diameter
of nearly a kilometer the fireball engulfed the center of the city vaporizing about 20 000 people
on the ground thermal and ionizing radiation killed virtually all people within a kilometer of the
surface of the fireball burning them to death or rupturing their internal organs farther out
in successive concentric circles around the epicenter people were exposed to gamma rays
neutron radiation flash burns the blast wave and firestorms the initial shock wave he writes
raced away from the epicenter at greater than the speed of sound some 984 miles per hour
streetcars were lifted from their tracks and scattered like toys clothing was torn from bodies
nearly all wooden buildings within 2.3 kilometers were completely leveled and about half of all
such buildings to a radius of 3.2 kilometers later investigators found the shadows of people
caught within the inner radius around the hypo center they had been vaporized but their bodies
had left faint silhouettes on the pavement or on nearby walls end quote basically the atomic attack
combined the bad side of the firestorms because the fires from the superheated everything exploded
very quickly with horrific concussive blast damage like you would have in major bombings
and then added just as a sprinkling of extra specialness on top horrible dispersion of radio
activity the stories all sound like people who are living through a natural disaster but now
human beings can create the equivalent of natural disasters the effects of the bomb
managed to take out most of the first responders the hospitals the doctors the firefighters everyone
who might actually go out and improve the situation which leaves the people in a horrific
situation for weeks afterwards as they die from radiation and the heartbreaking stories this is
what i mean about if you could take these people who saw this as such a wonderful logical way to
get the japanese to end the war if you could have put Winston Churchill on the ground there and let
him watch the scene going on as people trapped in burning buildings with their loved ones trying
to get them out had to be abandoned because the flames were coming one of the most horrific stories
connected with the Hiroshima bombing involves kids who are caught in the rubble as the fires
approach and the parents don't even know what to do i mean there's the theoretical understanding
what it means to drop a bomb on a city and then there's the reality of something like this in the
book Hibakusha survivors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki which is just remembrances by people one of these
survivors Shiga Hiratsuka talks about the bomb exploding and says quote just then a brilliant
flash like lightning appeared in the thunderous roar of an explosion reverberated around us
in a moment our house collapsed and we found ourselves buried in its rubble as my husband
and i worked frantically to free ourselves i heard a cry for help from the woman next door i called
back to her if we get out before you will come and help you when we did finally pull ourselves free
we saw the city of Hiroshima in ruins around us nowhere was a building left intact and in
several places tongues of fire had begun licking outward suddenly panic stricken and completely
forgetting about our neighbor i began searching for my children she continues as i was calling
their names a voice emerged from a spot two or three meters away help mommy help it was my six
year old daughter kazuko hurrying to the spot i found her tightly wedged from the chest down by
fallen plaster and timber i screamed to my husband to come quickly and do something he however could
hardly move being badly bruised and bleeding from the shoulder he had no strength left it was all he
could do to walk she continues and once again i imagine winston church hall and all the other
decision makers standing to the side watching this unfold quote my daughter kept calling to me it
hurts mommy my legs hurt i can't move hurry and get me out i tugged at her but could not move her
no matter how desperately i tried i just could not free her the fires were moving closer and
closer we would not be able to stay there much longer finally when the flames began to lap
around us we were stirred into moving no longer able to stand the intense heat i realized i was
afraid to die i could not let myself be burned alive tears streaming from my eyes i placed my
hands together as if in prayer and asked my daughter to forgive me kazoo i am a bad mother to you but
please forgive me you don't want to die either i know mommy isn't brave enough to stay here and
die with you i'm afraid of the fire kazoo forgive me forgive me then i chose an area that seemed to
be safe from fire and fled towards it pulling my husband along by the hand i kept looking back at
the ruins of our house as if i were being dragged by the hair from behind there had been no time
to rescue our other child either end quote she spent the rest of the evening uttering apologies
to her dead children and then her husband died this is one of many i always describe it as a
mosaic right and everybody's individual story of how they dealt with this human-caused version
of a natural disaster when you put them together into the mosaic you get a picture it's a lot of
individual stories but look at the stories and imagine if maybe emotion could have stirred
the decision makers rather than logic but once again to what end to allow a blockade to happen
to starve people to allow an invasion to happen where the citizens of japan are killed in house
to house fighting what you're really getting here if we wanted to look at this through the
long-term lens is a vision of a future to be avoided
in that same book hibakusha akira naga sakas quoted he tries to go back home and find
his house and his relatives after the bombing and describes what is not that hard to imagine
our future looking like if everything goes poorly and he writes quote the area around
urakami cathedral was completely burned out and the heat prevented me from approaching
it was not until early the next morning that i made my way to what appeared to be the ruins of
our house the whole area was a fire blackened desolation there was not even a charred remnant
of the huge camphor tree that it stood behind our house all around me were strewn skeletons
scattered bones and torsos of ebony ash i sank down exhausted when i'd recovered somewhat i began
looking for my mother or rather her bones all i had to go by was the fact that she had gold teeth
i held skull after skull in my hands and peered into the jaw area i wonder how many people skulls
i picked up during my search i continued searching frantically there were times when squatting i even
raised fire blackened heads to look at the teeth i spent that whole day the 10th picking up skulls
and putting them down again end quote it is absolutely obvious that it is impossible for us
to conceptualize what this is really like you can make movies about it and people have you
can read survivor accounts and i've read a ton of those and yet there's this distance between
what they experienced and what you can glean from it just by hearing about it and when you
read the accounts of survivors they'll often refer to that one way or another that there's no way
for you sitting here in a peaceful room to understand what i'm saying this is why i think
i'm so attracted to the idea of bringing in you know the leaders who will have to decide to use
these weapons and i'd like to add to the group the leaders on the japanese side who are resistant to
surrendering when it's clearly over in this war i'd like to bring them to and in an ebony
these are scrooge like ghosts of christmas past present or future observer tour allow them to see
what we're really talking about here and i remember in reading michael best's book choices under fire
that even with all this stuff that i've read and even with the hours we've talked about these
questions that there's always something you didn't think about like he mentions
about the other things that are destroyed when the bomb goes off and he says quote
at the same instant meaning when the bomb went off birds ignited in midair mosquitoes and flies
squirrels family pets crackled and were gone and quote it's obvious but i didn't think about all
the insect life instantly being wiped out it's a crazy kind of weapon isn't it and while there's
burning corpses in the foreground it is absolutely understandable that you would miss the things in
the background that you might have lost but those are considerable and when somebody starts rattling
off what you lose in an attack like this a nuclear explosion well one history professor who was on
the ground at herosha mine just marveled at the fact that the city was just gone he said of the
atomic bomb that such a weapon has the power to make everything into nothing well what's everything
thing richard rhodes quoted by best who had a study on this very subject tried to sum up some
of the things besides the obvious things of burning corpses in the foreground and he wrote quote
destroyed that is we're not only men women and thousands of children but also restaurants and
inns laundries theater groups sports clubs sewing clubs boys clubs girls clubs love affairs trees
and gardens grass gates gravestones temples and shrines family heirlooms radios classmates books
courts of law pets groceries and markets telephones personal letters automobiles bicycles horses 120
war horses he points out musical instruments medicines and medical equipment life savings
eyeglasses city records sidewalks family scrapbooks monuments engagements marriages employees
clocks and watches public transportation street signs parents works of art
end quote such a weapon has the power to make everything into nothing and still does by the way
the nuclear sort of Damocles that hangs over our heads now starts then it is perhaps a sign
of something that even after this ferocious attack at Hiroshima the Japanese government still isn't
ready to surrender and before they can even come up with some decent conversation about the matter
they get hit with another hammer blow two days later when the Soviet Union declares war on Japan
this is extra nasty because the Japanese hardliners were living in this fantasy world where they
thought they could use the Soviets as a way to get a better deal from the allies but when the
Soviets declare war on you well hard to deny that that deal is now dead and then the day after that
while the Japanese government is still figuring out how to respond to these you know we have an
atomic bomb dropped on us in two days later the Soviet Union declares war on us and then on
august 9th we get hit with another atomic bomb attack at Nagasaki if you get a hundred thousand
eighty to a hundred thousand people killed in Hiroshima the numbers at Nagasaki are lower because
of the way the terrain is laid out and some other things but you know 45 to 65,000 these are not
insignificant numbers needless to say and even after Nagasaki you can't get the army ministers on
board to surrender unless they can have four conditions and all four conditions are unacceptable
to the allies I mean there are things like you can't occupy Japan we'll try our own war criminals
you know all kinds of I mean it wasn't going to happen but they're not going to surrender till it
does and the US and the allies are not going to stop attacking until they do in fact there are
bombing raids launched on Japan after the two atomic bombs are dropped because nothing is
going to stop until the surrender happens and finally and famously and in a way that's hard
to figure out what really happened because the Cold War made it in the interest of certain
countries like the United States to maybe hide some of the emperor's decision-making in the
Second World War but the emperor steps in and famously says we have to endure the unendurable
and breaks the tie between the officials and and says we're going to surrender
the moment the emperor steps in is one of those times that a lot of people have focused on ever
since understandably because it brings up all sorts of questions first one is is if the emperor had
this kind of power all along why did he wait till now to use it I mean did things have to get this
bad before he exercised it the Japanese system as we've said all along as everyone says is a
government that's opaque by design the decision-making is veiled and sort of you know seen through a
gauzy lens and isn't always following you know the western idea of written down rules and for
every I mean there's there's some there's a vibe to it there's a feel to it there's protocol and
stuff that's deeply embedded in Japanese cultural traditions and imperial traditions hard for
outsiders to grasp and then there's also the hardcore realpolitik Machiavellian people who
will say things like if the emperor does something that we don't like we'll just get rid of him and
get another emperor this is the same government that not long ago had been referred to as a
government by assassination there are Japanese higher government officials right now right in
this room with the emperor who carry bullets in their bodies from being assassination attempted
assassination victims for policy decisions that were not nationalistic or right-wing enough
not super patriotic enough one of the people who's key to this whole thing one of the people
who's involved in the standoff is a general name Anami and he says Francis Pike mentions it mentions
it in his book Hirohito's war he's contemplating maybe the alternate reality from surrender and
he says quote would it not be wondrous for the whole nation to be destroyed like a beautiful flower
and quote that's like a samurai romance poem ending there right we all die and it's beautiful
did it seem beautiful at Hiroshima with the descriptions there or Nagasaki or Tokyo
what if that's the kind of cultural blinders you're working with here on a certain segment
of the military community in Japan and they have a veto power over policy
that's a kind of tragedy sort of when you look at how it turned out and it is with almost
a sense of resignation that when the emperor decides that we're going to finally give in
here and surrender a coup is attempted by the same mid-level military guys who've had an inordinate
amount of impact over policy all along right we talked about them these lieutenant colonels and
these mid-level guys who actually bully and scare their superiors decide they're not going to stand
for this they try to attempt a coup they want to get their hands on the emperor's message to the
public announcing that they're going to surrender before it can be broadcast people will die the
coup plotters will eventually realize they've failed they'll try to take over a radio station just
so they want to be able to explain their motives it's denied they'll kill themselves some other
people will commit suicide but you see the last gasp of these people trying to make a play for
things to prevent this surrender which they've had a large hand in delaying to this point and
there are generals we should point out on the mainland who've been beating the chinese who
are going to look at this idea that they have to surrender is crazy we're gonna have to go over
and surrender to the people whose butt we've been kicking i don't think so don't forget
hiru onoda and a ton of other japanese troops on these pacific islands aren't going to go anywhere
for decades no matter what the emperor does here no other army had the phenomenon of their soldiers
thousands of them fighting for years and years after the war was over either because they were
such true believers they were never going to surrender regardless of what the truth of the
situation happened to be or because they were such true believers that they refused to believe the
truth of the situation was true but you didn't see this phenomenon in any of the other major armies
in the second world war and it's rare to see it in any war ever
it is a relic of the japanese imperial period which ends when the war does on september 2nd 1945
interestingly enough it coincides and is interconnected with the dawn of the next age
in history and most of the time these eras in history aren't easy to pin down when they happen
most people living through them whether it's the agricultural revolution or the age of discovery
or the industrial era can't put their finger on exactly you know when it began or where they are in
the historical moment but the nuclear age well everyone paying attention to current events
knew exactly when it started and everyone figured it out at exactly the same time
and because of what the japanese people went through at Hiroshima and Nagasaki
the door is opened to a third world war which would be civilizationally transformative
as albert einstein is supposed to have said that he didn't know with what weapons world war three
would be fought but world war four he said would be fought with sticks and stones
by the time the human being lawnmower grinds to a halt in 1945
the death totals are some of the worst in recorded history if you just take the asia pacific theater
alone between 25 and 30 million allied civilians are dead the second world war is one of those
rare wars where civilian casualties vastly outnumbered military casualties in the first
world war wasn't that way at all but military casualties are significant too just in that
theater the allies lose four million allied dead a lot of those chinese we forget that the
chinese play the role in the asia pacific theater that the soviets play in the european one
ones who suck up the majority of the damage and keep the enemy occupied
of those forces two and a half million japanese military deaths approximately
and a million civilian ones these are the kind of death totals
that will stick with you for a while and it's hard for me not to notice
that we haven't had a great war between the great powers in the 75 years since the second
world war ended of course there might be another reason for that and i can't help but notice that
we haven't used nuclear weapons on human beings since either the human being lawnmower does not
stay quiet for long because the death and destruction will kick up in the wake of the
second world war in large part because of the structures and changes that were created by
the second world war i mean when the japanese are thrown out of places like korea what moves
into that vacuum or do the koreans just take over the next 15 to 25 years are going to be
all of these areas having independence movements nationalist movements communist insurgencies and
all kinds of things that can be tied directly to them having a soft or not so soft landing from
their colonial eras and a lot of um historians can can draw direct connections between the japanese
throwing out the colonial overlords when they initially took over those areas and the amplification
and acceleration of trends toward independence that were already underway in most of these places
and if they weren't they were by the time the allies tried to retake control of them from the
japanese at the end of the war i mean the indians were going to get independence pretty soon no
matter what they were well on their way and it's only a couple of years after the second world war
that they get independence but you're going to have things with korea and malaysia and
vietnam and the rest of indochina i mean this is all going to be shaking out that will be
contributing to the death and destruction and the human being conveyor belt of death
you know the subsidiary second world war version for decades to come here's the the part though that
i try to reconcile and i never have which is if the end result is something that people celebrate
right if a nation's independence from outsiders for example is dependent on all these terrible
things happening is it worth it can you put a price in lives and destruction on political or
national independence that may be something that the answer differs depending on who you ask
but what it does do is raise all sorts of questions that will lead you into moral quagmire after
moral quagmire i mean start with the idea that either inadvertently or by design does this mean
that the japanese propaganda that portrayed their armies in these pan asian terms these east asia
co-prosperities for your driven terms does that mean that their army actually was the military tip
of the spear of the non-white world you know playing its role in doing what none of these
colonial oppressed societies could do militarily defeat the colonial overlords and is there some
truth to that and if there is how does that change the morality of the overall situation right if you
say that you can't put a price on national or political independence what if you're the chinese
and it cost you 20 million civilians to get yours and the people that killed those people are the
japanese are you thankful to them for that it's it'll tie you up into moral knots won't it how
about another one because if you play that game you know by taking the first step and wondering
if the japanese are the tip of the spears freeing all these other people well could you make the
argument that the allies are the equivalent of the democratic tip of the spear doing the same
thing for the japanese people that they were doing for other asian peoples elsewhere i mean
freeing them from an oppressive authoritarian totalitarian um pseudo fascist state
in his book embracing defeat historian john dower looks at the post war situation in japan and one of
the elements the focus is on is how some japanese viewed it that way usually the people who had been
most oppressed under the old regime artists free thinkers liberals communist socialists leftist of
all kinds people who would end up in prison or tortured or censured or watched victims of the
secret police in the state they often in dower's um book look like people who view themselves as
having been freed by an alliance of other countries which is the way the united states will often
portray its interventionist activities after the second world war right we don't have a problem
with the people of this place it's their government their government's not free we're gonna come in
there defeat their military give them the freedom that they didn't have before let them run their
own go did it in japan and we did it in japan a revolution as a gift was the way some of these
japanese portrayed it and in his book dower reprints a cartoon from japanese cartoonist
kato itsuro where he portrays the japanese as an individual in the foreground of one of these
pieces of art a human being whose hands had been tied behind his back and then he has just had the
bonds severed by a giant pair of scissors that is over his head in the piece of artwork and the
scissors are sort of clothed in the stars and stripes garb so you get the idea that the scissors
represent the united states the japanese person who had been in bondage represents japan and in
the distance running away from the scene of the crime you can see the two figures one who is dressed
as a military high-level muckity muck representing the militarists the other looks like mr monopoly
from your monopoly game and he represents the fat cat rich elites who are the puppet masters in the
society and now the outside powers led by the united states in this case have freed the japanese
people and handed democracy back to them and i mean it's interesting to contemplate because
a lot of societies evolve politically through bloodshed i mean how many countries get independence
from other countries through bloodshed how many get independence from their own oppressive governments
by political revolution right the american revolution the french revolution bloody affairs
there's just a different vibe isn't there when it's people from outside your country who have
to kill your soldiers your civilians destroy your cities occupy your territory in order to give you
these good things it's just fascinating to think about and like so much of the frayed ends of the
rope at the end of the second world war how many loose ends here leave us wondering about moral
questions i mean how about the number one question that often comes out of this time period the
morality of the dropping of the atomic bomb now i am on record as saying that i think this is one
of the most important ethical sorts of circumstances one can ask themselves about something that the
entire potential future of humanity could rest on and its importance becomes clear anytime the issue
actually raises its ugly head like in the middle of the cuban missile crisis everyone
instantly understood the import of this you know moral issue known as nuclear weapons and this
almost shakesperian question of two atomic bomb or two not atomic bomb what is not helpful useful
satisfying or in any way instructive for the next time we might consider using such a weapon is to
take it out of the context of the times because you end up creating a moral choice that never
really existed for the people who had to make it and then judging them on that it says though you
have a plan a drop atomic weapons on Hiroshima and Nagasaki or plan b don't drop atomic weapons on
them and they can live happily ever after but that was never plan b plan b is the one that
makes plan a something that people would consider plan b is not to drop the atomic bomb but to
continue with the fire bombing which continued after the atomic bombs were dropped as well
historically continue with the fire bombing tighten the blockade on japan and they're already
dropping uh sea mines from the air on japan's harbors so get that to a point where millions
are dying from starvation or lack of medicine and then have the inevitable land invasion
against a bunch of civilians who are training with bamboo spears in 1945 that was the ethical
choice and it becomes a lot more murky when those are the plan a and plan b choices
what should be pointed out though sometimes is that our views on these things have been colored
by the intervening history and when you read what historical participants on the allied side
saw these weapons like sometimes you might compare them to x caliber a super weapon that has fallen
see themselves as king arthur and a weapon like x caliber in the hands of an individual like king
arthur is a potential awesome force for good see how murky and morally i mean this is this is the
ethical dilemma of saran's ring right in the lord of the rings isn't it i hope you will forgive me
for once again somehow with my cynical nature seeing a silver lining to the dark cloud that
is the atomic bombings of japan and it's a similar silver lining to the one i see for the holocaust
i think that after the holocaust the fact that there was a holocaust saved a lot of lives
i think those who died in concentration camps probably created such an international historical
shock i don't know how long it lasts but it certainly lasted pretty strongly since that created
an international moral line in the sand that has been violated many times since i mean look at
rwanda for example but that has created a situation where it is radioactive to commit genocide on
people the Uighur is not withstanding perhaps i think the genocides that would have happened had
the holocaust not happened haven't happened and therefore i think the holocaust saved some lives
i feel the same way about the atomic bombings i i don't know if humanity ever collectively
learns lessons but if we do i often think it comes with the equivalent of us you know touching
history's hot stove and in this case in 1945 maybe the hot stove was an atomically heated one
and had we not had an example of what these weapons do to people and to our societies and
the things that we build you know the the power is that one historian said to turn everything into
nothing that's a theoretical power until you see it and seeing it is shocking and the shock of it
may have prevented us maybe from thinking we ever had to try to use these weapons again i mean think
about had the weapon been delayed another year and the war ended before nuclear weapons were
ever used do you think given what you know about how we are that we wouldn't have used them in the
interim just to see what they do we were tempted many times and it was always Hiroshima and Nagasaki's
example that created if not a feeling on the parts of the military or the political leaders maybe as
strongly as we wanted certainly a feeling on the parts of global humanitarian public opinion
and the pressures you know exerted by them and the images that were certainly for example cascading
through president kennedy's brain as he contemplated the decisions he was making in the 1962 Cuban
missile crisis when he was looking at six or seven hundred million people dying you know in a few days
is it possible that humanity and the japanese specifically suffered 150 200 000 250 000 deaths
from a couple of 10 kiloton atomic bombs maybe a 15 kiloton one in Nagasaki's case
to teach us not to use dozens or hundreds of 30 megaton ones i mean if that's the case
is this the atomic age beginning nightmarishly so that it doesn't have to end that way someday
so that we don't have to have you know the war after the next war occur with our very
best technological capabilities and those being sticks and stones
hi everyone dan here with just a couple of quick words before we leave you
the first one is if you were interested enough in the ideas surrounding strategic bombing that's
the bombing of cities or the early history development use theories trying to come to grips
with its potential destructive power of atomic and nuclear weapons we do have past shows on both
of those subjects one is still in the free feed as of this recording anyway and that is the destroyer
of worlds that's about six hours on that subject so maybe wait for a long car drive but we also
have in the pay for archives off of our website they're like two or three bucks i think logical
insanity the title of which we referenced in the past show you just heard twice maybe and also logical
insanity extra for the stuff that didn't fit into logical insanity and those are available on the
website if that sounds interesting to you once again i want to thank you for being the most
patient audience on the planet and we appreciate it it allows us to do the work with the way we want
to do it also another announcement for those of you who didn't get to see and want to see
our first world war immersive experience exhibit war remains just want to let you know that it is
now a part of the national world war one museum and memorial in Kansas City, Missouri and you
can go see it there this is the full set by the way we're talking i mean there's a home version
of this but it doesn't have the the actual set it doesn't have the giant speakers under your feet
to make the sound of things like shells vibrate through your spinal column there's a whole bunch
of things that the actual we said it combined like virtual reality in a haunted house when you
were a kid in terms of you know you can reach out and touch things and they're there right barbed
wire rats everything feels just the way it should the people at mwm and at flight school and at
skywalker sound they outdid themselves with this and if you have the home edition that's great too
but there's nothing like standing on those speakers and just having it you know knock your socks off
so if you find yourself in Kansas City, Missouri and you'd like to experience it head over to the
national world war one museum and memorial and check it out would you tell them i sent you
support us with patreon by going to patreon.com forward slash dan carlin or go to our donate
page at dan carlin.com forward slash dc-donate