World War II: Pacific Theater Overview and Japanese Cruelty

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World War II: Pacific Theater Overview and Japanese Cruelty Starting in the early 1930’s, the Japanese began to display their great imperialistic dreams with ambition and aggression. Their goal was to create a "Greater East Asia Co-prosperity Sphere" where they controlled a vast empire in the western Pacific.1 In September of 1939, Japan signed the Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis Treaty, allying themselves with Germany and Italy in an effort to safeguard their interests in China from the Soviet Union. Japan’s only major obstacle left lay in the significant size of the United States Pacific Fleet. To rid themselves of this, Japan attacked the United States Pacific Fleet in hopes of crippling it enough to prevent any further hindrance from the US. Although Japan began the War in the Pacific on the offensive, winning many battles and gaining significant territories, the tide quickly turned in favor of the US because of the their dominating industrial capacity. Thus, the Japanese began to resort to ghastly measures to prevent a humiliating defeat. Japanese aggression originated in the fall of 1931 when the explosion of a section of the South Manchurian Railway in northern China occurred, causing Japan’s Kwangtung Army, who was guarding the railroad, to exchange fire with the Chinese Army and then proceed to occupy all of Manchuria. Soon after, the Kwangtung Army set up a puppet government and renamed the region Manchukuo. The Chinese Army claimed that the Japanese purposely blew up part of the railroad to initiate a confrontation and therefore a reason to occupy Manchuria.2 Later, in 1937, Japan decided to go ahead with plans to further invade China, and conquered most of the northern and eastern regions within a year. This was later t... ... middle of paper ... ...c., 1963), 29-32. 6. Dupuy, On To Tokyo, 4. 7. Dupuy, Rising Sun of Nippon, 69. 8. Dupuy, On To Tokyo, 24. 9. Dupuy, On To Tokyo, 67. 10. "The Nanking Massacre." Basic Facts on the Nanjing Massacre and the Tokyo War Crimes Trial. (24 October 1999). 11. Yuki Tanaka, Hidden Horrors: Japanese War Crimes in World War II (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1996), 135. 12. Tanaka, 198. 13. Tanaka, 11-34. 14. "The Bataan Death March." America USA. http://www.neta.com/~1stbooks/ bataan.htm (1 November 1999). 15. Tanaka, 173. 16. Tanaka, 115. 17. Philip R. Piccigallo, The Japanese on Trial: Allied War Crimes Operations in the East, 1945-1951 (Austin, TX: The University of Texas Press, 1979), xi-xii.

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