America’s Responsibility for the Arrogance of China and South Korea: The Legacy of GHQ Occupation Policy

This article argues that the arrogance and aggression of China and South Korea are, to a significant extent, the responsibility of the United States.
Tracing the root cause to the GHQ occupation policy, it condemns America’s wartime actions, including indiscriminate bombing and atomic attacks, and criticizes current U.S. officials for uncritically accepting anti-Japan propaganda while failing to confront China’s hegemonic ambitions.

2017-07-25

It is no exaggeration to say that the responsibility for making China and South Korea so arrogant and overbearing lies with the United States.
It goes without saying that the root of this lies in the occupation policies of GHQ.
The United States bears not only the responsibility for maneuvering Japan, under the pretext of self-defense, into actions that inevitably dragged it into war,
but also the guilt of carrying out indiscriminate bombings using inhumane incendiary bombs on 127 cities throughout Japan, even after Japan’s defeat had become decisive, slaughtering countless civilians who were non-combatants.
Furthermore, in order to atone for the greatest crime in human history—dropping atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki as a threat to the Soviet Union—
the United States must not show even the slightest opening toward the wicked hegemonic ambitions of China, an evil great power that is a one-party communist dictatorship.
Still more unacceptable is the conduct of U.S. State Department spokesperson Nauert and Adams of the Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs, who swallow whole the malicious anti-Japan propaganda of South Korea, another evil nation that echoes China.
The Japanese people, with a history of 2,600 years and guided by the principle that “harmony is to be valued,” will never seek revenge for the indiscriminate bombings and the two atomic bombs, unlike nations such as China and South Korea,
but that does not mean that Japan is something to be taken lightly.
To Americans represented by profoundly ignorant figures such as State Department spokesperson Nauert and Adams of the Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs, I, as a modern-day Oda Nobunaga, raise my voice and deliver a stern rebuke.
To be continued.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Please enter the result of the calculation above.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.