Why Did the Japanese Army Terrify America? GHQ Brainwashing and the Errors of Postwar Intellectuals

Published on January 30, 2020. This is a revised republication of a chapter originally posted on September 5, 2019. It discusses the prolongation of the Sino-Japanese War, Soviet espionage, the Asahi Shimbun, the Roosevelt administration, and GHQ’s postwar brainwashing, while examining the strength of the Japanese Army and the depth of the Japanese people’s love for their country, families, and hometowns. It criticizes the masochistic historical view of postwar intellectuals and media figures such as Oe Kenzaburo, Murakami Haruki, the Asahi Shimbun, and NHK.

January 30, 2020
Since propaganda operations are their supreme mission, and since they have no intellect for anything else, that may only be natural.
I am republishing, after correcting paragraphs and the like, the chapter originally posted on September 5, 2019, under the title: “The Japanese Army was far too strong… The U.S. military, then the strongest military in the world and boasting overwhelming material resources, must have felt this in its very bones.”
The following is a chapter originally posted on January 25, 2019, which I am posting again after correcting one typographical error.
That the twentieth century was the century of war means that—
for example, in complete contrast to the so-called cultural figures who contributed to yesterday’s Nihon Keizai Shimbun column—
all the people of the countries concerned were involved in war in some form.
There is no end to the number of poets who volunteered to go to the battlefield and died in battle.
That is only natural, because there can be no such thing as a true poet who is not a patriot.
But the so-called intellectuals, cultural figures, so-called lawyers represented by yesterday’s Nikkei column, and NHK employees who calmly say that Japan colonized the Korean Peninsula are different.
In them, the very root of a perfectly natural and self-evident patriotism is distorted, or has been distorted, and has rotted.
Bad wars are things such as the Nazi massacre of the Jews,
the repeated massacres of their own people by China and the Korean Peninsula,
or America’s massacre of the Native Americans.
The Sino-Japanese War was turned into a quagmire by Soviet spies and the Asahi Shimbun,
and it was the Soviet spies who had captured the Roosevelt administration who used this as material to form pro-China and anti-Japanese public opinion in the United States all at once.
If they succeed in infiltrating five percent of the elements, they will inevitably control the organization that is the target of their operations.
Since propaganda operations are their supreme mission, and since they have no intellect for anything else, that may only be natural.
At that time, the Soviets also infiltrated spies into countries that formed anti-Japanese public opinion, such as Canada.
The famous Herbert Norman was one of them.
After all, when Lenin succeeded in the Russian Revolution, intellectuals throughout the world were deeply shocked,
because of the top-heavy weakness that intellectuals possess.
It was even one of the factors in Akutagawa Ryunosuke’s suicide.
For example, Deutscher wrote about the shock that intellectuals of the time received from the Russian Revolution.
The bright minds in the studies of various countries perceived the Russian Revolution as if it were an ideal revolution by workers.
It is understandable, since they did not yet know what communism really was.
However,
it was Japan’s postwar intellectuals who repeated the mistake of the intellectuals of that time.
Yesterday’s “Oiso Koiso” revealed that fact vividly.
Who spread the idea that Japan fought a bad war?
Whose brainwashing was it?
Most of Japan’s postwar intellectuals completely failed to understand a truth that even a kindergarten child could really understand.
Giving the Nobel Prize to Oe Kenzaburo, who is hardly worthy of calling himself an intellectual, was the height of folly.
Who spread the idea that Japan fought a bad war?
Needless to say, it was the United States.
Whose brainwashing was it?
Needless to say, it was brainwashing by the United States.
For what purpose? To divert the eyes of the world from, and to conceal, the greatest act of slaughter in the history of war carried out by human beings: the indiscriminate attacks on 127 cities throughout Japan with incendiary bombs.
Furthermore, in order to divert the eyes of the world from, and to conceal, the greatest and worst crimes in human history, Hiroshima and Nagasaki, they turned Japan into the supreme villain.
However, the facts that Takayama Masayuki, the one and only journalist in the postwar world, has verified truly and revealed to us are the exact opposite of their propaganda.
Rather, there were no soldiers more gentlemanly on the battlefield than Japanese soldiers.
He reveals that they were people who possessed the aesthetic sense and good sense cultivated by the Japanese over 2,600 years.
In this chapter, I will tell the world the truth for the first time.
Why did the United States not stop at indiscriminate attacks on 127 cities throughout Japan with incendiary bombs, but go as far as Hiroshima and Nagasaki?
Regarding the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, there was certainly the factor that the world and the U.S. administration at the time possessed a sense of racial discrimination.
But the greatest reason was that the Japanese people—the Japanese Army—were a military force so strong that one could call them the strongest in history.
Even when their supply of materials was cut off,
in order to defend a faraway country, the country where their own families, wives, and children lived,
most of them fought on distant battlefields, staking their own lives until they died.
In truth, there had never been such a people anywhere in the world in all of history.
Bushido was probably one factor in this.
The Japanese Army was far too strong.
The U.S. military, then the strongest military in the world and boasting overwhelming material resources, must have felt this in its very bones.
In every battle that the United States fought.
The strength and toughness of the Japanese Army were far beyond their imagination.
The Japanese Army was as strong as fierce gods.
The Japanese people, who in all human history possessed the strongest feelings of love for their country, their families, and their hometowns,
were, when it came to war, the bravest people in the world.
In other words, the Japanese people’s feelings of love for their country, their families, and their hometowns were so strong that no country in the world could even approach them.
That is the kind of people the Japanese were.
In one sense, that is only natural.
That is because, until Japan was maneuvered by the plots of Soviet spies, by media such as the Asahi Shimbun, and by the Roosevelt administration captured by Soviet spies into having no choice but to side with the defeated nations in the Second World War,
and until Japan lost a war for the first time in history and was occupied and ruled by another country,
it had been a country that, for more than 2,000 years since the dawn of recorded history, had never been occupied or invaded by another country.
There is no such country anywhere else in the world.
The people in whom that feeling is astonishingly thin are yesterday’s writer, the Asahi Shimbun, and the so-called cultural figures.
Oe Kenzaburo and Murakami Haruki are their representative players.
It seems that Oe has strong feelings only for his own family, his hometown, the Korean Peninsula, China, and the like,
and it is a well-known fact that he holds intense hatred toward the real Japan, the actual Japan, apart from those.
This is also clear from the fact that his name appears, almost without fail, among the founders of movements that openly express hatred toward Japan.
In other words, they possess brains below the level of kindergarten children.
They are pitiful infants who completely believe the dissemination carried out by GHQ, which was truly, in the real sense of the term, nothing but false rumors, and who were brainwashed by them.
That is the true nature of them, the Asahi Shimbun, NHK, and others.
This article continues.

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.