This worst dictator in history will surely do the same thing as Putin.
As I was re-disseminating this chapter, I came across a horrifying fact.
Recently, the fleets of China and Russia have been conducting joint military exercises in the waters of the Japanese archipelago, from Hokkaido in the north to Tsushima in the south.
They threaten Japan with the evilest thoughts and vicious sentiments that the Yalta Conference is still alive.
Japan must do the following immediately.
Remove Japan from the hostile nations clause of the U.N… Japan, which has allowed the U.N. to retain such a clause and has provided an enormous amount of U.N. maintenance funds for many years, along with the U.S., has been a modern cartoon nation, even more, stupid than North Korea, as we have mentioned before.
Japan must immediately “learn from Germany” and build a system to share the U.S. nuclear weapons.
We must immediately amend our constitution to deter attacks and aggression from the pretty low and the worst nations, such as China and Russia.
Xi Jinping takes Russia’s actions and the West’s response very seriously.
It goes without saying that this is to invade Taiwan and the Senkaku Islands.
This worst dictator in history will surely do the same thing as Putin.
The time has come for the Japanese people to realize that Japan’s current politicians, media, and academics are as stupid as kindergarten children.
In fact, the Russians tell lies that make light of people. The chapter I sent out on 2019-03-22 titled “In fact, the Russians tell lies that make light of people.” is by far the number one search on Amoeba.
I guess I don’t need to tell you why.
The following is from Masayuki Takayama’s famous column in this week’s weekly Shincho.
Russia’s Deadly Sin
The four northern islands belonged to Russia at the Yalta talks.
Foreign Minister Viklov proclaimed lord it over, saying Japan should not talk pompously and accept it obediently.
Ambassador to Japan Mikhail Galuzin followed suit, saying that the four northern islands had been legally acquired.
But will the media remain silent in the face of the Russians’ rhetoric, or will they, like the Asahi Shimbun, flatter Russia by saying, “Even if it’s only two islands?”
It is doubtful whether Editor-in-Chief Shiro Nakamura has manhood.
In such a situation, Tsutomu Saito of the Sankei Shimbun made a dare.
After the Japanese army disarmed, the Russians invaded.
It was like a looter.
The Russians had barely arrived in Kunashiri when the surrender signing ceremony was being held on the battleship Missouri on September 2.
It would be another three days before they could enter Gumai and Shikotan.
Saito also cited that the Japanese had tricked 600,000 Japanese people into going to the bitterly cold land, abducted them, treated them as enslaved people, and killed 60,000.
I had worked with him when I was a journalist covering the Atlanta Olympics.
He is a graduate of the Department of Russian at Tokyo University of Foreign Studies. When he was a correspondent in Moscow, he broke a big story about the dissolution of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union.
His work was slow, but he wrote honest articles.
It is the first time I have seen him write such a radical article.
The correspondent is blindly in love with the country of the language he studied, which is the United States in English.
In his case, he is very fond of Russia, which must have been very hard for him to tolerate.
In fact, the Russians tell lies that make light of people.
Lavrov says that the possession of the four northern islands was a “known fact” decided at the Yalta Conference in February 1945.
However, in “Hoover’s Memoirs,” translated by Soki Watanabe, the U.S. newspaper scooped up the details of the meeting two years after the end of the war, and eight years later, the U.S. State Department issued a report on the summit.
Eight years later, the U.S. State Department issued a report on the talks. Still, it said, “There was no line on Japan, only Europe.
Japan was not even aware of the existence of the Yalta Agreement when it was signed on September 2″ (Masaru Sato), nor did it know its contents.
What kind of secret agreement was there between FDR and Stalin?
Russia wanted half of Hokkaido. MacArthur refused and recommended Nagoya, where the U.S. military could impose restrictions. Still, the Russians did not respond,” according to the records of William Siebold, director of the Diplomatic Section at GHQ.
But MacArthur was not even allowed to be involved in dropping the atomic bombs, of no importance.
He had no authority to make any decisions.
FDR is still the key.
He was very lenient with Stalin, giving the Soviet Union three votes in the U.N. and letting the Soviet Union have its way in Eastern Europe.
Stalin’s second words were to “avenge the Russo-Japanese War.
He tried to defeat the Japanese army by himself by attacking Nomonhan but was crushed in the process.
He could not win against the Japanese, but he had a chance to win.
The only chance to win was when the Japanese surrendered and became unarmed.
He was thinking about retaliation in advance.
The first was to turn the Japanese into enslaved people in Siberia.
The second was to invade their territory.
In Tsutomu Saito’s “Stalin’s Secret Records,” there is a quote from a naval officer who said, “If we take South Sakhalin and the Kuril Islands, our fleet trapped in Okhotsk will be free to go out to the Pacific.
Furthermore, “The strategy of “capturing the Kuril, Soya, Tsugaru, and Tsushima straits'” was discussed, and Churchill encouraged “welcome the Russian fleet to enter the Pacific Ocean. Churchill encouraged “welcome the Russian fleet to enter the Pacific Ocean.”
Churchill and the more pro-Russian FDR joined the Yalta meeting.
Perhaps there was an agreement that Britain and the U.S. would tacitly approve the invasion of all of Hokkaido and Tsushima.
Otherwise, I don’t see any reason why Britain and the U.S. would have tolerated the looter after the war.
However, Russia was useless to the bone, and when challenged by the surrendering Japanese army, it was shattered and could not reach Hokkaido in the end. it should dismiss Russia’s atrocities
Taking the four northern islands was the best they could do.
That does not mean that it should dismiss Russia’s atrocities out of hand.
The newspapers should take a lesson from Tsutomu Saito.