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Whose Back was Stabbed?: FDR’s Secret War on Japan

Autor Koichi Mera
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 5 apr 2017
This is a book that will change the American perception of the Pacific War. One important question is: Who actually started the Pacific War? By examining recently discovered facts revealed through the declassification of official documents, the decoding of secret communications between the Soviet Union and its operatives, and findings from American and Japanese writers in recent decades, the author clarifies the role played by President Franklin D. Roosevelt and members of his cabinet in pushing Japan to the brink of war. Another notable analysis concerns the U.S. occupation of Japan immediately after the war. The author finds it as a spectacular success in politically castrating Japan. The impact is still clearly observable. Many Japanese have lost the sense of nationhood as a result.

The author examines the historical background of U.S.-Japan relations from the visit of Commodore Matthew Perry in 1853 to the present day. Utilized a wealth of Japanese as well as American materials, he presents a view of the history of the two countries. He finds that Japan was not very skillful in utilizing code-breaking or information-warfare, but tried to liberate colonies in Asia and Africa, and indeed her effort was successful and ultimately resulted in the loss of Western Colonies including India, Indonesia, Burma, and Malaysia. After reviewing nearly two hundred years of history, the author urges contemporary Japanese to be free from the self-incriminating view of history and to be confident that the nation is on a right track.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780761868958
ISBN-10: 076186895X
Pagini: 220
Ilustrații: 4 Tables
Dimensiuni: 158 x 241 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.46 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Hamilton Books
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Cuprins

Preface
Acknowledgement
Chapter 1: Japan Twice Trapped: the Pacific War and Beyond
Chapter 2: The Tokyo War Crimes Trails: A Travesty of Legal Justice
Chapter 3: Japan among Competing Powers
Chapter 4: The Historical Implications of Japan's Resistance to Colonization
Chapter 5: Japan's Challenge to Racial Discrimination
Chapter 6: President Roosevelt Pushed Japan to Retaliate
Chapter 7: Japan's Total Defeat in the Information War
Chapter 8: American Occupation Policy of Castrating Japan
Chapter 9: The Historical Legacy of World War II in Asia
Chapter 10: Conclusions: Japan Should Take Pride in Her Past
Appendix A: Imperial Rescript on the Declaration of War Released by the Cabinet at 1100 Hours on 8 December 1941 (Japan Time)
Appendix B: The Concluding Testimony of General Hideki Tojo at the International Military Tribunal for the Far East
Appendix C: General Douglas MacArthur's Testimony on Japan before the Armed Services and Foreign Relations Committees of the U.S. Senate on May 3, 1951(Excerpt)
Bibliography
Index

Recenzii

Whose Back Was Stabbed? is a startling but important Japanese view of what led up to the attack on Pearl Harbor and the Pacific War, and what happened to the Japanese nation and people after the air raids. Professor Koichi Mera's personal account of a narrow escape from Korea leads into a look at what the American occupation of Japan-supposedly America's and MacArthur's finest hour-meant to people who had no chance to respond to a propaganda assault on recent Japanese history. The U.S. authorities and their 'court historians' fostered a myth of mindless Japanese aggression that persists to this very day under the guise of patriotism. There are two sides to every quarrel. Professor Mera fearlessly tells the other side.
Dr. Koichi Mera has collected a vast amount of authentic documents and produced this book which represents historically accurate understanding of the events related to the U.S.-Japan relations covering the years around WWII. The FDR conspiracy theory cannot be rejected any longer.