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In short: Nanking. "Rape" was a gross understatement.
Yes but if we go further down that line then you will get to some real attrocities that few know about.
In short: Nanking. "Rape" was a gross understatement.
Half. And it's a 48-star flag, to boot.
Just to address the "FDR knew it was going to happen" thing. I've been reading the diaries of FDR's Sec. of the Interior, Harold Ickes. He frequently mentions that they all hoped that GERMANY would create an incident that would give the US an excuse to enter the war. At the same time they all (meaning FDR and his administration) were hoping to avoid war with Japan. People criticize the US for shutting off oil and scrap metal sales to Japan in the weeks leading up to the outbreak of war. In fact FDR was receiving criticism for continuing these sales as long as he did, in an effort to appease the Japanese. Yes, he was trying to appease the japanese. The unbridled aggression of Japan forced even the State Dept to agree to stop these sales in November of 1941.
That war was imminent was obvious to everyone in the world by the end of November 1941. How it would start was another issue. Nobody outside the high level military planners in Japan expected such a ferocious and effective blow as the Pearl Harbor attack, and the subsequent invasions of Malaya and other areas of South East Asia.
In short: Nanking. "Rape" was a gross understatement.
I read The Rape of Nanking by Iris Chang.
I read The Rape of Nanking by Iris Chang. Writing the book took such an emotional toll on her that she suffered a nervous breakdown and after several years of battling depression she committed suicide.
I heard her interviewed on a local radio station soon after she wrote it. She didn't exactly sound thrilled with the facts she met with or her ability to get to the truth very quickly as some people stood in her way of uncovering the truth.:eusa_doh:
I read The Rape of Nanking by Iris Chang. Writing the book took such an emotional toll on her that she suffered a nervous breakdown and after several years of battling depression she committed suicide.
She was working on a book about the Bataan Death March when she suffered her nervous breakdown.
My flag is flying today. Pity it's the only one on the street that is.
Half. And it's a 48-star flag, to boot.