The Japanese Wartime Empire, 1931-1945 Peter Duus, Ramon H. Myers, Mark R. Peattie / Peter Duus, Ramon H. Myers, Mark R. Peattie
2021, 1996, c1996., 2021-07-13, 19960101
eBook
With this book the editors complete the three-volume series on modern Japanese colonialism and imperialism that began with The Japanese Colonial Empire, 1895-1945 (Princeton, 1983) and The Japanese ...Informal Empire in China, 1895-1937 (Princeton, 1989). The Japanese military takeover in Manchuria between 1931 and 1932 was a critical turning point in East Asian history. It marked the first surge of Japanese aggression beyond the boundaries of its older colonial empire and set Japan on a collision course with China and Western colonial powers from 1937 through 1945. These essays seek to illuminate some of the more significant processes and institutions during the period when the empire was at war: the creation of a Japanese-dominated East Asian economic bloc centered in northeast Asia, the mobilization of human and physical resources in the older established areas of Japanese colonial rule, and the penetration and occupation of Southeast Asia.Introduced by Peter Duus, the volume contains four sections: Japan's Wartime Empire and the Formal Colonies (Carter J. Eckert and Wan-yao Chou), Japan's Wartime Empire and Northeast Asia (Louise Young, Y. Tak Matsusaka, Ramon H. Myers, and Takafusa Nakamura), Japan's Wartime Empire and Southeast Asia (Mark R. Peattie, E. Bruce Reynolds, and Ken'ichi Goto), and Japan's Wartime Empire in Other Perspectives (George Hicks, Hideo Kobayashi, and L. H. Gann).
Biadillah hailed the important support by Japan to Morocco's socio-economic development and said that the two parties expressed their resolve to join hands in order to promote Japan-Morocco-Africa ...triangular cooperation.
The service ironizes the slowness of the work in the construction of the facilities for the Olympics
Caleidoscopio Ciac C1209, 14/04/1960
Il servizio ironizza sulla lentezza dei lavori nella ...costruzione degli impianti per le Olimpiadi.
According to the ministry, Ban made the explanation when Masaji Matsuyama asked him about his intention after he, speaking of Japan's friction with China and South Korea, said at a news conference in ...Seoul on Monday that leaders in Northeast Asia need to have a correct recognition of history. Ban's remarks have led Japanese Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga to express discontent. Questioning whether Ban commented with his recognition of Japan's stance, Suga said he wanted to confirm Ban's intention.END
Tokyo, Sept. 15 (Jiji Press)--Zepharma Inc. will aim to produce profit in the first year of its operations from next month, President-elect of Zepharma Masaji Oe told Jiji Press on Wednesday. By ...around fiscal 2010, it is hoped that Zepharma will record sales of 50 billion yen. To achieve the goal, Zepharma may acquire other brands and companies, Oe said.
The Chinese want more than confessions from old soldiers. They have their own records and eyewitness accounts, many of them compiled after the 1949 revolution raised a ''bamboo curtain'' between ...China and the free world--a cold-war divide that guaranteed Japan's wartime misdeeds would never be fully exposed. The Chinese claimed that Japan used chemical weapons in more than 2,000 battles that spanned nine years and killed roughly 10,000 people. As if to corroborate these charges, remnants of Japan's chemical arsenal have risen like ghosts from the grave. In 1953, chemical rounds sold as scrap metal injured 70 workers in Heilongjiang province. In 1991, leaky phosgene mortar rounds made 20 people dizzy at a high school in Hebei province. In Xiaobeitun, site of a chemical-warfare testing ground, 47-year-old farmer Fan Lizhong remembers ''catching my rake on a large metal shell,'' probably a chemical bomb, while gathering kindling as a child. He counts himself lucky it didn't detonate, which would have added his name to the roughly 2,000 Chinese injured, more than a dozen fatally, by abandoned chemical weapons. Japan learned how to make these weapons in the trenches of World War I. At the French government's invitation, Lt. Col. Taneki Hisamura, then a Japanese military attache in England, spent 1918 touring French chemical-weapons factories. After the Armistice, he and a colleague did similar research in Germany. Back home, their findings inspired a crash program, in defiance of the 1925 Geneva Protocol banning chemical weapons. Japan imported manufacturing equipment from both France and Germany, and in 1929 began building a production facility so secret that its location, Ohkuno Island, was erased from unclassified Japanese maps. Dubbed ''the island of great hardship,'' the facility produced toxins for 7.5 million weapons. In 1931 the hardship spread to China. Japan invaded Manchuria, a resource-rich industrial region, and established Unit 516 in Qiqihar to develop and test a modern chemical arsenal. The facility perfected a variety of new weapons, from deadly smoke ''candles'' to chemical grenades, mortars and heavy artillery--all manufactured with Ohkuno's poisons. Japanese troops used these munitions almost from the day they invaded central China in 1937. They launched 375 separate chemical attacks in a four-month campaign to conquer Wuhan, for example, and in the deadliest gas attack of the war killed more than 800 people in tunnels beneath the communist-held hamlet of Beitan. A Chinese newspaper account published soon after the 1942 assault described victims as civilians ''without an inch of iron in their grip who died at the hands of Japanese devils.''
April 22, 1999--JETRO (Japan External Trade Organization) announced that Masaji Nagai has been appointed to be a JETRO senior trade advisor based in San Diego. Nagai succeeds Tatsuo "Ted" Chida, who ...consulted with more than 100 firms in San Diego and helped to increase interest in the Japanese market during his three-year assignment. Chida was also committed to working with local business people to develop stronger ties between Southern California and Japan. Chida's efforts successfully provided accurate and valuable information about Japan and the Japanese market.
Addressing the complex history of Korea and Japan, he reveals the hypocrisy of Kim Il-sung's government as starvation becomes a way of life for the people living for decades under his rule. Ishikawa ...relates his painful story with sardonic humor and unwavering familial love even in the depths of despair, making human the often impersonal news coverage of mysterious and threatening North Korea. -
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