|
WAR CRIMES TRIALS
| Index |
Tokyo Trial | Eat 'Em |
Old Mukden |
Rape of Nanking | Gall Bladders |
Provoked |
Japanese War Crimes Trials
By Carlos Whitlock Porter
- The Tokyo War Crimes Trial, or,
You Are What You Eat - So Be Careful
by
Carlos Porter
- If You Can't Eat 'Em, Beat 'Em
Or, How I Killed Thousands of People With My Bare Hands
by Carlos Porter
- I Left my Heart in Old Mukden,
or, How I Survived Miraculously While Almost Nobody Died
by Carlos Porter
- Japan was Provoked into a War of
Self Defense
by Carlos Porter
- Rape of Nanking - So Sorry,
or, How I Got My Rocks Off in Old China Town
by Carlos Porter
- Queer Facts, or, How I Ate Gall
Bladders While Writing My Diary
by Carlos
Porter
| Index |
Tokyo Trial | Eat 'Em |
Old Mukden |
Rape of Nanking | Gall Bladders |
Provoked |
The Tokyo War Crimes Trial,
Or, You Are What You Eat - So Be Careful
By Carlos Whitlock Porter
On October 30, 1938,
an actor named Orson Welles pretended to be a sole surviving
radio announcer broadcasting from the ruins of a city destroyed
by Martian invaders. Thousands of people abandoned their homes
and fled in terror to escape octopus-like monsters ravaging
the country in flying saucers equipped with death-rays; yet,
a simple flick of the radio dial would have revealed that other
stations were broadcasting normally.
Three years later,
America faced another, even graver threat - a second invasion
of flying-frying people-eating monsters and non-octopoidal humanoids:
not this time from outer space, nor even yet from the Black
Lagoon; but from a small island in the Pacific called Japan.
Known to naturalists for its omnivorous feeding habits
- in contrast to the European variety - and for its aggressive
nature - Fascisticus japanicus subsists on a diet of
Japanese, Chinese, Filipinos, Americans and raw fish. (American
good taste makes this food hard to clean - rendering this diet
expensive).
That the Japanese are a nation of habitual
cannibals has been repeatedly "proven" in "War Crimes Trials",
(a sort of zoo).
The most famous of these "War Crimes
Trials" was the International Military Tribunal for the Far
East, or Tokyo Trial. The transcript is available in book form
from Garland Publishing, 1000A Sherman Ave., Hamden CT 06514,
or 136 Madison Ave, New York 10016-6753, under the title THE
TOKYO WAR CRIMES TRIAL, edited by R. John Pritchard and Sonia
Magbanua Zaide, ISBN 0-82404755-9.
The following "eyewitness
testimony" is taken from these volumes:
"Two men fled
and hid nearby as the Japanese approached, but the Japanese
bayonetted to death all five occupants of the house, one of
whom was a three-year girl. The six Japanese ate the flesh
from some of the bodies of their victims... the flesh of the
little-girl was cut into small pieces, put on the ends of sticks
and roasted over an open fire... the flesh of another victim
was roasted or boiled with native vegetables. The flesh
of three of the victims was consumed in this manner... After
the Japanese left, two observers went into the house and
saw a piece of human flesh inside of a bag left by one of the
Japanese and also inside one of the kettles..." (JAG Report
137, pp. 12,468-9 of mimeographed transcript; these reports
"quote" "testimony" of unknown persons, often illiterates identified
by first name only who are allowed to repeat hearsay and who
could not be cross-examined).
"I saw this from behind
a tree and noticed Japanese cut his flesh from arms, legs,
chest and hips... I was shocked at the scene and followed
the Japanese just to find out what they do to the flesh.
They cut the flesh to small pieces and fried it. About 1800
hours a Japanese high official (Major General) addressed about
150 Japanese. At the conclusion of the speech a piece of
the fried flesh was given to all present, who ate it on the
spot" (Affidavit of Havildar Changiram, p. 14,130; Changiram
was a totally unknown person who never appeared in court).
"Towards the end of the Pacific War the Japanese Army
and Navy descended to cannibalism, eating parts of the bodies
of Allied prisoners whom they had unlawfully killed... At
times this consumption of the flesh of their enemies was made
into something of a festive occasion at officer's quarters.
Even officers of the rank of General and Rear-Admiral took part.
Flesh of murdered prisoners or soup made from such flesh
was served at meals... (Judgment, IMTFE, pp. 45,674-5; hearsay
repeated in interrogation written in English is taken as fact
and upheld in the judgment).
"Sake was served... it
was said we should come to a party... Colonel KATO did not have
enough drinks and things to go with the drinks... the question
came up of where to get something in the line of meat and more
sake. The general asked me about the execution and about getting
some meat. Therefore, I telephoned personally to my headquarters
that meat and ten sho of sugar cane rum be delivered to the
307th Battalion Headquarters. I do not recall now if the
sugar cane rum was delivered or not, I know that the meat was...
After the party at the 307th Battalion Headquarters where human
flesh was served and eaten, on my way back I talked to Admiral
MORI, and told Admiral MORI of the party. It was then that he
told me to bring down a little human liver from the body
of the next flyer to be executed... I also heard that flesh
from this flyer was served in soup... human liver was eaten
in the officer's mess... MIYAZAKI returned to the naval headquarters
with a portion of the liver... I then ordered Doctor TERAKI
to go and cut out the liver... I ordered the removal of the
liver previous to the execution... I had it cut and dried...
It wasn't exactly a party, but they ate the liver at the
308th Battalion Headquarters that night. It was Hall's liver...
yes, definitely they ate it... During the Chinese-Japanese war
human flesh and liver was eaten as a medicine... they were all
saying that liver was good medicine for the stomach... these
are the three times that I ate human flesh... I ate a
small pill made from human liver in Singapore... ORDER REGARDING
EATING OF FLESH OF AMERICAN FLYERS... The battalion wants
to eat the flesh of the American aviator... attend the execution
and have the liver and gall bladder removed... (pp. 15,033-42).
(Note use of gall bladder as culinary delicacy; above passages
are from an interrogation written in English).
(Here
they are forbidden to eat each other):
"Those who eat
human flesh (except that of the enemy) knowing it to be so,
shall be sentenced to death..." (p. 12,576; the document is
an "English translation" of an original document which was not
brought to court).
(Here they are executed for eating
each other):
"Troops must fight the Allies even to the
extent of eating them... troops were permitted to eat the flesh
of Allied dead but must not eat their own dead... four men were
executed... for disobeying this order" (p. 12,577; the document
is an "English translation" of an original document no one has
ever seen).
(Here they hate the taste of human flesh):
"Of course, nobody relished the taste" (p. 15,034).
(Here they love the taste of human flesh):
"The
evidence indicated that this cannibalism occurred when there
was other food available... this horrible practice was indulged
in from choice and not of necessity" (Judgment, IMTFE, p.
45,675).
(Here they only eat people when they are hungry):
"The flesh of the enemy should be eaten... all prisoners
of war would be executed... the flesh would be eaten... we should
fight and live on the flesh of our comrades and that of the
enemy" (pp. 15,134-5; hearsay quoted in an interrogation written
in English).
The existence of gas chambers on remote
islands is proven on page 40,535:
"Journal of Taiwan
POW Camp Headquarters date 1 Aug 44" (note: Japanese did not
use Western system of dating)... sets out plan for the final
disposition of POWS... they may be disposed of in any way such
as poisoning, bombing, gassing, drowning, decapitation..."
(The document is an "English translation" of an original which
was not produced).
There were no acquittals. One of
the Tokyo defendants, Umezu, petitioned for clemency on the
grounds that he was 70 years old and was dying of rectal cancer.
The Americans hanged him anyway. That takes gall.
| Index |
Tokyo Trial | Eat 'Em |
Old Mukden |
Rape of Nanking | Gall Bladders |
Provoked |
If You Can't Eat 'Em, Beat 'Em
Or, How I Killed Thousands of People With My Bare Hands
By Carlos Whitlock Porter
In the Far Eastern
war crimes trials, Japanese defendants were commonly convicted
of killing POW's by fiendish torture (possibly for tenderizing
purposes), after which the victims were eaten. Today, of course,
it is recognized that the Japanese are a nation of fastidious
eaters who consume little meat; nor do they devour dogs, cats,
rats, and bird's nests like the Chinese.
In the German
war crimes trials, the evidence concerning fiendish torture
is much the same, except that we are spared this final culinary
insult (or perhaps the food was less appetizing).
Certainly
no one familiar with the average year's "Holocaust survivor"
crop could get his taste buds in a twist for such cuisine-on-the-hoof.
In addition to its often unsavoury appearance, there is the
danger that such fare, like polluted shellfish, might prove
toxic to the eater.
With "eating" eliminated, there
remains "beating". A survivor, like an egg, spends a great deal
of time being beaten (when he is not being steamed, fried, or
poached); this may explain the scrambled nature of his testimony.
The evidence in prison camp trials (both Japanese and
German) is very repetitive. Dozens of witnesses appear and describe
horrific tortures in which inmates are beaten to a pulp with
hands, fists, boots, and a variety of objects.
The defendant
then appears and testifies, in effect: "I slapped them; sometimes
I hit them with my fist; once in a while I kicked them. But
I never hit them with an object, or beat them so badly as to
cause serious injury. If I am serving food and they are all
trying to steal it, what am I supposed to do? Write out a written
report, in which case they will all be punished more severely
later, or just hit them and make them stop?"
This, of
course, is taken as a "confession". "Hit" is translated as "beat",
giving the impression of repeated blows and serious injury.
Since thousands of inmates died of disease (this is always admitted
by the prosecution somewhere or other), many of these he "hit"
have died; therefore, he has "beaten thousands of people to
death". He is then hanged on the basis of his "confession",
corroborated by "eyewitness evidence".
The following
testimony, from the Trial of Martin Gottfried Weiss, is probably
typical of thousands of cases:
A: I used the whip once
that I can remember... seven bottles of wine were stolen...
each block elder received three over his buttocks. There was
no report handed in... I always hit them with the hand. I was
strict but just. It was entirely necessary, because... these
blocks elders and the capos took their own rations from their
own people. Butter and other things were stolen from the kitchen
or taken outside and sold, and in some instances cases of eggs
were missing...
Q: ... you slapped prisoners every time
you came into contact with them, did you not?
A: No,
prisoners weren't beaten without a reason.
Q: ... you
always had a reason for beating them, didn't you?... you beat
prisoners, slapped them in the face and hit them in the head?
Is it not true that you broke bones and hit them in other places
besides their buttocks?
A: No, it never happened that
I hit a prisoner in the face or broke bones or drew blood.
(Above is the testimony of Tempel, microfilm pages 000445-50.
Tempel was a member of the SS. The SS overseers claimed that
the prisoners beat each other, since most of them were criminals
and there were not enough guards. Tempel was hanged).
Q: Did you ever beat, or beat to death, prisoners?
A: I never beat anyone to death, or else I would be in jail
today. Now and again I administered a slap in the face as a
reprimand, but that was necessary to avoid punishment reports
to the SS...
Q: Did you ever kick with your feet?
A: I never kicked with my feet, but I told people while
marching "get up, see that you get up".
Q: The witness
Siebold said that you beat Russians to such an extent that their
noses bled as a result. Is that correct?
A:It is possible
that a slight bleeding of the nose occurred on a person whom
I slapped on the face. I cannot remember any such case...
Q: ... Becher, there was a witness who testified that
you beat another prisoner, Kowalski, to such an extent that
he had to be sent to the hospital, and died.
A: I can
remember the case of Kowalski exactly... I gave him two slaps
in the face, and he had to go to the plantation for easy work.
When he came back he had dysentery. He remained in the block
for three days, made the beds filthy, and then I took him over
to the hospital. After five or six days, the report came in
that he had died of dysentery... it sometimes happened that
certain prisoners attempted to make homosexual advances on other
prisoners, and naturally, these people had to be corrected.
It happened that people stole. For example, the smoking tobacco
of a man was stolen. Thereupon I asked him whether that was
true. He said, "No, it was not true, I could swear to it". Then
the other prisoner told me to search him, he had the tobacco
in his pocket. And that was actually true. I found the tobacco
belonging to the other man in his pocket.
Q: ... and
you beat Kowalski in the face, did you not?
A: With
the flat of the hand.
Q: And you beat Kowalski in the
body, did you not?
A: No, only in the face...
Q: ... now Becher, how many of these men did you beat while
you were block eldest?
A: Me, beat people? I didn't
beat people. I only corrected them. If somebody stole from his
companions, or if he was a homosexual. What else could I do?
A: It is a fact, isn't it, that you corrected them by
beating them?
Q: Yes. with the hand. I beat them with
the hand, and never with an object, and never so that they would
be injured or go to the hospital...
(Above is the testimony
of Becher, microfilm pages 000608-9, 000615-6. Becher was a
Communist who claimed that the SS had beaten people, but denied
beating people himself).
Q: Do you admit to having beaten
people?
A: No. But I did give out slaps in the face,
where, according to my feeling, I had a right to do so. Or else,
if I didn't, I would have to make a report to the SS. Or in
order to save the prisoner from getting the twenty-five and
the usual things that accompanied it, because I myself experienced
the twenty-five and the other things.
Q: You said before
that you did that in order to correct them. What made you correct
them?
A: In order to tell that to the court I would
have to talk until tomorrow, in order to explain all those things
that could happen in a block with one thousand people. I would
like to tell you only one case. One evening, while passing by
a block, I see somebody there using a newspaper instead of the
toilet. I wanted to look in to see what he is doing, but I didn't
look in for long, because the whole mess flew in my face...
or else if the room eldest gave jam and bread to somebody else
for distribution, at noon when they fall in again, ten or twelve
complain that they didn't have any marmalade... or else when
you were trying to select fifty or sixty people for work, you
picked out ten because they were the strong ones. By the time
you picked out ten more, the first ten would have disappeared.
And these various cases, I could continue to tell about them
into tomorrow morning...
(Above is the testimony of
Kick, microfilm pages 000619-20. Kick was another Communist.
Kick was hanged for making mole-skin coats out of Jewish inmates).
| Index |
Tokyo Trial | Eat 'Em |
Old Mukden |
Rape of Nanking | Gall Bladders |
Provoked |
I Left My Heart In Old Mukden
Or, How I Survived Miraculously While Almost Nobody Died
By Carlos Whitlock Porter
In the post-war
Japanese film Rashomon an event takes on radically different
shape when seen through the eyes of different people, including
the ghost of a dead woman.
In the Tokyo Trial transcript,
a similar phenomenon may be observed.
PROSECUTION
VERSION OF MUKDEN PRISONER OF WAR CAMP
(Prosecutor,
International Military Tribunal for the Far East, 3 January
1947).
"These two affidavits describe the conditions
under which prisoners lived at Hoten Camp near Mukden. Over
two hundred inmates died of malnutrition, lack of medical
care, and lack of fuel. The buildings were inadequately
heated although plenty of coal was available for issue. During
the first month and a half the prisoners received maize and
Chinese cabbage soup and two sour buns a day. The food was frequently
so contaminated that the prisoners could not eat it. All
requests for additional food, fuel and medical supplies were
refused..." (pp. 14,188).
"Deponent states that
during the first few months he was at Mukden Camp about 250
American prisoners died either from starvation or dysentery.
No medical care supplies were available. The food consisted
of maize and soy beans.
"The prisoners worked in nearby
factories making steel helmets for the Japanese army, airplane
parts and gears for large calibre guns. Deponent worked in a
steel mill sixteen hours a day. During his stay in Mukden Camp
as a result of the hard work and poor food, he lost over sixty
pounds in weight" (pp. 14,194-5).
"Deponent was confined
at Camp Hoten, Mukden. The camp was about six hundred yards
from a large Japanese ammunition factory. There was no designation
on the prisoner of war camp. During a B29 air raid nineteen
prisoners were killed and about thirty were injured" (pp. 14,193-4).
RED CROSS VERSION OF MUKDEN PRISON CAMP
(Excerpts from two Reports published by the International
Red Cross in Geneva; (i) From the Report of January 1944;
an Extract from the Report filed by Max Pestalozzi, a Representative
of the ICRC, following his inspection of the Mukden Prisoner
of War Camp at Mukden, Manchuria (Manchukuo), on November 13,
1943, (ii) From the Report of March 1945; an Extract
from the Report filed by Mr. Angst, a Representative of the
ICRC, following his Inspection of the same Camp on 6 December
1944):
(i) "Delegation to Japan - on November 13, Mr.
Max Pestalozzi has visited the camp of prisoners of war at Mukden,
Manchukuo, which confined Britishers, Australians, Americans,
in total, more than a thousand prisoners of war.
The
dwellings are satisfactory; they are brick buildings, well-constructed
and well-equipped. The prisoners there are provided with straw
mattress and complete bedding. As for clothing, the prisoners
possess two suits of clothing; one for summer and one for winter.
The prisoners of war are satisfied with the nourishment, however
they find it a little monotonous in the long run.
The
sanitary arrangements are sufficient. The camp has an infirmary
attached to it, fully-equipped, which, considered as military
hospital, is given all necessary things. The dental cares
are also much appreciative. All the prisoners have been inoculated
against typhoid, paratyphoid, and dysentery and vaccinated.
A large sport ground and many indoor games are
available to prisoners, but prisoners who desire are given
books, as much instructive as recreative.
In
regard to correspondence, the prisoners can send a plenty of
messages.
The discipline is somewhat relaxed, because
the prisoners came from several units of army and navy.
The delegate of the International Red Cross Committee express
much satisfaction of his visit and the kindness of the Red Cross
of Manchukuo, and signalize at the same time, that the officers
attached to the camp are making the utmost effort in order to
ameliorate the treatment of the prisoners of war".
(ii)
"On Dec. 6 again, Mr. Angst has made the second call at the
camp of prisoners of war at Mukden, which assembled more than
a thousand Americans, approximately a hundred Britishers, several
Australians, and a French.
The measures to protect
against aerial attacks have been taken; the hygienic institutions
are satisfactory, and this camp is disinfected whenever
it seems to be necessary.
The rations correspond in
quantity to those which are distributed to the camp guards,
but the quality of them looked better; the energy values attained
about 3500 calories.
The supplemental foods are
prepared for the prisoners who do heavy labours, and for the
patients, as well as in the special occasions as, for example
certain fete days.
The hospital of the camp is
a brick building, which can receive one hundred fifty patients.
It is composed of a separate ward, a tuberculosis patients rooms,
a room of test, operations, X-rays, pharmacy and a recreation
room. The medical and surgical equipment is complete, and only
the patients who suffer from special diseases are transferred
to the Mukden Military Hospital, which gives equally dental
care.
The medical inspections take place three
times a week and the patients receive doctors visits every day.
All the prisoners have been vaccinated for small pox, and inoculated
against typhoid, paratyphoid, dysentery and cholera.
The money which they use is given them out of their savings.
It is above all expended in the canteen, where they
are informed that these pocket money serve to buy musical instruments,
sporting goods, food, seeds and toilets articles. The prisoners
also can send the funds to their families if they wish.
Most of the people are able to work. The duty hours are
eight hours a day, with recesses of morning, noon, and afternoon.
Sunday is a holiday. Some men work in factory, and the rest
are occupied in conversations in the camp.
There is
no Chaplain in the camp; the religious services are celebrated
in English by a Japanese clergyman.
The prisoners can
play sport, music and cards; visitors from outside are not admitted,
no more than the visits to outside are non authorized; but they
can go out of the camp to visit the graves.
The camp
commander has reported to the delegate that their morale and
spirits have been, on the whole, ameliorated, and that the relations
between the camp authorities and the prisoners have been satisfactory,
and with the camp guards they have talked in a like manner;
the state of health has been equally ameliorated, and they have
seemed also to be satisfied with the fact that they can have
these special considerations given them at that time".
(Defense document 3136, introduced into evidence 8 September
1947, pp. 27,918-21).
| Index |
Tokyo Trial | Eat 'Em |
Old Mukden |
Rape of Nanking | Gall Bladders |
Provoked |
Rape of Nanking - Very Sorry
Or, How I Got My Rocks Off in Old China Town
By Carlos Whitlock Porter
The tropical landscape
of the Tokyo Trial transcript is rich in strange fauna and flora.
A variety prevalent on the lowlands of Central China is known
for the hypotrophic development of its organs of locomotion
and perception, (particularly hearing). He is called the Universal
Witness.
Despite its name, ("Ah See" in Chinese), the
vision of this specimen is quite poor.
Like the Indestructible
Witness, the Universal Witness is immune to shooting, bayonetting,
and other forms of capital punishment; however, the Universal
Witness is everywhere and sees everything; he sees though doors,
walls, and obstacles.
I SAW JAP ATROCITIES IN 12
CITIES AND WAS BAYONETTED TEN TIMES BUT ONLY HAVE ONE SCAR
"I was the eye-witness... in such places as (list of
12 Chinese place names)... many others were killed in various
other places... ten Japanese stabbed the left side of my
abdomen with bayonets... The scar on the left side of
my abdomen is an evidence" (pp. 4,650).
(Note: affidavit
was written in English in 1946 describing events in China in
1937, "translated orally" into Chinese prior to signature).
THE JAPS TOOK ME ALONG AS A WITNESS, THAT'S WHY I
SAW SO MANY ATROCITIES
"I and another were put
to one side, and the Japanese used light machine guns to
kill the rest... I helped throw the bodies in a pond by order
of the Japanese... the same day in the afternoon I saw three
Japanese rape a dumb girl... I was taken by Japanese soldiers
again... they killed with the bayonet... on the same day
in the afternoon I was taken to... and saw three Japanese
soldiers set a fire... I saw another raping case..." (p. 2,609).
(Note: this affidavit was written in English in 1946
describing events in China in 1937, complete with names of the
Japanese responsible, with the names of their units, and was
"translated orally" from English to Chinese prior to signature).
I SAW JAPS HANG AROUND AFTER RAPING
"I
see with my very eyes the Japanese soldier raping a woman in
a bath room, and his clothes outside, and then afterwards
we discovered the bathroom door and found a woman naked and
also weeping and downcast...
"Now we went to the camp
to try to get... to catch two Japanese who were reported to
be living there... we saw one Japanese still sitting there,
with a woman on the corner and weeping... and that man was sitting
there with his head low there... once we caught a Japanese raping,
and he was naked. He was sleeping... I know another
case where because of the boatman... he told me this: where
he saw that too on his boat, it happened on his boat... after
raping, the Japanese asked the old man in that family, isn't
that good?... I forgot to say that when the Japanese asked the
older man whether it is good or not, he wanted the old man to
rape that young girl so all the girls -now I saw this - they
all jumped into the river. So the whole family jumped into the
river and all drowned. This is not second-hand story.
This is real, real and genuine, and we have, we know that, the
boatman has been with us for a long time" (pp. 2,569-2,573).
(Note: the witness claimed to have a Ph. D. from
the Univer-sity of Illinois at the age of 13).
I TREATED A BEHEADING VICTIM AND HEARD ABOUT MASS RAPES AT
NANKING
"I can say the few instances of patients
that I treated during the time immediately following the fall
of Nanking, but I will not be able to give their names, except
in the case of two... one case... is that of a young woman of
forty, who was brought to the hospital with the back of her
neck having a laceration severing all the muscles of her
neck, and leaving the head very precariously balanced... there
was no doubt in our minds that the work was that of a Japanese
soldier...
Q: "You say that the woman of about 40
had a wound in her neck and the muscles were cut and were hanging
loose. But what was this caused by?
A: "A Japanese
sword... (pp. 2,534; 2,552-3).
(Testimony of Dr.
Robert O. Wilson).
THEY CUT MY HEAD OFF BUT I CRAWLED
TO THE HOSPITAL
"They attempted to cut off her
head. The muscles of the neck had been cut but they failed
to sever the spinal cord. She feigned death but dragged herself
to the hospital... Dr. Wilson is trying to patch her up
and thinks she may have a chance to live..." (p. 4,476).
(Note: this is the same woman. First quotes are from Dr.
Wilson. Wilson's hospital at Nanking had 180 beds. Wilson
claimed that 500,000 people were in Nanking at this time; many
patients were turned away, but he could not say how many.
If the Japanese injured 200 people, Wilson's testimony is "true".
Second quote is from mimeographed "diary" of
James H. McCallum; McCallum was an unknown person who
did not appear to testify; one of the American defense attorneys
had defended a James H. McCallum on a charge of mail fraud in
Ohio; the defendant jumped bail and was never caught. It was
never learned whether this was the same James H. McCallum).
HOW THE JAPS KILLED 200,000 OR MAYBE 260,000 OR MAYBE
278,586 OR MAYBE 300,000 OR MAYBE 500,000 AFTER MASS RAPES AT
NANKING
"... approximately 260,000 dead... over
300,000 victims were reported... it is believed that over 200,000
more are yet to be confirmed... more than 200,000 were murdered...
more than 300,000 people killed... the total number of victims
killed totalled - I wish to say there is a typographical error
there - the number should read 278,586... the total number of
bodies buried... totalled more than 155,300...".
OBJECTION:
"Mr. Brooks calls my attention to the fact that in another
portion of the affidavit is contained the statement that 300,000
were killed in Nanking, and as I understand it the total population
of Nanking is only 200,000..."
THE PRESIDENT: "...
the judges will be just as vigilant as the defense to see that
evidence which is indefinite or vague, or sweeping assertions
which are not supported by evidence, are rejected" (pp. 4,537-51).
(Note: the quotes are from two "war crimes reports"
prepared by the Nanking Procurator General's office in 1946
relating to events of 1937. Material on which conclusions are
based are not attached to the reports. Also included are several
"reports" of "burial societies". The "reports" are quite short.
According to the defense, 20 cases of rape by young
recruits were reported to headquarters in Tokyo, 3 trials were
held; 1 officer was executed and 2 soldiers imprisoned. Elsewhere
it is stated that up to 100 trials of Japanese soldiers were
held; elsewhere, that 180 cases per week were being reported
from possibly hostile sources. One defense witness admitted
that atrocities in Nanking were "very severe"; what this means
in terms of numbers is hard to guess.
Mass rape was
a crime allegedly committed by Japanese in all theatres of war
as part of a "Common Plan". It seems obvious that such a "plan"
would be incompatible with discipline and that any army following
such a "plan" would be immediately defeated.
At the
time of these events, the Chinese Nationalists were cooperating
with the Communists under the terms of the Shan Agreement to
expel the Japanese from China, and the Japanese were the victims
of considerable Communist propaganda, not only in China, but
elsewhere.
It appears that Japanese atrocities at Nanking
(to the extent to which they have any reality at all) were a
reprisal for Chinese atrocities against Japanese residents in
China at Tientsin in July 1937, atrocities which included rape.
It was pointed out by the prosecution that murder could be justified
on the grounds of reprisal, but that rape could not be.
| Index |
Tokyo Trial | Eat 'Em |
Old Mukden |
Rape of Nanking | Gall Bladders |
Provoked |
Queer Facts
Or, How I Ate Gall Bladders While Writing My Diary
By Carlos Whitlock Porter
The production of
"diaries" was a growth industry in the post-war years.
In one of these efforts, the top floor of a house disappears
behind a book case; the house is sold to an architect who does
not realize that the top floor is missing; with many other magical
events.
In war crimes trials, "diaries" are produced
by something resembling magic; the conjuror takes a mimeograph,
utters an incantation and - presto! reams of secondary evidence
appear where none existed, usually in the form of "copies" or
"translations".
In the Tokyo Trial, the incantation
goes something like this:
We offer in evidence IPS document
no. 2707-K, which is the English translation of extracts
from a diary...
"We are ordered to kill all the males
we find... our aim is to kill or wound all the men..."
We offer in evidence IPS document no. 415, which is the
English translation of extracts from a captured diary...
"27 Mar. 45 (correct Japanese year: 20th year of Showa)...
we went out to kill the natives. It was hard for me to kill
them because they seemed like good people. Frightful cries of
the women and children..."
We offer in evidence IPS
document no. 426, which is the of English translation
of an extract from a captured diary...
"My turn was
the second one... I bayonetted him... after bayonetting them
we covered them with soil".
We offer in evidence IPS
document no. 2776, which is the English translation of
extracts of a captured notebook diary...
"7 Feb 45 -
150 guerillas were disposed of tonight..."
We offer
in evidence IPS document no. 428, which is an English translation
of an excerpt taken from a loose, handwritten sheet containing
battle report...
"All were either stabbed or shot to
death..."
We submit in evidence IPS document no. 2749,
which is an English translation of an extract from a
bound, printed and mimeographed file containing censored papers...
"It was pitiful, so I couldn't watch. They also shot
them and speared them to death with bamboo lances. Indeed the
Japanese army does extreme things..."
We offer in evidence
IPS document no. 2777, which is the English translation
of an excerpt from the bound handwritten notebook diary dated
14 November 1943 to 17 April 1945...
"All inhabitants
of the town were killed..."
We offer in evidence IPS
document no. 425, which is the English translation of
extract from a captured bound diary-notebook dated July 1944...
"Every day is spent hunting guerillas and natives. I
have already killed over 100. The naivete I possessed at the
time of leaving the homeland has long since disappeared. Now
I am a hardened killer and my sword is always stained with blood.
Although it is for my country's sake, it is sheer brutality.
May God forgive me! May my mother forgive me!"
We offer
in evidence IPS document no. 2707-H, which is the English
translation of a captured Japanese "Memorandum"... which
mentions and makes admission and confirmation of the practice
of cannibalism...
"... those who eat human
flesh (except that of the enemy) knowing it to be so, shall
be sentenced to death as the worst kind of enemy against mankind..."
We tender in evidence IPS document no. 2850, which is
an extract from statements made by prisoner of war YANAGAZIWA,
Eiji...
"Cannibalism..." (pp. 12,565-77).
Extract from diary, apparently belonging to an officer,
unit unknown. Vivisection took place...
"... to prevent
their escaping a second time, pistols were fired at their feet,
but it was difficult to hit them. The two prisoners were
dissected while still alive by Medical Officer YAMAJI and
their livers taken out, and for the first time I saw the internal
organs of a human being. It was very instructive..." ... (p.
14,140) (SPAC "translation").
The following is
the document of which Justice Pal said, "We were not given
the captured diary... I hope it was written in Japanese"):
"The head, detached from the trunk, rolls in front of
it... a superior seaman of the medical unit takes the Chief
Medical Officer's sword and... turns the headless body over
on its back, and cuts the abdomen open with one clear stroke...
not a drop of blood comes out of the body..." (Maybe
he was anaemic. - Ed.). "If ever I get back alive it will
make a good story to tell, so I have written it down" (pp.
14,075-80).
(Speaking of "confessions" in foreign languages...):
"They made much reduced official reports in the Japanese
language and characters which we could not read but were nevertheless
compelled to sign, without being told the contents. Afterwards,
these reports turned out to be our "confessions", in which
we were charged with the queerest facts..." (p. 13,680-1).
(In the following case the "witness" read about his
"testimony" in the newspaper and showed up to repudiate his
affidavit entirely and testify for the defense).
"I
was summoned to the U.S. Military Government in Saipan and examined
by a young American Lieutenant... He knew Japanese and interrogated
me in that language. His Japanese was not fluent, but good enough
to make himself understood. He wrote down my statement in English
and had me sign it but he did not translate it and read it to
me... I do not understand spoken English. I can only understand
written English if I have an English-Japanese dictionary before
me and considerable time to ponder over the written material.
On the original document is a statement by Ensign Charles D.
Shelton which reads as follows:
"I swear that I am familiar
with both the English and Japanese language and the Japanese
and that before the above statement was signed I read same in
the Japanese language to the person who signed same".
"This statement is in error. A translation of the English
document was not given to me either orally or in written form.
The manner in which I was questioned is as follows: the American
lieutenant asked me questions in Japanese to which I responded.
Then, writing with a fountain pen on a piece of paper, he appeared
to be making a statement. The interview lasted about 20 minutes,
at the end of which time the Lieutenant gave the handwritten
piece of paper to a Navy enlisted man who typed out the piece
of paper which I ultimately signed..."
Cross examination
by the prosecution:
Q: "How did things proceed; what
happened?"
A: "In accordance with some notations made
on a memo paper he asked questions... he apparently had some
kind of list of questions..."
Q: "Did you ask what it
was you were being asked to sign?"
A: "I asked no questions...
I learned about it for the first time when it appeared in the
newspapers in October last year".
(Testimony of WAKAMATSU
Makoto, 22 August 1947, pp. 26,532-42).
| Index |
Tokyo Trial | Eat 'Em |
Old Mukden |
Rape of Nanking | Gall Bladders |
Provoked |
Japan was Provoked into a War of Self Defense
Synopsis of Arguments by Lawyers for the Defense, International
Military Tribunal for the Far East
By Carlos Whitlock Porter
On December
7, 1928, a group of distinguished Senators gathered in the Capital
Building at Washington D.C. to discuss ratification of the Briand-Kellogg
Peace Pact, an instrument whose purpose was to "abolish aggressive
war".
Among those present was the author of the Pact,
Secretary of State Frank B. Kellogg.
During the course
of the recorded discussions, the following exchange took place:
"Q: Suppose a country is not attacked - suppose there
is an economic blockade...?
A: There is no such thing
as a blockade [unless] you are in war.
Q: It is an act
of war?
A: An act of war absolutely... as I have stated
before, nobody on earth, probably, could write an article defining
"self defense" or "aggressor" that some country could not get
around; and I made up my mind that the only safe thing for any
country to do was to judge for itself within its sovereign rights
whether it was unjustly attacked and had a right to defend itself
and it must answer to the opinion of the world." Japan's
War of the Pacific was a war of self-defense for the following
reasons: - blockade is an act of war; (p. 43,051); - every nation
is the judge of what constitutes self- defense (ibid); - no
submission to any tribunal is required by the Pact (pp. 42,162;
42,240); - self-defense is not limited to defense of the national
territory (p. 42,239); - the Pact does not contain any sanctions,
express or implied (pp. 42,163); - breach of treaties does not
constitute aggression (p. 42, 191); - American aid to the Chinese
made America a belligerent in that war (see Note, below); -
declarations of war are not required in self-defense (pp. 42,431-5);
- no treaty requires any warning prior to attack (pp. 42,447-8);
- declaration of war prior to attack was intended, but
was delayed due to clerical errors on the part of Embassy staff
in Washington (pp. 43,704-18; see also p. 42, 448- 51).
It was argued further that:
- the attack on Pearl
Harbor was not illegal under international law (pp. 42,403-513;
43,493-738); - Japan was provoked into a war of self-defense
(pp. 43,050-175); - Japan was not prepared militarily for war
(pp. 43,177- 222); - Japanese military preparedness was not
aggressive (pp. 43,224-263).
Japan is an island nation
devoid of natural resources, overpopulated, dependant on imports
of nearly all commodities for manufacture. Most of Japan is
mountainous or infertile; most cities are on the coast.
Japan must be a naval nation; every major city in Japan
can be destroyed by coastal shelling from battleships, to say
nothing of airplanes.
Japan was not prepared for war
in the Pacific.
Japan never prepared for combat in tropical
regions; military supplies and equipment were designed for combat
in cold climates (pp. 26,949; 43,244).
Most Japanese
ships were small, for the coastal trade; many were built of
wood (pp. 24,915; 43,076; see also p. 24,929).
2 destroyers
were added to the Japanese fleet in 10 years, 1931-1941, reaching
a total of 112 in 1941 (ibid).
Japan had no long-range
aircraft carriers. Japanese carriers could not refuel at sea
(pp. 26,719-20; 43,221); Japanese ships were built for patrolling
shallow Japanese coastal waters (pp. 11,272; 43,202).
Japan did not stockpile any commodity except oil for any
purpose in 1941.
Japan planned to store 36,000 kiloliters
of oil by 1943 (pp. 24,855; 43,241).
Japan did not store
ammunition or oil in Formosa or southern parts of Japanese territory
overseas (pp. 26,951; 43,246).
Japan did not develop
a merchant marine (pp. 24,965; 43,076).
Japan had few
civilian aircraft or ships capable of conversion (pp. 26,671;
43,201).
Japan suffered from an acute food shortage
in 1939-40 (pp. 25,050-2; 43,101).
The American embargo
applied to foodstuffs, including rice, tea, soy beans, wheat
flour, fertilizer, fodder, edible fats and seeds (pp. 36,966-8;
43,131; 25,255-9; 43,162-175).
Synthetic oil could not
be produced due to a lack of high pressure steel pipes, coal
and cobalt (pp. 24,870; 43,134).
Japan possessed 11,654
military aircraft (pp. 8,030-1; 43,070) and 65 submarines in
1941 (pp. 11,261; 43,194).
Japan built 1,380 army planes
in 1941 (pp. 18,293; 43,240).
Japan's initial conquests
after Pearl Harbor were achieved using 1,175 land planes; 475
carrier planes; 13 divisions of army; and a "handful" of marines
(pp. 39,391; 43,262).
Japan negotiated for 9 months
prior to the attack. In the course of these negotiations, the
Americans demanded a guarantee of freedom from attack by Japan
regardless of any action taken against Germany (pp. 43,517-21).
Japan agreed, repudiating the Tri-Pacific Pact (pp.
43,522- 39).
Japan gave the Americans permission to
publish the text of the repudiation (p. 43,642).
Japan
offered to withdraw all troops from China (pp. 25,856; 43,588)
or at least 90% (p. 43,604).
Japan received no response
to either concession (43,602).
Japanese cables (decoded
by the Americans in violation of international law) were so
badly mis-translated by American Nisei that they probably helped
cause the war (pp. 43,607-21).
(As far as one can tell,
no Nisei translators of Japanese were used in war crimes trials
of Japanese military personnel. Affidavits in English were supposed
to have been translated orally and accurately on sight to Japanese
affiants prior to signature by translators who were British
or American, frequently with Jewish names).
The Americans
froze Japanese assets (in violation of a treaty) and began to
embargo oil.
It was demanded, as a condition to restoring
normal relations, that Japan sign an agreement with various
other nations who had never before been party to the negotiations,
including Thailand and Soviet Russia (pp. 43,678-98).
To obtain agreement with the other nations in accordance
with this demand could have taken months or years; and might
never have been possible. Japan had enough oil for a few months
only. A conference was held at which it was decided that if
there was to be war, it must come now; by spring Japan would
be too weak to fight. In any case, the attack on Pearl Harbor
was an act of utter desperation. The oil embargo meant the destruction
of Japan's independence and perhaps survival as a nation.
Japan faced immediate military defeat in China; total
industrial collapse at home; and destruction through coastal
shelling of all the major cities by any one of five traditional
enemies (America, Britain, China, the Netherlands, and particularly
the Soviets).
Oil had been supplied to Japan for two
years in the teeth of hostile public opinion. It was believed
essential to keep war out of the Far East; Roosevelt wished
to import rubber, tin, etc from the South Pacific, supplying
the British in the Near East with meat, wheat, corn, troops,
and military supplies (pp. 25,316-7; 43,121).
When this
did not work, Japan was forced into war, crushed with atomic
bombs, and her leaders hanged for "aggression".
War
with Japan had been avoided - as long as it was believed that
Germany could be provoked into a declaration of war through
bombing and ramming attacks on German and Italian ships and
submarines, and many other violations of international law (pp.
42,436; 43,639).
Japan attempted to negotiate a surrender
for 11 months prior to the atomic bombings (pp. 23,582-610).
That America, Britain and Holland conspired "aggressive
war" against Japan is proven by the report of the conversations
at the Most Secret American-Dutch-British Conversations held
in Singapore in April 1941:
"It was important to organize
air operations against Japanese occupied territory and against
Japan itself. It is probable that her collapse will occur as
a result of economic blockade, naval pressure, and air bombardment".
Space does not permit further discussion of the crimes
of this nation of monsters (we mean Japan).
(Note: almost
no use was made of the argument that America was a belligerent
in the China Incident. The Incident was a "conflict" rather
than a "war" in the sense that belligerent and neutral rights
were not invoked: diplomatic relations were undisturbed; enemy
aliens in Japan were not interned, etc. Rather, it was maintained
that if it was a war, then American aid to China made America
a belligerent subject to attack without formality. The Americans
claimed it was a war in which they could participate without
becoming a belligerent.)
| Index |
Tokyo Trial | Eat
'Em | Old Mukden |
Rape of Nanking |
Gall Bladders | Provoked
|
|