توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Whose Back Was Stabbed?: FDR's Secret War on Japan
نام کتاب : Whose Back Was Stabbed?: FDR's Secret War on Japan
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی :
سری :
نویسندگان : Koichi Mera
ناشر : Hamilton Books
سال نشر : 2017
تعداد صفحات : 221
ISBN (شابک) : 0761868968 , 9780761868965
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 1 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
1 Japan Twice Trapped
Japan in Two Traps
Recent Documents Reveal the Lies and Deceptions by the Allied Nations
2 The Tokyo War Crimes Trials
The Tokyo War Crimes Trials Performed without Legal Basis
The Imposition of the Tokyo War Crimes Trials by the Military Occupation Forces
The Trials that No One Can Justify
Japan Was Not an “Aggressor Nation”
An Injustice that Even the United States Admitted
Notes
3 Japan among Competing Powers
The Need to Reevaluate Modern History
The Russo-Japanese War as the Starting Point of the Great East Asian War
The Persecution of Japanese Immigrants
The Clash of Interests in Japan’s “Twenty-One Demands”
America’s Ravenous Territorial Expansion
Shackling Japan at the Washington Naval Conference
The Manchurian Incident and Japan’s Isolation
Behind-the-scenes Maneuvering by the Soviet Comintern
The Anti-Japanese Propaganda Campaign of Soong Meiling
Notes
4 The Historical Implications of Japan’s Resistance to Colonization
Japan’s Role in the Liberation of Asia
Japanese Reply to Commodore Perry’s OPEN DOOR Request
Strained Relationships with China, Korea and Russia
Clash between Japan and China in Korean Peninsula
Japan Saved Korea from Russia and China
The Position of the U.S. toward Japan’s Annexation of Korea
Independence of Various Asian Countries and Their Modernization
Japanese Encouragement to Colonized Asian and African People
The U.S. Deceiving the Philippines, and Japan Assisting Indonesia
The Ideal of the Great East Asian Co-Prosperity Sphere
Japan Crushed by the U.S.
The Legacy of “Great East Asia Co-prosperity Sphere”
Notes
5 Japan’s Challenge to Racial Discrimination
The Cruelty of Interracial War
Progression of Colonial Rules by Western Powers
The Global Environment Japan Jumped Into
First Appeal for Global Racial Non-Discrimination by Japan
The New Regime of Great East Asia for the Asians
The Cruelty of the Second World War
Impacts of the Great East Asian War on Asian and African Countries
Civil Rights Movement in the U.S.
Notes
6 President Roosevelt Pushed Japan to Retaliate
Rewriting History
The Context of Roosevelt’s Provocations
Roosevelt’s Diplomatic Policies
Driving Japan to the Brink
The Soviet Plot behind the Hull Note
The Words and Deeds of President’s Men on the Eve of the Pearl Harbor Attack
The Memoirs of Herbert Hoover
MacArthur’s Testimony before the U.S. Senate
Conclusions
Notes
7 Japan’s Total Defeat in the Information War
Information Is Power
Stalin’s Global Strategy and Manipulation of Information
The Second Sino-Japanese War and the Comintern
The Way China’s Leaders Used Information
The Fabrication of the Nanking Massacre
President Roosevelt’s Intrigues
Japan’s Failure to Use Its Home-made Radar Technology
The Occupation Army’s Skillful Manipulation of Information
Japan Failed in the Information War
Notes
8 American Occupation Policy of Castrating Japan
Introduction
Control of the Japanese Government
Trying of War Criminals
Purging of Influential Persons
Dissolution of Business Conglomerates
Information Control
Confiscation of “Undesirable Books”
Imposing a New Constitution
Provision of Propaganda Information
Education Reforms
Taxation Policies
Farm Land Reform
General Impacts
Notes
9 The Historical Legacy of World War II in Asia
Two Postwar Trends
The Establishment of American Hegemony
The Founding of the United Nations and the Bretton Woods System
The Power of Nuclear Deterrence
The USSR’s Challenge to America and Its Collapse
The New Struggle for Supremacy
The Revival and Growth of Japan
The Independence of the Former Colonies in Africa and Asia
The Secrets of Rapid Growth that East Asia Learned from Japan
Neglect of Defense and the Peace Stupor
The Plaza Accord: Japanese Good Will Meets American Machiavellianism
Japan’s Relations with Neighboring Nations
The World’s Admiration for Japan
Putting an End to the Imposed Constitution and to the Legacy of the Tokyo Trials
Notes
10 Conclusions
Japan Should Be Proud of Not Being Crushed by the Western Powers
The True Defeat Took Place after the Allied Occupation
The Japanese Must Be Respected
Japan Must Deal with the U.S. on an Equal Footing
Japan Should Walk on Her Own Path
Notes
Appendix A
Note
Appendix B
Note
Appendix C
Note
Bibliography
Index