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#1
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Today, 65 years ago
On July 7, 1937, just after midnight, IJA (Imperial Japanese Army) forces attempted to enter what is now Beijing by using the pathetic excuse that one of their soldiers was lost.
Such an unreasonable demand was promptly rejected by the Chinese garrison, and the IJA attacked, resulting in the famous Marco Polo Bridge Incident. It marks the full scale invasion of China by Japan, and the beginning of the 8-year long War of Resistance, resulting in 20 million Chinese casusalties. What's more worrying, however, is the rise of Japanese militarism. There was a prolonged economic slump in Japan then, as there is one now. |
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#2
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What on bloody earth is is the relevance of this OP.
Let’s see...
Don’t you think we should worry about those pesky Americans, Germans, Swedes and French a little? I mean for crying out loud they all have standing armies, to boot two of those nations have nukes! Were does the OP fetch the information that Japan is remilitarizing? What indication does the OP have that Japan of 2002 is harboring politics like those of Imperial Japan of the 1930s? Oh that’s right, recession it was. Those not troubled by silly little things like reason would also draw conclusions from the following: The economy in the US is doing half ass at best. Germany is experiencing quite a rough ride at the moment. Sweden is in recession. The French economy is staggering and crab walking. I’d say we had better take away their guns before they do something rash. I mean who knows? Before you know it they might be launching unprovoked attacks on Iraq, or getting involved in some other absurd venture like the blasted militarists they all are. They might even use them guns in conjunction with those scary Japanese medical and rescue corps over in Afghanistan, heaven forbid. I take it the OP was written a little faster than thought flows, yes? Sparc |
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#3
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Sparc: While I don't really understand what the OP is getting at either, exactly, I do feel the overwhelming compulsion to point out to you that 304 years ago it was 1698 and the Thirty Years War had been over for fifty years
.And, hey let's cut the "Swedes" ( who mostly weren't of course - the armies of the day were heavily mercenary in character and by the latter days of the Thrity Years War the Swedes were no exception ) a break . Though they degenerated badly towards the end ( like every other force engaged in that meat-grinder of a conflict ), they were pretty disciplined early on under Gustav Adolf and late in the war under Lennart Torstensson and the evidence is pretty strong that the areas they entered saw the halting of the mass slaughter of "witches" ( mostly anything but ) which was at its genocidal peak in various German Prince-Bishoprics in this period.Also fifty years ago it was 1952 - WW II was well over. But you got the Battle of Friedland and Kit Carson's Navajo campaigns right .Sorry man, it's just the history geek in me taking over .- Tamerlane |
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#4
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To me, July 7 is about justice and annexation, 19th-century style!
(from abcnews wires) Today is Sunday, July 7, the 188th day of 2002. There are 177 days left in the year. Today's Highlight in History: On July 7, 1865, four people were hanged in Washington, D.C., for conspiring with John Wilkes Booth to assassinate President Lincoln. On this date: In 1846, the United States' annexation of California was proclaimed at Monterey after the surrender of a Mexican garrison. In 1896, the Democratic national convention opened in Chicago. In 1898, the United States annexed Hawaii. |
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#5
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here's 5 or 6 reasons it wont and maybe one reason why it could
Why it wont: 1 China isn't parceled out among the western powers with a weakened goverment 2 that same government is unified and isn't fighting a decades old civil war 3 China has a modern army where as Japan only has a defense force 4 China has nukes and too many allies in the area i.e. n Korea Vietnam ect 5 us self interest if there was a war between the two wed step in either directly or through the U. N or the NATO alliance 6 It wouldn't be viewed as "chinks fighting each other " this time around and the UN is somewhat stronger than the league of nations in enforcing its mandates (well the debate on that would cause another whole thread) Now the reason it might happen is this: China and America have a cold war ,,,, Japan invades we let it in the name of "democracy and freedom " and" ending the oppression of the communist government " They'd have some help from us and from Chinese rebels and sympathizers also But unless something extreme happens WW3 wont be started from there like a lot of WW2 was
__________________
"its easier and better to get forgiven than permission" "theres no point in telling me that the wisdom of a fool cant set me free " |
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#6
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However they don't, in either respect. Quote:
China really doesn't have any serious military allies to speak of. Not that they need any for self-defense. Quote:
All the above aside, Sparc ( by implication ) is correct. Japan is a bastion of ( relative ) stability, not an aggresive threat to anybody. The almost 'cultural inversion' their society has undergone since WW II would almost guarantee that Japan would become politically paralyzed with internal opposition to any foreign aggression, long before anything ever reached a crisis point. A potential powerhouse they may be - But a relatively sane and peaceful one these days. Speculating on them 'going rogue' is wandering well out of the realm of rationality and into the demesne of the fantasy. - Tamerlane |
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#7
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#8
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Re: Today, 65 years ago
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#9
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Re: Re: Today, 65 years ago
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But back to the OP. Japan is culturally very different now, as compared to the 1930's. The Japanese parliment almost shit a brick when it was proposed that they allow for naval deployments outside of territorial waters. (Much to their credit, they agreed). There just isn't much of a warrior-culture left in Japan, at least at the governmental level. Not much to worry about from Japan. Sweden? That's another story. The Ja.39 Gripen, their new goofy stealth FAC's, recent purchase of Leopard 2's, all does not bode well. Don't let their 'neutrality' fool you. It's just a maskirovka for what is to come. |
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#10
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Don't forget that Japan is currently occupied by the United States, as it has been for the last 50 years.
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#11
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Isn't Japan still subject to that restriction? If Japan was seen to be building up its military, wouldn't the U.S. be authorized to step in and stop it before its military grew substantial? Of course, as msmith537 points out, the U.S. would have to contend with MechaGodzilla if it intervened in Japanese internal affairs, but it wouldn't be too hard to drum up some brilliant reclusive scientist who knows MechaGodzilla's secret weakness. |
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#12
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However by casting the Japanese military ( started as a National Police Reserve in 1950 during the U.S. occupation as a replacement for U.S. troops dispatched to Korea, expanded into the SDF in 1954 ) as a "Self-Defense Force" they have, with a wink and a nod from the U.S. ( who during the Cold War in particular had good reason to build up Japan's defensive capabilities ), eeled around the restriction in the second paragraph. In essence the Constituition forbids them from ever conducting offensive actions, but has been interpreted to mean that they may legitimately fight in self-defense. However many Japanese pacifists think even this is illegal. The relationship with the U.S. is codified in a series of defense treaties in the 1950's and finally in 1960, in which the U.S. guarantees the external security of Japan. I don't think the U.S. maintained any explicit right to intervene since 1960 if, say, the Japanese government decided to amend Article 9. However that doesn't mean they aren't capable of exerting enormous political pressure in opposition if they so chose. The Japanese military isn't huge ( ~250,000 ), but their military budget was the fourth largest in the world in 1997. They spend an awful lot on not only the latest equipment, but also on logistics and support - It is an extremely well-maintained and efficient force. Quote:
.- Tamerlane |
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#13
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#14
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I guess I was writing faster than thought flows... Quote:
As re the Swedes and the Thirty Years war Tamerlane is certainly correct as far as their composition. leadership and what-not goes. However (I bet you already knew there would be a ‘however’) there is a not so insignificant and often overlooked part of the Thirty Years War that beggars if you ask me, namely Bohemia. The Swedish army, (granted; not the Swedes, but an army non the less under Swedish command) repeatedly plundered burned and raped their way through this part of Europe during the bare 20 years that they were involved on the continent. Before the war Bohemia counted 738 towns, 34 000 villages and approx. 3 million inhabitants. When the Swedish army was done there were 230 towns, 6 000 villages and and some 800 000 inhabitants left. The worst of all this did in fact come to pass in 1639 under Baner, in the last years of the period between HM Gustav II Adolf and Torstensson. In early summer that year the Swedish army enters Bohemia headed for Prague. In grave need of fodder and supplies they turn on the countryside with some wanton violence that is still legend in the area. Some estimates give that during this campaign alone over 6 000 villages and towns were burnt to the ground and their inhabitants brutally murdered. No doubt it was ‘just’ pillaging and there was some resistance in the military leadership to it – but it was pillaging and murder justified by the supposed Catholic faith of the victims. That some of those were in fact Protestants and expressed their outrage at being lumped in with the awful Papists didn’t have much effect in saving neither them nor the actual intended victims. Maybe not planned genocide, but hey the degrees in Hell are only significant as long as you’re not the one being burned. Quote:
Beyond my rhetorical answers Tamerlane’s short but significant expansion should suffice to show you that the OPs position on Japan is completely fallacious and in such a way based on bygone events that it is dated to the point of rot. To succumb to such an opinion as the OP propones is to tumble into the abyss of absolute ignorance. Sparc |
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#15
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#16
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And if Japan invaded China, where would they get the soldiers? The youth of Japan? Not F*'ing likely...
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#17
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Sparc: Oh, aye ( arrh! shiver me timbers! ), Baner's army in particular was a little more than a chaotic, murderous rabble towards the end. My understanding was that the only way Torstensson restored discipline was by a) bringing in some fresh Swedish reinforcements with him when he took over command, which he used to stiffen up the ranks and b) brutalizing it back into shape with floggings and beatings. The troops apparently hated him, but he consistently got results, both on and off the battlefield.
An exceptionally destructive war in many respects, with Bohemia perhaps only the most prominent and thoroughly hit of the many devastated areas. Both sides tended to live off the countryside ( Ernst Mansfeld's good reputation apparently rested not on his, at best, competent battlefied skills, but on his logistical abilities that allowed him to maintain sizeable armies in the field at a low cost to his employers ) and the civilian population were the first to suffer and last to recover. Even more than most wars this was a hard one on the countryside, not least because it just dragged on and on. And the "Protestants" had plenty of symbols of their own of "Catholic" atrocities, like the bloody sack of Madgeburg ( though in that case apparently Tilly's army just got away from him and he was personally horrified at the wanton slaughter ). Anyway, can we possibly get more off topic ?- Tamerlane |
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#18
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That should be "...floggings and hangings".
- Tamerlane |
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#19
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Also, for the OP, I would point out that Japan invaded Manchuria in 1931 over the objections of the league of nations. Or lets go back to the Sino-Japanese war of 1894-95, where China lost and ceded Korea, Taiwan, Pescadores and the Liaodong Peninsula as well as paid a massive indemnity. Or in the aftermath of WW1, when the west gave Japan treaty ports with extraterritoriality in China. Economic war that was going on when the Japanese brutallized the Chinese silk industry, or the boycott of Japanese goods. So, I'm not sure what the point of the OP is, but the Marco Polo Bridge incident was a chapter in the middle of the book. |
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#20
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Bush has now repealed that position with a clear "first strike" policy. |
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#21
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Re: Re: Re: Today, 65 years ago
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And these quotes from the Blusterer In Chief: From the Washington Post, 30 Jan 2002 We will be deliberate," Bush said, "yet time is not on your [terrorists] side. I will not wait on events, while dangers gather." [bolding added] From the West Point Graduation Speech "Our security will require the best intelligence, to reveal threats hidden in caves and growing in laboratories. ... Our security will require transforming the military you will lead -- a military that must be ready to strike at a moment's notice in any dark corner of the world. And our security will require all Americans to be forward-looking and resolute, to be ready for preemptive action [bolding added] when necessary to defend our liberty and to defend our lives." I suppose these comments could be interpreted to mean that GW wants to be ready and have the military be ready to rush into action to attempt to build a "moment's notice coalition to bring diplomatic pressure on governments that support terrorists." Just the same I'm not sure "conjecture and lies" are exactly justifiable. And the whole point was that we don't need to wait for some imaginary "Japanese militarism" when we have plenty of our own. |
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#22
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But you're right we are way, way off the topic here and I am bending historical fact to somewhat awkwardly make rhetorical points that have already been made. Urban Ranger, would you care to tell us what your intent with the OP was and what you hoped we might debate or should we perhaps take your absence in the thread as a sign that the 'debate' is over? Sparc |
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#23
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149 years ago today
July 8, 1853, an expedition led by Commodore Matthew Perry arrived in Yedo Bay, Japan, on a mission to seek diplomatic and trade relations with the Japanese.
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#24
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__________________
Providing useless posts since 1999! |
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#25
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Today, 65 years ago
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'Mere suspicion' has nothing to do with our military actions. Confirmable intelligence is what lead us to Afghanistan, and is leading us back to Iraq. |
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#26
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Brutus.
Tom and David both gave you cites and argument. What do you need next? A private audience with GWB so that he can explain it to you in person? BTW you still owe me thanks and an apology. Sparc |
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#27
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What do I owe you a thanks and apology for? Let me guess: Thanks for reminding that today was the 9th anniversary of Kim Il Sung's death. I am sorry for your loss, Sparc. That do it? |
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#29
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#30
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IMHO, that which is is quibble-worthy should not be characterized by as a lie.
I thank the posters here who maintain a healthy ratio between information and fact on the one hand and rhetoric on the other. |
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