Did America really give immunity to scientists from Japan’s Unit 731 in exchange for whatever information they’d gathered from their “experiments” like this siteclaims?
Wikipedia seems to agree.
I had never heard of it but since they didn’t use any European or American people in the ‘experiments’ I guess we didn’t care.
You’re quoting the site the OP wants outside confirmation on.
Not the U.S.'s finest moment. There’s more here:
https://www.reddit.com/r/AskHistorians/comments/1xd0yz/why_did_the_us_give_immunity_to_japanese/
http://www.ww2pacific.com/unit731.html
To play devil’s advocate, the US military knew the Cold War was starting and the higher-ups also knew significant scientific intel had already been garnered from Germany (though not so much from their torture of prisoners). So they gambled that the same might be true for Japan’s chemical and biological warfare programs. Unfortunately, they were terribly wrong. The Japanese research was all worthless junk. But once you make a deal like that going back on it is viewed as just making things worse.
And yes, the vast majority of Unit 731’s victims were Chinese, Koreans and, to a lesser extent, Russians. And the Chinese and Russian govts did execute the Japanese scientists they captured.
I have to go with this in spades:
Not our finest at all.