The [Axis] Occupation of Singapore from February 1942 to August 1945 was a particularly momentous period of loss and sacrifice for the Chinese population as compared to other ethnicities, because they were the targets of brutal [Imperial] military policies. During a month of screening procedures and indiscriminate massacres in 1942 known as sook ching, or cleansing operations, an undetermined number of civilians were separated from their families and friends and suffered uncertain fates. In many cases, the last time relatives saw loved ones was at a screening center before the unlucky victims were driven away in trucks to unknown destinations.
What about the invasion of mainland China? Rape of Nanking? What about the vivisection of living test subjects? Manchurian testing?
They may not have done a holocaust, but they did a lot worse shit in other areas. The medical testing was the worst to learn about. The worst thing is they got away with it, not admitting to any of it until later. Japanese leadership completely skirted any type of Nuremberg-type consequences.
Many things they did were problematic, but I don’t remember Japan doing a Holocaust
Edit: Thanks for the info, comrades.
They definitely committed war crimes and I don’t mean to downplay this. Was this genocide though?
https://web.archive.org/web/20070614140107/http://yale.edu/gsp/publications/WaiKeng.doc
it was definitely genocide, what we're criticising is the war crimes committed by the americans.
What about the invasion of mainland China? Rape of Nanking? What about the vivisection of living test subjects? Manchurian testing?
They may not have done a holocaust, but they did a lot worse shit in other areas. The medical testing was the worst to learn about. The worst thing is they got away with it, not admitting to any of it until later. Japanese leadership completely skirted any type of Nuremberg-type consequences.