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senseandsensibility
(23,760 posts)
VGNonly
(8,254 posts)He was on his ship, heard the speech on shipboard radio.
Irish_Dem
(74,425 posts)What was the mood on board his ship?
Somber, quiet, or loud and celebratory??
VGNonly
(8,254 posts)Hard to say what he felt. I think he was just mostly relieved that it was over.
Irish_Dem
(74,425 posts)Quiet, subdued, relieved.
But also aware of the tremendous loss of life and suffering.
And the ordeal they had been through.
senseandsensibility
(23,760 posts)That would be amazing if he was. Thanks to all the WWII vets such as your father and my late father in law!
VGNonly
(8,254 posts)Of the approximately 16 million US WW2 veterans who served, only about 66,000 are left.
oasis
(52,862 posts)
Hekate
(99,371 posts)To my surprise, it brought some tears.
BigmanPigman
(53,710 posts)"Unit 731 was responsible for large-scale biological and chemical warfare research, as well as lethal human experimentation. The facility was led by General Shirō Ishii and received strong support from the Japanese military. Its activities included infecting prisoners with deadly diseases, conducting vivisection, performing organ harvesting, testing hypobaric chambers, amputating limbs, and exposing victims to chemical agents and explosives. Prisonersoften referred to as logs by the staffwere mainly Chinese civilians, but also included Russians, Koreans, and others, including children and pregnant women. No documented survivors are known.
After the war, twelve Unit 731 members were tried by the Soviet Union in the 1949 Khabarovsk war crimes trials and sentenced to prison. However, many key figures, including Ishii, were granted immunity by the United States in exchange for their research data. The Harry S. Truman administration concealed the unit's crimes and paid stipends to former personnel."
The US history books leave this important fact about the US after WW2. We went after Nazi doctors/torturers but we let the Japanese doctors/torturers go.