Warriors of the Rising Sun by Roger Edgerton is an excellent book detailing the development of brutality seen in the Japanese Army of WWII.
He points out that in the Russo-Japanese War, and in China during the Boxer Rebellion, the Japanese were quite compassionate in dealing with their opponents.
Later, with the rise of militarism, the training changed, a corruption of the notion of Bushido took place, and the subsequent atrocities occured.
Good book.
I agree that the "sins of the father" should not be held agains the son. The Japanese of today should not be held responsible for the previous generation. But they must be held accountable. As an American, I don't feel obligated to pay reparations for the enslavement of blacks (not one person in my family had a black slave or even lived in the South), but as an American I MUST aknowledge the injustice openly. The Japanese are not doing this. Their history texts are revisionist, and their children aren't aware of the atrocities their armed forces committed.
I disagree strongly with this statement by MACaver:
"Never mind the death march at Baatan because the crimes were against soldiers who were at war with other soldiers and it is indeed war."
NOTHING justifies what they did to those men. Read the accounts. Forget that the Japanese felt that surrender was dishonorable...they knew how the west viewed it, and played that angle in engineering the surrender of U.S. and British forces in the first part of the war. They bayonetted wounded men in hospitals in Singapore, and slaughtered hospital staff. They doused prisoners in gasoline and set them on fire. They shot, beat, decapitated, starved, and neglected western prisoners. One pilot that was picked up by a Japanese submarine had an artillery shell tied to his legs, his hands were tied, and he was thrown overboard. Did Americans commit atrocities? Certainly. But not of this nature. Not against secured prisoners.
The war is over...forgiveness is in order. But we must remember, aknowledge, and then teach our children NEVER to do this sort of thing. The warrior's honor and simple human decency demands the respectful and humane treatment of prisoners and non-combatants.
Steve Scott