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The real Japanese devils under the lens: Figure 2 sits in the homes of ordinary people eating dumplings, and the caliber of the cannon in Figure 5 is too scary!

The real Japanese devils under the lens: Figure 3 squatting in the homes of ordinary people eating dumplings, and the caliber of the cannon in Figure 5 is too scary!

The real Japanese devils under the lens: Figure 2 sits in the homes of ordinary people eating dumplings, and the caliber of the cannon in Figure 5 is too scary!

After the fall of Nanjing, more than 100 Japanese journalists, writers, and critics came to Nanjing, and they were called "pen troops." Under Japan's wartime press control policy, reports and photographs of the Japanese army's atrocities in Nanjing were stamped with the mark of "no permission" and banned from public publication to cover up the criminal acts of the Japanese army. In their pens and lenses, Nanjing is a "peaceful" scene of "singing and dancing".

Figure 1: On April 1, 1938, the Japanese "World Pictorial" published a photo of "Spring View of Nanjing" to whitewash Taiping.

The real Japanese devils under the lens: Figure 2 sits in the homes of ordinary people eating dumplings, and the caliber of the cannon in Figure 5 is too scary!

Figure 2: In the winter of 1937, the little devil said: The Chinese people still make hot dumplings for us to eat... This scene of "hypocrisy and goodwill" also does not know how much thought the Japanese devils have spent to force ordinary people to act.

The real Japanese devils under the lens: Figure 2 sits in the homes of ordinary people eating dumplings, and the caliber of the cannon in Figure 5 is too scary!

Figure 3【

Is it the same as the machine gunners in the anti-Japanese drama?

This is a photograph of a Japanese defensive position taken by a Japanese war correspondent during the Battle of Songhu in 1937. The third Japanese soldier counted from the left was a machine gunner in terms of his weapons. This Japanese machine gunner is very well hidden, he lies on the ground and shoots from the firing port at the bottom of the sandbag, which is completely different from the shooting method of the machine gun mounted on the sandbag in the current TV series, and the real shooting method of the Japanese army in the photo is the real shooting method of the Japanese army. In the surrounding buildings, the four characters of "Coca-Cola" are very eye-catching, which shows that Coke has been very popular in Shanghai as early as the 1930s. However, with the fierce fighting between the Chinese and Japanese armies, shanghai at this time was filled with smoke and smoke, and the prosperity of the past was gone.

The real Japanese devils under the lens: Figure 2 sits in the homes of ordinary people eating dumplings, and the caliber of the cannon in Figure 5 is too scary!

Figure 4: This is a photo taken when the Japanese army attacked the city of De'an in Jiangxi in 1938. There are 3 Japanese soldiers in the picture, and there is a blurry figure not far away. This should be a street, flanked by shops, with the names of the shops on top of them, Guangfu Grocery Store and Guangfu Candy. The most thrilling thing was that the Japanese army had already raised its gun to aim at the Chinese soldier. You see this Chinese warrior directly across the street, jumping over, as if he didn't even have a gun! This sudden appearance caught the 3 Japanese soldiers by surprise, and they hurriedly raised their guns and shot in a hurry! I hope this Chinese hero can get out of danger safely! It can be said that he escaped from the muzzle of the Japanese army and died nine times

The real Japanese devils under the lens: Figure 2 sits in the homes of ordinary people eating dumplings, and the caliber of the cannon in Figure 5 is too scary!

The caliber of the cannon in Figure 5 is too scary, from this gesture to see about 400mm, do you know what giant cannons were in World War II?

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