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How cruel were the Japanese to American prisoners of war in World War II? The prisoners of war cooked lice for lunch, and each one was tortured into inhuman form

author:Quiet talk history

At the end of a war, there will be a lot of embarrassing remnants, such as prisoners of war, who are in the middle of a human-like non-human. To say that they are human beings, of course they are human beings, is unmistakable, to say that they are not human beings, that they are in the eyes of the enemy army, that they cannot be regarded at all as flesh-and-blood people as enemy soldiers, but at best "prey".

War is a test of human nature, war is easy to arouse the madness in people's hearts, and once people fall into madness, they give up the good thoughts in human nature and become devils. The most brutal of The Second World War was the Japanese, especially in their treatment of prisoners of war.

It is said that if a prisoner of war captured by the Germans, a thousand people can return six hundred, if captured by the Japanese, a thousand people can return a hundred people with full beard. Among the Japanese who tortured and mistreated prisoners of war, the most brutal was the treatment of American prisoners of war.

People who understand the rise of Japan know that Japan has extreme hatred for whites, and in the Russo-Japanese War, Japan also mistreated Russian prisoners, not to mention that Japan did not pass the regulations on how to treat prisoners of war, and felt that since it was not passed, it would be nothing, so it was released to wait for prisoners of war.

How cruel were the Japanese to American prisoners of war in World War II? The prisoners of war cooked lice for lunch, and each one was tortured into inhuman form

Japan's "Bushido spirit" made the Japanese think that the prisoners of war did not commit suicide and simply did not deserve to be human, so they did not treat prisoners of war as human beings.

Japan has one of the largest POW camps, where many people are huddled together and lack food and water, some call them "chicken coops", some boil lice to eat.

Beatings to death is a common thing, and if the Japanese are in a bad mood, they beat prisoners of war for fun. The punishment for fleeing prisoners of war was even more severe, not only he had to be beaten, but also his friends, and the Japanese tied them to pillars, beat them with leather whips and maces, opened their flesh, and put them in the sun to expose them to the sun, making the wounds inflamed, and then continued to fight.

The Japanese continued to intimidate the prisoners of war, and after three days had them dig their own pits to humiliate them, and finally shot them to death and buried them directly in the pits.

How cruel were the Japanese to American prisoners of war in World War II? The prisoners of war cooked lice for lunch, and each one was tortured into inhuman form

These are the japanese army's mistreatment methods of the Americans, they vent their jealousy and hatred, everyone knows that white people have a sense of superiority, small Japanese people before and after the white people are respectful, in fact, the hatred and jealousy in their hearts are very deep, and the Japanese army and the Us army in World War II fought, the hatred for the US army is deeper, once the prisoners of war fall into the hands of the Japanese, it is better to live than to die.

We've all heard of a death march called the Bataan March, in which U.S. troops stationed on the philippine islands surrendered to Japan and more than 80,000 U.S. prisoners of war lived miserable lives ever since.

The U.S. military underestimated the cruelty of the Japanese, believing that the Japanese would abide by congressional regulations for prisoners of war, and the Japanese were even more cruel than they thought.

Nearly 80,000 American prisoners, driven by the fierceness of the Japanese, marched for 120 kilometers, and 80,000 died 17,000.

How cruel were the Japanese to American prisoners of war in World War II? The prisoners of war cooked lice for lunch, and each one was tortured into inhuman form

Why is there such a big death? The Japanese did not allow them to drink water or food along the way, and these American soldiers were already wounded, and if they were too thirsty to go to the stream to get water to drink, they would be shot. They were not even allowed to support each other, and some Japanese deliberately drove tanks over the prisoners of war.

The U.S. military is tired and hungry, and if it has a cold or dysentery, it will be buried on the spot.

After reaching the concentration camp, there was still no food to eat, there was no water to drink, and the American prisoners of war finally starved to the bone, and for two months in the prisoner of war concentration camp, another 26,000 people died in pain.

A 90-year-old doctor at a Japanese hospital who recalled receiving U.S. prisoners of war in his old age said thank you to him, and he completely let down his guard, thinking he would be treated and completely unaware of what he was facing.

How cruel were the Japanese to American prisoners of war in World War II? The prisoners of war cooked lice for lunch, and each one was tortured into inhuman form

Seventy years later, the doctor can still recall the scene at that time, not knowing whether he has remorse. Those living beings, he injected them not with blood, but with seawater, called "substitute blood." In addition to the infusions, they removed the internal organs of the American prisoners of war to see how long they could survive.

After the defeat of the Japanese army, a large number of Japanese became prisoners of war, suffered harsh treatment, and deserved it, but the United States did not mistreat the Japanese prisoners, these American soldiers can be called temperamental people, they are resentful of virtue, worthy of praise.

However, some big countries were not polite to them, and the Japanese prisoners of war fell into their hands, and the fate was also very miserable. The Japanese had tortured American prisoners of war into inhuman form, and the Japanese had been tortured by other countries to the point where only a few ships of ashes were left, and very few people returned, which was also their sin and a just punishment in the war.

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