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Doolittle Raid: Its Impact on China Don M. Tow

Doolittle Raid: Its Impact on China Don M. Tow. April 17, 2012 Brookdale Community College Lincroft, NJ. Doolittle Raid. Mission Impossible. Its Impact on the U.S. Its Impact on China. Its Impact On China. 15 of the 16 B-25 bombers landed on the southcentral east coast of China

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Doolittle Raid: Its Impact on China Don M. Tow

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  1. Doolittle Raid: Its Impact on ChinaDon M. Tow April 17, 2012 Brookdale Community College Lincroft, NJ

  2. Doolittle Raid • Mission Impossible • Its Impact on the U.S. • Its Impact on China

  3. Its Impact On China • 15 of the 16 B-25 bombers landed on the southcentral east coast of China • Most in Zhejiang Province • Some in neighboring Jiangxi Province • One landed in Vladisvostok, Soviet Union • Running out of fuel, without homing beacons and facing bad weather • All 15 crews made the same decision • They either all parachuted, or pilot remained and crash landed the plane

  4. Its Impact On China (cont.) • Rescue of American crewmen from 13 planes by local Chinese • Provided shelter, food, and caring of wounds • Keep relocating Americans as Japanese troops were actively looking for the Americans • Eventually got 64 of the 75 American crewmen transported safely to Chongqing (1 died while bailing out) • What about the 15 crewmen from the other 3 planes? • From 2 planes: 2 drowned and 8 were captured and trialed by Japanese troops • 3 were executed • 1 later died while in prison under extremely poor conditions • 4 remained in prison until they were rescued at the end of the war • 1 plane landed in Vladivostok and all 5 men were interned in Soviet Union

  5. Its Impact On China (cont.) • Japan unleashed a reign of terror on Chinese who helped the Americans • Sent a large number of army units into Zhejiang Province • Launched more than 600 air raids to cover the advancing army • Committed massacre after massacre of entire villages • Usually indiscriminately • General Chiang Kai-shek wrote to Washington in one of his cables: “These Japanese troops slaughtered every man, woman and child in these areas -- let me repeat – these Japanese troops slaughtered every man, woman and child in these areas” • Risking the lives of themselves and their villagers, local Chinese helped the Americans from being captured • Zhao Xiao Bao, one of the rescuers, saw that in a nearby town, the Japanese had already burned to death all the Chinese in that town

  6. Its Impact On China (cont.) • Reverend Charles L. Meeus, a Belgian-born missionary living in China, wrote to his Bishop • They threw 300 hundreds to the bottom of their wells to drown there. They destroyed all the American missions in the vicinity (29 out 31), they desecrated the graves of these missionaries, they destroyed the ancestor tablets in the various villages they went through. Cannibalism is the only terror they spared the Chinese people of Jiangxi.” • He estimated that the number of murdered Chinese just in the towns he passed through to be 25,000 • The Japanese also deployed many biological and chemical weapons of mass destruction • Biological weapons included anthrax, glanders, bubonic plague, and cholera • Unit 731 in Harbin, China: World’s largest biological/chemical weapons laboratory and factory

  7. Its Impact On China (cont.) • Two American medical doctors, Professor Michael Flanzblau and Dr. Martin Furmanski (also a medical historian) interviewed many of the germ warfare victims. Dr. Furmanski wrote in a paper: • “,,,, but the massive epidemics did not begin until the Japanese left and the Chinese returned to their villages.  Then a wide variety of diseases occurred:  fevers, diarrheas, rashes, and the first cases of rotten leg.  The mortality was terrible:  many families lost at least one member, and sometimes entire families were wiped out.  Entire villages were depopulated.” • Japanese also experimenting with live human captives, including cutting them open to see the effects of various germ weapons on the inside of their bodies

  8. Its Impact On China (cont.) • In spite of the massive and tragic inhumane atrocities of the biological and chemical weapons used by Japan in China • Top Japanese military leaders, scientists, and doctors of these weapons centers/factories were never prosecuted • This sad episode of history was quickly forgotten and erased from history • Dr. Furmanski wrote “In a disgraceful agreement with the Japanese biological weapons war criminals, the U.S. offered immunity from war crimes prosecution in exchange for the scientific data the Japanese had collected from murdering Chinese citizens, as well as citizens of other countries, both in their laboratories and in field applications.  The official U.S. and Japanese policy became one of denying the existence of the Japanese biological weapons program.”

  9. Its Impact On China (cont.) • The consequence to the Chinese was about 250,000 killed in the Zhejiang area • The American crewmen never forgot the bravery and sacrifices of the Chinese people • Several helpers, including Zhao Xiao Bao, were invited to the 50th Anniversary of the Doolittle Reunion in 1992 in South Carolina • It is especially important to recall this historic great friendship between the American people and the Chinese people in light of the current extremely antagonistic stand toward China of many American politicians and the mass media • For more information: • http://www.dontow.com/2012/03/the-doolittle-raid-mission-impossible-and-its-impact-on-the-u-s-and-china/

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