From News Nation/AP:
“5 things to know about
Japan’s World War II surrender”
World War II ended 75 years ago,
but not all countries commemorate it on the same day. Wednesday is the
anniversary of the formal Sept. 2, 1945, surrender of Japan to the United
States, when documents were signed officially ending years of bloody fighting
in a ceremony aboard the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay. It’s known as V-J Day in
some countries. But some nations mark Aug. 15 as the war’s end, the day Japan’s
emperor made a speech announcing the surrender. Five questions and answers
about Japan’s surrender:
Q: WHAT IS V-J DAY? A: An abbreviation for Victory over Japan
Day, marked by the United States and its allies in the war and by the Asian
victims of Japan who won their liberation from years of atrocities and
oppression. Some countries, including Britain, Australia, the Netherlands and
the Koreas, mark Japan’s surrender on Aug. 15. Others, including the United
States, mark the day on Sept. 2, while the Philippines, China and Russia
observe Sept. 3. Japan mourns for its war dead on Aug. 15 in a solemn ceremony
attended by the emperor, political leaders and veterans’ families.
Q: WHY ARE THERE DIFFERENT DATES? A:The countries that observe Aug. 15 mark
Japan’s public announcement of its surrender. Others commemorate Sept. 2, when
Japan formally signed its surrender, ending a conflict that lasted, in various
degrees, nearly half a century in parts of Asia. Then-U.S. President Harry
Truman said that the V-J Day proclamation had to wait until Japan officially
signed the surrender terms. Countries also mark different dates for
political and historical reasons. In 2014, China set Sept. 3 as a newly
formalized historical day to annually mark the Victory Day of the Chinese
People’s War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression. The country celebrates
with a military march. The Philippines also observes Sept. 3, the day in 1945
when Japanese Gen. Tomoyuki Yamashita surrendered in that country. Russia,
which declared war against Japan on Aug. 9, took military action against Japan
until early September.
Q: WHAT HAPPENED ON AUG. 15,
1945? A: At noon on Aug. 15, days
after the U.S. atomic bombings of Hiroshima on Aug. 6 and Nagasaki on Aug. 9,
Japanese Emperor Hirohito broadcast a surrender message to his people on the
radio. The broadcast came one day after Japan told the United States and its
allies that it was surrendering, and Hirohito and Japanese ministers signed the
Imperial Rescript of Surrender. The emperor’s radio statement was
prerecorded on Aug. 14 in secrecy. Palace officials protected the records from
army officials who stormed the palace to steal them. The emperor’s voice, which
most Japanese were hearing for the time time, was muffled and nearly inaudible
because of poor sound quality.
Q: WHAT HAPPENED ON SEPT. 2,
1945? A: A formal signing of Japan’s surrender was held aboard the
battleship USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay, where in 1854 Navy Commodore Matthew
Perry had signed a treaty with Japan to open up the feudal nation for trade
with the United States. Aboard the USS Missouri, Japanese Foreign Minister
Mamoru Shigemitsu and Gen. Yoshijiro Umezu signed the Instrument of Surrender.
The two men were later convicted of war crimes. Gen. Douglas MacArthur,
also Supreme Commander of Allied Forces, signed for the United Nations, with
Fleet Adm. Chester Nimitz signing for the U.S. Delegates from other allied
nations, including Britain, France, Australia, Canada, the Netherlands, New Zealand,
China and the Soviet Union, witnessed the half-hour ceremony.
Q: WHAT HAPPENED AFTERWARD? A:The
official signing of Japan’s surrender ordered that the country must cease all
military actions, liberate prisoners of war and others in captivity and follow
other terms. It also launched a seven-year U.S. occupation that lasted until
the San Francisco Peace Treaty took effect in April 1952, allowing Japan’s
return to the international community. Japan has since become a major U.S. ally
in defense and other areas. Since 1954, Japan has spent tens of billions
of dollars in development aid, initially meant as war compensation, for the
region. But it took more than two decades for Japan to normalize diplomatic
ties with some of its wartime Asian foes. It restored ties with South Korea in
1965, and with China in 1972, though disputes over wartime history continue to
affect Japan’s ties with its neighbors. Japan has yet to sign a peace treaty
with Russia because of territorial disputes and has not established diplomatic
ties with North Korea.
^ 75 years ago today World War 2
officially and completely ended no matter where in the world you were. Unfortunately,
the US and most of the world has done little to nothing to remember this
historic year. ^
https://www.newsnationnow.com/world/5-things-to-know-about-japans-world-war-ii-surrender/
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