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Japan
Rebuffs Requests for Information About Its Germ-Warfare Atrocities
By RALPH BLUMENTHAL with
JUDITH MILLER
The New York Times
March 4,1999
More than 50
years after the Japanese Army attacked China with germ weapons and conducted
gruesome experiments on thousands of human beings, Japan is resisting demands
that it compensate the victims or make records of the atrocities public.
The Japanese
Government has declined to cooperate with efforts by the Justice Department
to put the names of several hundred surviving veterans of the germ warfare
operations on a list of suspected war criminals barred from entering the
United States, American officials say.
It has also
rebuffed researchers seeking access to a vast archive of military documents
in Tokyo that detail the World War II activities of the Japanese Imperial
Army, including its chief biological warfare arm, known as Unit 731.
The American
authorities seized the archive after World War II but returned it to Japan
in 1958 after only a small number of documents were copied.
Japan's approach
stands in contrast to that of Germany, which has paid about $80 billion
to war victims and their families. Private industries and banks in Germany
and Switzerland plan to pay billions more.
Despite the
refusal of the Japanese Government to release information, new details
are emerging about the scope of the biological program. Research by scholars,
campaigns by the Simon Wiesenthal Center of Los Angeles and the Global
Alliance for Preserving the History of World War II in Asia, and a lawsuit
in Japan by Chinese plaintiffs have unleashed a flood of new accounts that
substantially expand the historical record.
The accounts
have heightened tensions between Japan and its neighbors. They suggest
that Japan's World War II germ attacks were even more widespread than first
thought, stretching from Burma (now Myanmar), Thailand, Singapore and the
Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) to Russia and Chinese cities and hamlets.
The Dead
The Numbers
Remain in Dispute
The death toll
from Japan's biological warfare remains in dispute. Some scholars assert
that several hundred thousand people died, mostly in China. Others say
the casualties were far lower. Scholars estimate that an additional 10,000
prisoners were killed in experiments, perhaps a dozen times the number
who died at the hands of Dr. Josef Mengele and other Nazi scientists.
Eli M. Rosenbaum,
director of the Office of Special Investigations in the Justice Department,
said the dispute between Tokyo and Washington over suspected war criminals
has been quietly building for three years.
The Justice
Department's worldwide list of war crimes suspects now includes the names
of about 60,000 Germans and other Europeans, including Kurt Waldheim, the
former United Nations Secretary General, President of Austria and wartime
intelligence officer in Hitler's army.
By contrast,
Mr. Rosenbaum said the United States had dates of birth and other identifying
data on fewer than 100 suspected Japanese war criminals.
''For a friendly
government to deny us access is astonishing, beyond the pale,'' Mr. Rosenbaum
said. ''Most outrageous of all is that the Japanese Government will not
provide the dates of birth of war crimes suspects identified by O.S.I.
so that they can be barred from the United States. They won't even tell
us if they will ever assist us.''
A Japanese Embassy
spokesman in Washington, Tsuyoshi Yamamoto, said his Government would have
no comment because the issue concerned ''the specifics of Japanese cooperation
with the United States, which are of a diplomatic nature.''
Little was publicly
known about Japan's germ operations until the 1980's, when scholars published
their first accounts. More recently, veterans of Unit 731 have been speaking
publicly in Japan about their misdeeds, seeking expiation.
According to
participants, victims and records, the unit mounted widespread germ attacks
with anthrax, typhoid and other pathogens. Among other experiments, its
doctors infected prisoners with disease germs, removed organs and blood
and withheld water to collect data on how the human body copes with illness
and deprivation. Many victims were then dissected alive.
Only one former
member of the unit was ever turned away from entering the United States:
Yushio Shinozuka, who arrived last summer to join a forum and publicly
express anguish over having prepared victims for vivisection.
Rather than
fading with time, diplomats and scholars say, sensitivities over the issue
are becoming sharper as new generations re-examine wartime events, as they
have with the Holocaust in Europe.
Complicating
the issue is the complicity of American officials in shielding from prosecution
top Japanese scientists who turned over their data to the United States,
which was developing its own germ warfare program.
Among the questions
that remain unresolved is whether doctors working with Unit 731 experimented
on American prisoners of war.
''The cover-up
continues,'' said Sheldon H. Harris, emeritus professor of history at California
State University in Northridge and the author of ''Factories of Death''
(Routledge, 1994), an account of the Japanese germ warfare program and
the American hunger for its secrets. The book is scheduled for publication
in Japan this spring.
Mr. Harris said
in an interview that while he had unearthed American translations of three
Japanese autopsy reports comprising nearly a thousand pages recounting
wartime medical experiments on dead and living prisoners, 17 other reports
were missing, along with some 8,000 photographic slides documenting the
experiments.
The Campaign
Germ Bombs
In the 1930's
The origins
of Unit 731 go back to 1930 and the Tokyo laboratory of an ultranationalist
surgeon and microbiologist, Shiro Ishii, who was later made a general.
Within two years, after Japanese troops overran Manchuria in northeast
China, General Ishii, using the cover of a sanitation unit, set up the
first of several large biological warfare and human research centers in
Ping Fan and other areas around Harbin, a heavily Russian city near the
Soviet border.
Over the next
decade, scholars and researchers say, the Japanese attacked hundreds of
heavily populated communities and remote regions with germ bombs. Evidence
of the attacks continues to emerge.
''There appears
to have been a massive germ war campaign in Yunnan Province bordering Burma,''
said Daniel Barenblatt, a graduate psychologist and New York City researcher
who has been assembling material for five years for a documentary with
the film director David Irving, chairman of the undergraduate film and
television department at New York University.
''They seem
to have been killing ethnic minorities in a jungle campaign,'' Mr. Barenblatt
said.
Many questions
remain unanswered.
It is still
not established, for example, whether American prisoners of war were among
those experimented on. Some Americans have said they were sickened by contaminated
feathers in their food, and Japanese accounts tell of jars containing body
parts labeled American among other nationalities.
Frank James,
77, a survivor of the Bataan Death March, ended up in 1942 at a Japanese
prison camp in Mukden, Manchuria, where, he said, he became a 70-pound
living skeleton.
''They gave
us shots, sprays in the face,'' he recounted in a telephone interview from
his home in Redwood City, Calif., where he is confined with diabetes and
lung disease.
He said one
of his jobs at Mukden was to retrieve for dissection frozen corpses that
he was certain were American. ''They opened them up so they could look
into the lining of the stomach,'' he recalled. ''The light pink icicles
in the stomach weren't thawed.''
A new hour long
documentary to be broadcast on Sunday on the History Channel, ''Unit 731:
Nightmare in Manchuria,'' features interviews with other surviving American
war prisoners who say they were victimized by Japanese experiments.
But records
of their debriefings by American officials remain unavailable. Mr. Harris,
the author, said he applied for the records under the Freedom of Information
Act several years ago and was told by the Veterans Administration that
they had been destroyed in a fire in St. Louis.
After the war,
American interest in prosecuting members of Unit 731 for war crimes faded
fast. While Germany was split in a four-power occupation, the United States
had a largely free hand in rebuilding Japan and was forging close ties
to the new Government.
In addition,
Mr. Harris said, American scientists were ''salivating'' over the chance
to obtain the forbidden secrets of Japan's human experiments. The American
authorities granted General Ishii and his associates immunity from prosecution
and in exchange received detailed information.
The Allies did
prosecute 5,570 Japanese, none for biological warfare. Nine Japanese medical
school professionals were convicted, and some executed, for vivisecting
eight captured American fliers in 1945.
Toshimi Mizobuchi
makes no secret of his years with Unit 731. A vigorous 76-year-old real
estate manager living outside the Japanese city of Kobe, Mr. Mizobuchi
is organizing this year's reunion for the several hundred surviving veterans
of Unit 731. He says he did not take part in experiments on humans, though
he knew of them and argues that they were justifiable.
In a recent
interview at home near Kobe with Rabbi Abraham Cooper of the Simon Wiesenthal
Center that was recorded and transcribed through an interpreter, Mr.
Mizobuchi said he still regarded the victims of the experiments as ''maruta,''
or logs.
''They were
logs to me,'' said Mr. Mizobuchi, a training officer with the unit. ''Logs
were not considered to be human. They were either spies or conspirators.''
As such, he said, ''they were already dead. So now they die a second time.
We just executed a death sentence.''
He said that
there were about 30 veterans of the unit living near him and that a reunion
was held almost every year, drawing 40 or 50. Mr. Mizobuchi said he had
never visited the American mainland but had been to Hawaii twice for sightseeing.
''It's a stain
on history,'' said Rabbi Cooper, associate dean of the Wiesenthal Center,
founded in 1977 in the name of the Viennese concentration camp survivor
and Nazi-hunter to keep alive the memory of the genocide of the Jews and
to campaign for tolerance and human rights. .
Rabbi Cooper
said he had interviewed former germ war soldiers and others last month
in Japan and planned to present Congress and the White House with evidence
he had gathered. ''This blanket amnesty can't stand,'' he said.
The Records
Japan Refuses
Access to Files
Nearly 60 years
later, Ada Pivo of Los Angeles is still looking for the truth about Unit
731's operations.
During the war,
she said in an interview, she lived with her family in Harbin, where the
unit made its headquarters. In 1940 her 17-year old sister, Leah, was one
of two members of a Jewish youth group who contracted typhoid and died
after an outing. Mrs. Pivo believes that her sister was infected by a bottle
of lemonade spiked with bacteria by Japanese scientists.
It is known
that food and drink and even children's sweets were sometimes laced with
pathogens. But without access to records, it may never be possible to establish
the link to a particular operation in Harbin.
Japan has long
restricted access to military records, which were in the hands of the American
authorities for nine years after the war.
The documents,
first screened by the Central Intelligence Agency, include hundreds of
thousands of pages of War Ministry records from 1868 to 1942, Naval Ministry
records from 1868 to 1939 and operational records of many units throughout
the war.
In 1948 the
C.I.A. turned over the records to the National Archives, with no indication
of what, if anything, had been removed. In 1957 the collection was ordered
returned to Japan.
Concerned over
the potential loss, a group of scholars including Edwin O. Reischauer of
Harvard University and John Young of Georgetown University, obtained a
Ford Foundation grant to hurriedly microfilm what they could.
In February
1958, after about 5 percent of the records were copied, Mr. Young recalled
in an interview, the documents were sent to Baltimore and loaded aboard
a ship for Japan. ''There was no way we could read them all,'' said Mr.
Young, who deplored the loss.
In any case,
Mr. Young, who assisted Allied war crimes investigators in China after
the war, compiled a 144-page index to the pages that were microfilmed.
A microfilm set was presented to the National Diet Library in Tokyo, an
irony, Mr. Young said, considering that Japan has now closed off the collection.
''I can tell you frankly, the militarists felt relieved,'' Mr. Young said.
''As a historian I couldn't stand it.''
Read
the letter to the Editor
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