General Ishiwara Kanji: Manchukuo how to Build a Puppet State🎙️ Episode 2
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- Опубліковано 4 лип 2024
- This Podcast about General Ishiwara Kanji, the mastermind behind the Mukden Incident of 1931 and author of the Final War Theory.
Ishiwara Kanji was a fascinating person and one whose actions changed the entire world. It could be argued Ishiwara Kanji single handedly caused World War Two.
Ishiwara Kanji is known predominantly for two things, his role in the Mukden Incident and his Final War Theory. Ishiwara Kanji sought for Japan to invade Manchuria to acquire her natural resources to build up the Japanese military in preparation for his theorized conflict against the United States.
Ishiwara Kanji performed the Mukden Incident, a false flag operation kicking off the invasion of Manchuria. The Japanese first seized Mukden, then expanded to places like Kirin, Jinzhou, Jiangqiao, Harbin, until all of Manchuria was now under Japanese control.
Yet Ishiwara Kanji did not seek a real war with China, his ultimate goal was simply to seize the resource rich part of Manchuria to build up Japan to face the United States. He sought an alliance with China and that of Asia in general. He began a campaign of racial harmony, Manchuria was to be called "Manchukuo". He had a vision for a East-Asian league and began lecturing all in the IJA about his grand schemes. Yet he would never see them come to be, for he had indeed ushered in a 15 year war with China instead.
Timestamp
00:00 Introduction
01:22 The Mukden Incident
06:00 Operation against Kirin
10:20 Operation against Jinzhou
16:00 Consolidating Manchuria
28:20 Manchukuo and racial harmony
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Ishiwara has a fascinating yet twisted world views
They should make a bio film on him, such a chaotic mind lol
Love the channel and hope you and yours have a great holidays, Craig.
Thanks so much!
It's interesting to think on how things might have gone if Japan had followed Ishiwara's vision to unify and build up Asia rather than rape, massacre and pillage its way across Asia. There would still have been resentment to it from the other cultures, but considering that many of the Asian countries invaded by Japan initially looked on them as liberators only to be rapidly disabused of that misconception by the vicious actions of the IJA and IJN occupiers Ishiwara's principles would have had to be enforced throughout the ranks...and the Japanese military had long since lost the ability to fully reign in the vicious ultranationalist tendencies that had become systemic.
Its would have changed world history
Was it so difficult to just show a map of Korea, during this podcast ?
err, its the animation is just a dystopian Manchuria battlefield.
@@ThePacificWarChannel Yes, you are right. The podcast is speaking about Japanese operations in Manchuria. This “dystopian snippet” was repeating itself every some seconds. It was good for some minutes. Afterwards, it became boring. In my message I’ve meant, that it was better to present a map with just the cities, who’s names you mention in your narrative.
Japan needs to make movies out of these great stories
I am surprised they have not done a biopic on Ishiwara...he is such a intense figure and he literally changed world history