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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:33,993 --> 00:00:36,787 Every day now, for more than 30 years, 2 00:00:36,871 --> 00:00:39,790 this couple have carried out this quaint ceremony 3 00:00:39,874 --> 00:00:45,171 meant, before their god, to expiate the guilt of seven souls. 4 00:00:58,267 --> 00:01:00,227 This is Japan 5 00:01:00,311 --> 00:01:04,190 and the seven souls belong to the seven Japanese war criminals 6 00:01:04,273 --> 00:01:07,902 hanged by the Allies after 1945. 7 00:02:14,426 --> 00:02:16,804 Japan suffered more than most countries 8 00:02:16,887 --> 00:02:20,015 from the Great Depression after the First World War. 9 00:02:20,099 --> 00:02:22,017 The population was increasing fast 10 00:02:22,101 --> 00:02:28,107 and every year produced another million mouths to feed. 11 00:02:30,860 --> 00:02:35,406 Japan had no mineral resources of her own, unemployment was high, 12 00:02:35,531 --> 00:02:39,743 and crop failures brought disastrous famines in rural areas. 13 00:02:39,827 --> 00:02:44,498 Public life was very hard in those days 14 00:02:44,623 --> 00:02:47,334 and most of the young military officers 15 00:02:47,418 --> 00:02:52,089 came from low-class agricultural families. 16 00:02:52,173 --> 00:02:56,552 And our culture was in a very, very hard position. 17 00:03:02,391 --> 00:03:05,144 1930 was the time when Japan 18 00:03:05,227 --> 00:03:10,691 entered what might be called her convulsive period of history. 19 00:03:12,651 --> 00:03:17,364 The influence of the ultra-nationalists grew 20 00:03:17,448 --> 00:03:21,744 and such incidents as the young officers' revolt of May 15 21 00:03:21,827 --> 00:03:26,874 placed Japan step by step under the power of the military. 22 00:03:26,957 --> 00:03:30,419 The politicians took second place to the army. 23 00:03:33,088 --> 00:03:37,051 The Japanese army had been in disrepute 24 00:03:37,134 --> 00:03:40,346 till about the beginning of the 1930s, 25 00:03:40,429 --> 00:03:47,311 and then they came back through the so-called patriotic societies - 26 00:03:50,105 --> 00:03:52,650 many of them no more than gangsters 27 00:03:52,733 --> 00:03:57,404 who could commit any misdeed in the name of patriotism. 28 00:04:12,169 --> 00:04:15,130 Those were the years certain authors have described 29 00:04:15,256 --> 00:04:19,635 as the period of government by assassination. 30 00:04:19,718 --> 00:04:21,887 And there were several assassinations 31 00:04:21,971 --> 00:04:25,307 of prime ministers and leaders in those days 32 00:04:25,432 --> 00:04:28,686 just because they had liberal views 33 00:04:28,769 --> 00:04:32,273 or because they favoured 34 00:04:32,356 --> 00:04:35,651 better relations with the United States, Britain, 35 00:04:35,734 --> 00:04:39,780 or more other democratic-minded nations. 36 00:04:43,033 --> 00:04:46,120 The army also controlled the education system. 37 00:04:46,203 --> 00:04:47,871 A respect for the martial arts 38 00:04:47,955 --> 00:04:53,502 was inculcated into every Japanese child from an early age. 39 00:04:59,425 --> 00:05:03,804 To the Japanese, their emperor was a god. 40 00:05:03,887 --> 00:05:07,641 But Hirohito chose to reign, not to rule. 41 00:05:07,725 --> 00:05:10,644 He allowed himself to be manipulated by the military, 42 00:05:10,728 --> 00:05:14,773 and since every Japanese was pledged to serve the emperor unto death, 43 00:05:14,857 --> 00:05:19,486 his connivance was a considerable asset to the army. 44 00:05:20,821 --> 00:05:22,990 To solve Japan's economic problems, 45 00:05:23,073 --> 00:05:26,869 the army favoured expansion on the Asian mainland. 46 00:05:26,952 --> 00:05:31,665 Korea had long been Japan's, and since her victory over Tsarist Russia in 1905, 47 00:05:31,749 --> 00:05:36,128 Japan had also been allowed to station troops in Manchuria. 48 00:05:36,211 --> 00:05:38,589 Manchuria was mostly empty wilderness, 49 00:05:38,672 --> 00:05:41,800 but it contained raw materials that Japan lacked, 50 00:05:41,884 --> 00:05:44,303 such as coal and iron ore. 51 00:05:57,858 --> 00:06:01,695 Impatient that the politicians back in Tokyo did not see the obvious need 52 00:06:01,779 --> 00:06:03,906 to seize Manchuria once and for all, 53 00:06:04,031 --> 00:06:08,660 a group of extremists in 1931 infiltrated the Japanese garrisons there 54 00:06:08,744 --> 00:06:12,373 and persuaded them to take on Manchuria's feeble army. 55 00:06:46,281 --> 00:06:48,117 Against little real opposition, 56 00:06:48,200 --> 00:06:51,203 the Japanese army soon controlled the whole country, 57 00:06:51,286 --> 00:06:55,457 driving the luckless Manchurians before them. 58 00:07:01,171 --> 00:07:03,924 The world was shocked, but did nothing... 59 00:07:08,470 --> 00:07:12,182 apart from a rebuke at the League of Nations. 60 00:07:12,266 --> 00:07:14,935 Japan, however, 61 00:07:15,018 --> 00:07:18,856 finds it impossible to accept 62 00:07:18,939 --> 00:07:22,776 the report adopted by the assembly. 63 00:07:23,152 --> 00:07:25,779 And so Japan leaves the League. 64 00:07:25,863 --> 00:07:31,201 The Far Eastern war cloud casts its shadow over the whole world. 65 00:07:37,624 --> 00:07:40,627 As they had occupied Manchuria with such ease 66 00:07:40,711 --> 00:07:43,464 and without interference from the rest of the world, 67 00:07:43,547 --> 00:07:46,550 the Japanese generals there soon turned their attention 68 00:07:46,675 --> 00:07:49,470 to Manchuria's next-door neighbour, China. 69 00:07:49,553 --> 00:07:52,890 The China of 500 million souls. 70 00:07:52,973 --> 00:07:59,354 The China that for centuries had thought itself secure behind its Great Wall. 71 00:07:59,438 --> 00:08:02,483 In July, 1937, an incident was manufactured 72 00:08:02,566 --> 00:08:06,695 whereby the Chinese appeared to fire on the Japanese. 73 00:08:06,778 --> 00:08:10,908 Without waiting to investigate, Japan invaded China. 74 00:08:31,512 --> 00:08:37,100 Disunited and ill-equipped, the Chinese were no match for the ruthless Japanese. 75 00:08:53,659 --> 00:08:57,663 Within a matter of weeks, the Japanese had overrun most of northern China 76 00:08:57,746 --> 00:08:59,581 and were bombing Peking. 77 00:09:24,231 --> 00:09:28,277 Peking soon fell, and it was then Shanghai's turn. 78 00:10:21,413 --> 00:10:26,001 Once Shanghai had fallen, the Japanese forces advanced up the Yangtze valley 79 00:10:26,084 --> 00:10:30,839 to threaten the then-capital of China, Nanking. 80 00:11:54,256 --> 00:11:58,343 It was here at Nanking in December, 1937, 81 00:11:58,427 --> 00:12:01,555 that the Japanese perpetrated what was, until then, 82 00:12:01,638 --> 00:12:04,391 one of the worst atrocities of this century, 83 00:12:04,474 --> 00:12:09,646 when their troops massacred more than 200,000 Chinese in cold blood. 84 00:12:17,112 --> 00:12:23,910 Even the Nazis were shocked, and offered to mediate to prevent further bloodshed. 85 00:12:23,994 --> 00:12:26,538 But the Japanese generals were unyielding 86 00:12:26,621 --> 00:12:28,790 as their military successes mounted. 87 00:12:28,874 --> 00:12:33,336 By the summer of 1938, the Japanese had captured a considerable part of China, 88 00:12:33,462 --> 00:12:35,714 including most of the major cities, 89 00:12:35,797 --> 00:12:38,633 but they were only conquering territory, not people, 90 00:12:38,717 --> 00:12:42,304 as the Chinese retreated into their vast hinterland. 91 00:12:42,387 --> 00:12:46,016 Worse for the Japanese, their conquests incurred the suspicion 92 00:12:46,099 --> 00:12:49,227 of their old enemy to the north, Russia. 93 00:12:56,568 --> 00:13:01,406 In the summer of 1938, Russian and Japanese troops battled for possession 94 00:13:01,490 --> 00:13:05,869 of a barren hill on the Soviet-Manchurian border. 95 00:13:14,795 --> 00:13:17,047 The Japanese received such a drubbing 96 00:13:17,172 --> 00:13:21,760 that they opted for a settlement after only two weeks. 97 00:13:43,406 --> 00:13:45,784 Ten months later, another squabble broke out 98 00:13:45,867 --> 00:13:47,994 and once again the Japanese were beaten, 99 00:13:48,078 --> 00:13:51,832 this time by none other than General Zhukov. 100 00:14:00,715 --> 00:14:04,761 It made them wary of further conflicts with the Soviet Union. 101 00:14:09,850 --> 00:14:13,436 But it also pushed them closer to Germany and Italy. 102 00:14:13,520 --> 00:14:15,522 Banzai! 103 00:14:25,574 --> 00:14:29,828 Living in Japan became difficult for other Westerners. 104 00:14:29,911 --> 00:14:33,957 You were constantly under the supervision of police. 105 00:14:34,040 --> 00:14:38,545 You were always, as a European, suspected of being a spy. 106 00:14:38,628 --> 00:14:41,673 In the railway stations, you'd often see posters 107 00:14:41,756 --> 00:14:45,468 of a man with a Sherlock Holmes cap and a curly pipe, 108 00:14:45,594 --> 00:14:48,388 which said, "Beware of spies". 109 00:14:48,471 --> 00:14:54,102 You had the intensified activities of the thought police and the Kempeitai, 110 00:14:54,185 --> 00:14:58,440 who controlled speech and thought. 111 00:14:58,523 --> 00:15:02,736 Then you had the introduction of a national uniform called Kokomin-fuku. 112 00:15:02,819 --> 00:15:07,616 After leaving school, people were supposed to wear these to go to work. 113 00:15:07,699 --> 00:15:08,783 And they were khaki 114 00:15:08,867 --> 00:15:13,872 and they were similar to the uniforms worn by the servicemen. 115 00:15:13,955 --> 00:15:16,958 And then the cinema and plays, 116 00:15:17,042 --> 00:15:22,756 the complexion of these became more martial and more a glorification of war, 117 00:15:22,839 --> 00:15:28,178 and the radio would play more and more music of a military nature. 118 00:15:32,015 --> 00:15:38,271 Then on the political field you had the Taisai Yukusankai, the one-party system 119 00:15:38,355 --> 00:15:40,148 that made it easy for the military 120 00:15:40,231 --> 00:15:45,695 to consolidate their influence over the country. 121 00:16:08,093 --> 00:16:10,845 There was constantly the sight and sounds 122 00:16:10,929 --> 00:16:13,848 of soldiers being sent off ceremoniously 123 00:16:13,932 --> 00:16:16,518 to the front in China. 124 00:16:16,601 --> 00:16:18,478 They were always taught that 125 00:16:18,561 --> 00:16:21,398 the greatest thing that could happen to any family 126 00:16:21,481 --> 00:16:25,485 was to be able to give a son or two sons or three sons or seven sons 127 00:16:25,568 --> 00:16:27,195 to the service of their country 128 00:16:27,320 --> 00:16:31,074 and to die for the emperor and the imperial family. 129 00:16:31,992 --> 00:16:37,622 You had the so-called ash boxes, remains of soldiers, 130 00:16:37,706 --> 00:16:41,418 coming back to Japan, so we knew we were at war. 131 00:16:48,800 --> 00:16:52,178 Western influences had grown in Japan in the '30s, 132 00:16:52,262 --> 00:16:55,390 which the military disliked and now discouraged. 133 00:16:55,473 --> 00:17:00,770 I remember my former wife - it must have been about 1938 - 134 00:17:00,854 --> 00:17:04,065 coming from a hairdressers' where she had her hair waved 135 00:17:04,149 --> 00:17:06,693 and being stopped by a policeman, 136 00:17:06,776 --> 00:17:11,406 who told her that this was a sign of Western decadence - 137 00:17:11,489 --> 00:17:15,326 you shouldn't have your hair waved. 138 00:17:15,410 --> 00:17:18,163 Dancing, even Western music - 139 00:17:18,246 --> 00:17:23,585 except classical music, which was mostly German, Beethoven, sort of thing - 140 00:17:23,668 --> 00:17:25,628 was frowned upon. 141 00:17:25,712 --> 00:17:31,926 Dance halls were closed down and any kind of pleasure introduced from the West, 142 00:17:32,010 --> 00:17:37,932 the military did their best to prohibit it and rub it out altogether. 143 00:17:41,895 --> 00:17:48,443 When I left Japan, early '40, there was rationing, prices were high, 144 00:17:48,526 --> 00:17:50,904 students of high schools, universities, 145 00:17:50,987 --> 00:17:54,074 were doing military training practically every day, 146 00:17:54,157 --> 00:17:59,412 you had army officers attached to every school to supervise such training. 147 00:17:59,496 --> 00:18:02,832 And so it was a nation preparing for war. 148 00:18:27,232 --> 00:18:29,818 The China war dragged on into 1940, 149 00:18:29,901 --> 00:18:32,695 though the Japanese generals were looking to end it 150 00:18:32,779 --> 00:18:35,782 without too much loss of face. 151 00:18:41,996 --> 00:18:46,000 But Hitler's swift victories over Holland and France in May, 1940, 152 00:18:46,084 --> 00:18:48,962 and the seemingly imminent defeat of Britain 153 00:18:49,045 --> 00:18:53,383 made the Japanese generals greedy for more. 154 00:19:00,974 --> 00:19:08,690 Generally speaking, the Japanese public was very elated by the German success. 155 00:19:08,773 --> 00:19:12,318 The catchword in those days was "Don't miss the bus". 156 00:19:15,613 --> 00:19:18,199 Within three months of France's fall, 157 00:19:18,283 --> 00:19:20,910 the puppet Vichy government had been persuaded 158 00:19:20,994 --> 00:19:23,788 to allow Japanese troops to enter French Indochina, 159 00:19:23,872 --> 00:19:28,668 ominously close to the Philippines, then an American dependency. 160 00:19:28,751 --> 00:19:30,545 America reacted sharply 161 00:19:30,628 --> 00:19:35,175 by embargoing supplies to Japan of iron ore and aviation fuel. 162 00:19:35,258 --> 00:19:38,887 The embargo pushed Japan still closer to the Axis. 163 00:19:57,405 --> 00:19:59,199 In Berlin in September, 1940, 164 00:19:59,282 --> 00:20:05,246 Germany, Italy and Japan concluded the Tripartite Pact. 165 00:20:05,330 --> 00:20:08,583 The two wars at opposite ends of the globe were now linked, 166 00:20:08,666 --> 00:20:12,295 though not yet joined. 167 00:20:19,761 --> 00:20:23,973 Japan's pro-German foreign minister Yƍsuke Matsuoka 168 00:20:24,057 --> 00:20:28,436 followed up his goodwill trip to Hitler with a visit in April, 1941, to Moscow, 169 00:20:28,519 --> 00:20:31,606 where he signed a neutrality treaty with Stalin. 170 00:20:32,982 --> 00:20:40,323 The Soviet Union had already posed a threat to Japanese security, 171 00:20:40,406 --> 00:20:47,080 and so the army was itching for a showdown with the Soviet Union. 172 00:20:47,163 --> 00:20:50,583 The navy, on the other hand, 173 00:20:50,667 --> 00:20:53,503 wanted to advance southward 174 00:20:54,545 --> 00:20:57,674 because the resources 175 00:20:59,175 --> 00:21:05,181 our country lacked were largely in the South Seas. 176 00:21:05,265 --> 00:21:08,935 And so Japan was, so to speak, pulled apart 177 00:21:09,060 --> 00:21:14,607 between the army ambition and naval design. 178 00:21:14,691 --> 00:21:20,113 But when the time for intervention against the north passed, 179 00:21:20,238 --> 00:21:24,826 the army naturally joined with the navy. 180 00:21:28,121 --> 00:21:31,207 Japan had the strongest navy in the Pacific, 181 00:21:31,291 --> 00:21:36,004 but when she occupied the rest of French Indochina in the summer of 1941, 182 00:21:36,087 --> 00:21:38,089 the United States embargoed oil, 183 00:21:38,172 --> 00:21:41,968 which left the Japanese navy critically short of it. 184 00:21:52,562 --> 00:21:55,690 Japan could either climb down and suffer loss of face, 185 00:21:55,815 --> 00:21:58,276 or else move south to seize these, 186 00:21:58,359 --> 00:22:02,363 the oil wells of the Dutch East Indies. 187 00:22:02,447 --> 00:22:05,658 Serious planning for such a move began straight away. 188 00:22:05,742 --> 00:22:12,415 Special jungle training and amphibious landing exercises were put in hand. 189 00:22:39,108 --> 00:22:40,401 Army leaders argued that 190 00:22:40,526 --> 00:22:44,822 unless an invasion of the Dutch East Indies began before the end of 1941, 191 00:22:44,906 --> 00:22:48,284 a shortage of oil would rule it out forever. 192 00:22:48,368 --> 00:22:52,205 Even so, some Japanese politicians still hadn't given up hope 193 00:22:52,288 --> 00:22:55,666 of achieving Japan's aims by diplomatic means. 194 00:22:55,792 --> 00:22:57,668 But time was short. 195 00:22:57,794 --> 00:23:01,089 The generals had given the diplomats until mid-October. 196 00:23:01,172 --> 00:23:05,718 When that deadline passed, Hirohito, on Marquis Kido's advice, 197 00:23:05,802 --> 00:23:09,639 invited his war minister General Tojo to form a government. 198 00:23:09,722 --> 00:23:13,643 There are many interpretations of Marquis Kido's actions 199 00:23:13,726 --> 00:23:18,439 in choosing General Tojo as the prime minister 200 00:23:18,523 --> 00:23:23,736 over the last cabinet preceding the outbreak of the war. 201 00:23:23,820 --> 00:23:28,616 I myself asked this point 202 00:23:28,699 --> 00:23:32,328 and Marquis Kido's reply was: 203 00:23:32,412 --> 00:23:37,708 "Nobody except Tojo was powerful enough to control the army, 204 00:23:37,792 --> 00:23:40,044 which was running amok." 205 00:23:40,753 --> 00:23:47,718 And also: "Tojo was deeply devoted to the person of the emperor, 206 00:23:47,802 --> 00:23:53,474 and if His Majesty made his wish known to General Tojo, 207 00:23:53,558 --> 00:23:56,644 Tojo would faithfully abide by such a wish." 208 00:24:05,153 --> 00:24:08,739 But even General Tojo shrank from the brink of war. 209 00:24:08,823 --> 00:24:13,619 He extended the deadline for diplomacy another month, until November 25, 210 00:24:13,703 --> 00:24:18,458 sending special envoys to Washington to negotiate the ending of the oil embargo. 211 00:24:18,541 --> 00:24:22,712 Say a few words for us, sir. If you come quite close... 212 00:24:22,795 --> 00:24:27,884 Gentlemen, you all know how difficult my mission is. 213 00:24:27,967 --> 00:24:30,136 But I will do all I can 214 00:24:30,219 --> 00:24:34,182 to make it a successful one for the sake of two countries, 215 00:24:34,265 --> 00:24:37,602 Japan and the United States. 216 00:24:37,685 --> 00:24:41,606 And so that autumn, with scant sincerity on either side, 217 00:24:41,689 --> 00:24:44,400 the diplomatic charade was played out. 218 00:24:44,484 --> 00:24:46,277 The government undertook 219 00:24:46,360 --> 00:24:49,447 the difficult negotiations with the United States, 220 00:24:49,530 --> 00:24:53,910 but the temper of the nation grew more militaristic, 221 00:24:53,993 --> 00:24:59,540 which made it practically impossible to continue the negotiations. 222 00:24:59,624 --> 00:25:02,543 While the diplomats talked in Washington, 223 00:25:02,627 --> 00:25:05,421 in Tokyo the militarists put the finishing touches 224 00:25:05,505 --> 00:25:07,173 to their plans of conquest. 225 00:25:08,132 --> 00:25:11,677 To capture the oil wells intact called for a surprise assault, 226 00:25:11,761 --> 00:25:15,765 not just on the Dutch East Indies, but also on Malaya and the Philippines. 227 00:25:15,848 --> 00:25:19,352 Having got the oil, there was the problem of getting it back to Japan 228 00:25:19,435 --> 00:25:22,605 unhindered by either the Royal Navy based at Singapore, 229 00:25:22,688 --> 00:25:29,320 or the massive United States Pacific fleet based in Hawaii at Pearl Harbour. 230 00:25:33,950 --> 00:25:36,118 It was felt that if war came 231 00:25:36,202 --> 00:25:39,121 and Japan were to fight in a conventional way, 232 00:25:39,205 --> 00:25:42,833 she had little hope of winning. 233 00:25:42,917 --> 00:25:45,419 And so the idea was to strike a blow 234 00:25:45,503 --> 00:25:48,339 against the American fleet at Pearl Harbour 235 00:25:48,422 --> 00:25:51,968 simultaneously as the war started. 236 00:25:56,222 --> 00:25:57,890 There were three main problems 237 00:25:57,974 --> 00:25:59,934 in attacking Pearl Harbour. 238 00:26:00,017 --> 00:26:02,186 The first was to keep it a secret, 239 00:26:02,270 --> 00:26:04,355 because if the Americans knew 240 00:26:04,438 --> 00:26:09,193 a Japanese fleet was approaching, then they would immediately attack it. 241 00:26:09,277 --> 00:26:11,988 The second concerned which route to take, 242 00:26:12,071 --> 00:26:14,991 and the third concerned the attack itself, 243 00:26:15,116 --> 00:26:17,785 whether it would be possible to use torpedoes 244 00:26:17,868 --> 00:26:20,830 in the shallow waters of Pearl Harbour. 245 00:26:22,331 --> 00:26:29,505 The most difficult problem was torpedo launching in shallow water. 246 00:26:30,548 --> 00:26:32,383 The British navy 247 00:26:32,466 --> 00:26:37,096 attacked the Italian fleet at Taranto 248 00:26:39,181 --> 00:26:42,602 and I owe it very much for this lesson 249 00:26:42,685 --> 00:26:46,147 in shallow-water launching. 250 00:26:46,230 --> 00:26:49,233 We made a model of Pearl Harbour 251 00:26:49,317 --> 00:26:54,155 and the situation of the battleships and other warships. 252 00:26:57,074 --> 00:27:01,954 We sent our agent to Pearl Harbour. 253 00:27:02,038 --> 00:27:07,793 Sometimes I went Japanese teahouse in Aliwa Height. 254 00:27:08,836 --> 00:27:15,384 From there, I saw the fleet in Pearl Harbour. 255 00:27:16,427 --> 00:27:22,475 Sometimes I go round Pearl Harbour 256 00:27:22,558 --> 00:27:24,852 by taxi or bus. 257 00:27:24,935 --> 00:27:32,318 Sometimes I walk along the front, drinking beer, to get information. 258 00:27:32,401 --> 00:27:35,154 I did, you know, fishing. 259 00:27:35,237 --> 00:27:38,949 I measured the depth of the sea, 260 00:27:39,033 --> 00:27:42,078 but it was very... danger. 261 00:27:42,161 --> 00:27:48,000 And one time I was ordered to see the torpedo gate. 262 00:27:48,084 --> 00:27:52,755 So I went to the prohibited area of Pearl Harbour, 263 00:27:52,838 --> 00:27:58,552 but I could not discover the submarine gate. 264 00:27:59,762 --> 00:28:04,975 I sent my information 265 00:28:06,560 --> 00:28:12,316 by commercial telegram, in code. 266 00:28:13,359 --> 00:28:18,322 The Japanese carrier fleet had left Japan on November 26. 267 00:28:18,406 --> 00:28:21,701 It took them 11 days to sail, undetected, 268 00:28:21,784 --> 00:28:24,537 the 4,000 or so miles to this point, 269 00:28:24,620 --> 00:28:27,790 a mere 200 miles short of Hawaii. 270 00:28:27,873 --> 00:28:32,128 The Americans had broken the Japanese codes and knew war was imminent, 271 00:28:32,211 --> 00:28:36,716 but they had not found out where the Japanese might strike them. 272 00:28:36,799 --> 00:28:41,637 "Climb Mount Niitaka" came the message from Tokyo. 273 00:28:41,721 --> 00:28:45,725 It was the signal for war to commence. 274 00:28:45,808 --> 00:28:51,939 6am on the morning of Sunday, December 7, 1941. 275 00:28:53,023 --> 00:28:59,363 The first of 400 Japanese bombers and torpedo planes take to the air. 276 00:29:20,843 --> 00:29:24,764 Their destination: Pearl Harbour. 277 00:29:27,767 --> 00:29:31,520 In the early morning of December 7, 278 00:29:31,604 --> 00:29:33,564 Joseph L Lockard and myself 279 00:29:33,647 --> 00:29:39,528 were detailed to operate a problem from our radar unit. 280 00:29:40,571 --> 00:29:44,700 The problem was to last from 4am to 7am. 281 00:29:44,784 --> 00:29:48,078 And it was a training programme. 282 00:29:48,162 --> 00:29:54,919 I was the plotter and Joseph Lockard was the radar operator. 283 00:29:55,002 --> 00:30:00,382 We picked up a very large blip, which we had never seen before, 284 00:30:00,466 --> 00:30:03,427 and proceeded to plot that flight in. 285 00:30:03,511 --> 00:30:06,514 It was then that I suggested that we send the information 286 00:30:06,597 --> 00:30:09,183 in to our information centre. 287 00:30:09,266 --> 00:30:15,147 I called in and the switchboard operator told me that there was no one there. 288 00:30:15,231 --> 00:30:19,068 Did we wish to have someone call back to our radar station? 289 00:30:19,151 --> 00:30:23,197 And that's when this Lieutenant Tyler called back 290 00:30:23,280 --> 00:30:27,827 and told us, in essence, to forget it. 291 00:30:29,078 --> 00:30:32,915 We continued the flight until about 20 minutes of eight, 292 00:30:32,998 --> 00:30:39,964 when the flight seemed to disperse to the right and to the left of the island. 293 00:31:08,492 --> 00:31:12,329 I was on board the USS California, tied to quay 3. 294 00:31:12,413 --> 00:31:15,291 I was on the quarterdeck, getting ready for a colour - 295 00:31:15,374 --> 00:31:18,460 as a matter of fact, I was a member of the band. 296 00:31:18,544 --> 00:31:21,839 And looking slightly to the south, 297 00:31:23,382 --> 00:31:27,303 I could see planes coming that direction, and some from that direction. 298 00:31:27,386 --> 00:31:30,389 That was about the time of general quarters. 299 00:31:30,472 --> 00:31:33,225 And I dropped my instrument, which was a clarinet, 300 00:31:33,350 --> 00:31:35,769 went down below into my battle station, 301 00:31:35,853 --> 00:31:41,901 and, about five minutes later, torpedoes hit us and exploded. 302 00:31:42,943 --> 00:31:48,240 I was aboard the West Virginia when the first airplanes came over. 303 00:31:48,324 --> 00:31:52,995 They were built similar to our Helldivers, in those days. 304 00:31:53,078 --> 00:31:55,915 And the pilot had the greenhouse back, 305 00:31:55,998 --> 00:31:59,376 and he flew so low that I still remember him. 306 00:31:59,460 --> 00:32:05,215 He had the leather helmet, like World War ll had, and the goggles, 307 00:32:05,299 --> 00:32:08,594 and the reason I remember, he had a real thick moustache. 308 00:32:08,677 --> 00:32:11,722 As he flew over, he kind of smiled and looked at the ship 309 00:32:11,805 --> 00:32:16,352 and flew over towards the hangar there, when he starts laying his first bomb. 310 00:32:24,193 --> 00:32:28,822 I saw the Arizona blow up, and it was like she just rained sailors. 311 00:32:28,906 --> 00:32:33,619 Those were the ones fortunate enough to live, the ones blown off the ship. 312 00:32:33,702 --> 00:32:36,747 I ran to the stern first to see if I could get off that way, 313 00:32:36,830 --> 00:32:39,458 cos everything was burning at this time. 314 00:32:39,541 --> 00:32:43,253 And so then I ran to the fo'c's'le. 315 00:32:43,337 --> 00:32:47,049 And then there was a lot of oil, but it hadn't caught fire at this time. 316 00:32:47,132 --> 00:32:50,260 So I said, "The best thing to do is to dive off there." 317 00:32:50,344 --> 00:32:54,974 So I hit the water and swam around this way 318 00:32:55,057 --> 00:33:00,646 and then came up over this rock there, and this is where I landed. 319 00:33:00,771 --> 00:33:04,858 The thing I remember most about that morning was terror and confusion. 320 00:33:04,942 --> 00:33:08,946 First place, it was early in the morning - everybody wasn't quite awake, 321 00:33:09,029 --> 00:33:11,657 and to have somebody trying to kill you at that hour 322 00:33:11,740 --> 00:33:15,911 kinda confuses you at best. 323 00:33:16,036 --> 00:33:20,124 We were taking power and steam from the dock, 324 00:33:20,207 --> 00:33:22,167 since we were alongside for repairs, 325 00:33:22,251 --> 00:33:26,255 and somebody in the confusion cut our power and steam line, so we were left... 326 00:33:26,338 --> 00:33:28,507 Everything had to be operated in manual. 327 00:33:28,590 --> 00:33:31,427 We only had one battery en masse that we could use, 328 00:33:31,510 --> 00:33:33,554 which was the port five-inch battery, 329 00:33:33,637 --> 00:33:36,724 so we started using it on the aircraft as they came in. 330 00:33:36,807 --> 00:33:40,185 The low-flying torpedo planes all came directly over the hill 331 00:33:40,269 --> 00:33:42,604 and down this way toward battleship row, 332 00:33:42,688 --> 00:33:45,399 so we were able to get some pretty good shots at 'em, 333 00:33:45,524 --> 00:33:47,359 even though we were in manual. 334 00:33:47,443 --> 00:33:51,238 However, the guns had to be served by manual means - 335 00:33:51,321 --> 00:33:54,199 we had to pass ammunition by hand. 336 00:33:54,283 --> 00:33:57,286 We had a young chaplain aboard, JG, at the time - 337 00:33:57,369 --> 00:34:01,248 he'd been aboard less than two months. His name was Hallow M Forgy, 338 00:34:01,331 --> 00:34:04,334 and he was... 339 00:34:04,418 --> 00:34:07,004 As for his battle station, he didn't have one - 340 00:34:07,087 --> 00:34:11,091 he was concerned with crew morale - so he marched along the gun deck, 341 00:34:11,175 --> 00:34:13,844 saying, "Praise the Lord and pass the ammunition." 342 00:35:04,061 --> 00:35:06,063 You live with these ships all the time - 343 00:35:06,146 --> 00:35:08,732 you never dream they could be damaged like this. 344 00:35:08,857 --> 00:35:13,195 There were ships afire, ships burning, explosions going on all over the place. 345 00:35:19,326 --> 00:35:22,830 My first knowledge of the attack was when I was awakened 346 00:35:22,913 --> 00:35:27,709 by the sound of bombs dropping and the roaring of aircraft all around us. 347 00:35:27,793 --> 00:35:32,756 I ran out on the lanai and saw immediately they were Japanese planes 348 00:35:32,840 --> 00:35:35,509 and there was a fella standing next to me who said, 349 00:35:35,592 --> 00:35:37,678 "It certainly looks real, doesn't it?" 350 00:35:37,761 --> 00:35:40,055 And I said, "Yes, I'm afraid it is." 351 00:35:40,139 --> 00:35:42,266 I ran over to my offices 352 00:35:42,349 --> 00:35:44,059 and I was standing alongside 353 00:35:44,143 --> 00:35:47,229 the commander-in-chief himself, Admiral Kimmel, 354 00:35:47,312 --> 00:35:52,484 and we were glumly watching the havoc, the carnage, that was going on. 355 00:35:52,568 --> 00:35:56,780 And suddenly he reached up, a motion of this kind, 356 00:35:56,864 --> 00:36:00,033 and tore off his four-star shoulder boards, 357 00:36:00,117 --> 00:36:05,581 which indicated his rank and title as Commander-in-Chief of Pacific Fleet. 358 00:36:05,664 --> 00:36:09,668 He stepped into his adjacent office and when he came out, 359 00:36:09,751 --> 00:36:12,754 he realised that he was going to lose command 360 00:36:12,838 --> 00:36:18,010 and he had donned two-star rear-admiral shoulder boards. 361 00:37:04,389 --> 00:37:07,976 All nine battleships of the United States Pacific fleet 362 00:37:08,060 --> 00:37:09,311 had been sunk or ruined, 363 00:37:09,394 --> 00:37:12,397 together with several destroyers and cruisers, 364 00:37:12,481 --> 00:37:15,651 but no aircraft carriers. 365 00:37:15,734 --> 00:37:17,194 Luckily for the Americans, 366 00:37:17,277 --> 00:37:21,490 the carriers had been at sea that particular Sunday morning. 367 00:37:26,870 --> 00:37:30,916 However, the Japanese were well satisfied. 368 00:37:32,459 --> 00:37:38,173 The United States Pacific fleet was not prepared 369 00:37:39,216 --> 00:37:42,427 and we succeeded. 370 00:37:47,391 --> 00:37:49,768 The Japanese did not just succeed 371 00:37:49,851 --> 00:37:52,604 against the Americans at Pearl Harbour. 372 00:37:52,729 --> 00:37:56,566 On December 10, the pride of the Royal Navy in the Pacific, 373 00:37:56,650 --> 00:38:00,404 the Prince of Wales and the Repulse, were sunk. 374 00:38:04,825 --> 00:38:07,953 That same day, Guam fell. 375 00:38:11,081 --> 00:38:14,626 On December 23, Wake Island. 376 00:38:17,796 --> 00:38:21,508 On Christmas Day, Hong Kong. 377 00:38:27,306 --> 00:38:32,894 On New Year's Day, 1942, Manila, capital of the Philippines. 378 00:38:36,690 --> 00:38:39,985 On January 19, Borneo. 379 00:38:42,863 --> 00:38:48,076 But the biggest prize of all awaited the Japanese in Malaya. 380 00:38:49,161 --> 00:38:52,748 The plan for the defence of Malaya 381 00:38:52,831 --> 00:38:57,419 was based entirely on the air force. 382 00:38:57,502 --> 00:39:03,258 And there were to be some 335 first-class aircraft, 383 00:39:03,342 --> 00:39:07,054 with the army protecting their bases and their aerodromes, 384 00:39:07,137 --> 00:39:09,765 and the idea was that they should attack 385 00:39:09,848 --> 00:39:13,602 the Japanese whilst they were at sea 386 00:39:14,644 --> 00:39:17,856 and destroy them or damage them 387 00:39:17,939 --> 00:39:20,692 before the campaign started. 388 00:39:20,776 --> 00:39:26,281 Percival's idea was to oppose the Japanese as they landed. 389 00:39:26,365 --> 00:39:34,122 And that didn't come off- they were able to land in Thailand 390 00:39:34,206 --> 00:39:39,086 and we would not break the neutrality, 391 00:39:39,169 --> 00:39:42,547 and so we were at a disadvantage from the start. 392 00:39:43,340 --> 00:39:46,426 The Japanese were outnumbered two to one. 393 00:39:46,551 --> 00:39:51,890 They had only the poorest of maps, usually pages torn from school atlases, 394 00:39:51,973 --> 00:39:56,353 but they kept the British on the run, not stopping to consolidate or regroup. 395 00:39:56,436 --> 00:39:59,272 One reason we were thrown onto the defensive, 396 00:39:59,356 --> 00:40:02,401 the Japanese employed 300 tanks. 397 00:40:02,484 --> 00:40:04,361 We hadn't any tanks at all. 398 00:40:05,028 --> 00:40:07,364 British strategists had decreed 399 00:40:07,447 --> 00:40:11,493 that armour was not suited to jungle warfare. 400 00:40:18,333 --> 00:40:22,379 Back in Whitehall, the British thought the jungle impenetrable, 401 00:40:22,462 --> 00:40:26,508 whereas in some places it was cleared, in others not so dense, 402 00:40:26,591 --> 00:40:31,721 and, anyway, the really dense patches could always be bypassed by sea - 403 00:40:31,805 --> 00:40:35,600 which was precisely what the Japanese did. 404 00:40:59,291 --> 00:41:01,960 The jungle is not such a terrible place. 405 00:41:02,043 --> 00:41:07,090 We can live on rice, salt and sesame seeds, and salted fish, you see. 406 00:41:07,174 --> 00:41:09,801 This can keep a soldier going a long time. 407 00:41:09,885 --> 00:41:11,845 The jungle did not have the fear for us 408 00:41:11,970 --> 00:41:16,349 that it seems to have had for some of the Allied soldiers. 409 00:41:21,354 --> 00:41:23,773 The Japanese had bombed Singapore 410 00:41:23,857 --> 00:41:25,859 the same morning as Pearl Harbour. 411 00:41:25,942 --> 00:41:29,946 The lights of the great port had guided them in and remained on during the raid 412 00:41:30,030 --> 00:41:33,325 because no one knew how to switch them off. 413 00:41:33,408 --> 00:41:39,581 Such confusion was to typify Singapore's reaction to the Japanese onslaught. 414 00:41:39,664 --> 00:41:43,585 I remember a British national newspaper ran a story 415 00:41:43,668 --> 00:41:45,670 in which the opinion was expressed 416 00:41:45,754 --> 00:41:48,048 that the Japanese would never be good flyers 417 00:41:48,131 --> 00:41:51,092 because they had no sense of balance 418 00:41:51,176 --> 00:41:56,848 through being carried on the backs of their mothers as children. 419 00:42:45,146 --> 00:42:50,902 The Japanese secret weapon in Malaya was... the bicycle. 420 00:43:16,344 --> 00:43:20,807 When their tyres punctured, the Japanese soldiers simply rode on their rims. 421 00:43:20,890 --> 00:43:25,312 To the retreating British, the clatter on the stony road sounded like tanks, 422 00:43:25,395 --> 00:43:27,856 and added to their fear. 423 00:43:55,133 --> 00:44:00,138 I think the fundamental reason why we failed in Malaya 424 00:44:00,221 --> 00:44:04,225 was that we were stretched to the limit at that time 425 00:44:04,309 --> 00:44:07,520 in our war with Germany and Italy 426 00:44:07,604 --> 00:44:14,944 and there simply were not the trained men, air forces and ships 427 00:44:15,070 --> 00:44:19,908 that we should have supplied to beat the Japanese attack. 428 00:44:31,378 --> 00:44:37,425 The priority of arms and equipment for Malaya at that time was very low. 429 00:44:37,509 --> 00:44:39,177 They were only number four, 430 00:44:39,260 --> 00:44:43,390 after Great Britain, the Middle East and Russia. 431 00:44:43,515 --> 00:44:49,270 Also, with regard to men, the first priority was the Middle East, 432 00:44:49,354 --> 00:44:52,148 and Malaya only came second. 433 00:44:52,232 --> 00:44:57,654 Some of the Australians that arrived in Malaya had never even fired a rifle. 434 00:44:57,779 --> 00:45:01,783 So we did field very much a second eleven 435 00:45:01,908 --> 00:45:06,371 against the very highly trained and strongly supported Japanese. 436 00:45:06,955 --> 00:45:09,582 Like the Americans at Pearl Harbour, 437 00:45:09,666 --> 00:45:15,171 the British in Malaya wrongly believed the Japanese air force was poor, 438 00:45:15,255 --> 00:45:19,676 but now British air cover waned and eventually disappeared. 439 00:45:19,759 --> 00:45:23,179 There was no effective plan to stop the Japanese by land 440 00:45:23,263 --> 00:45:26,057 and too little determination to resist. 441 00:45:30,103 --> 00:45:33,398 Your forces 442 00:45:33,481 --> 00:45:37,819 are not so aggressive as we expected. 443 00:46:09,476 --> 00:46:12,312 The British planners had thought that, at worst, 444 00:46:12,395 --> 00:46:15,440 northern Malaya could hold out for at least three months, 445 00:46:15,523 --> 00:46:20,445 enough time to enable substantial reinforcements to be sent to Singapore. 446 00:46:20,528 --> 00:46:25,533 But it took the Japanese, under General Yamashita, just seven weeks 447 00:46:25,617 --> 00:46:29,913 to advance the 600 miles down the Malayan peninsula. 448 00:46:37,045 --> 00:46:39,798 On February 8, 1942, 449 00:46:39,881 --> 00:46:42,884 they crossed the thousands yards of the Straits of Johor 450 00:46:42,967 --> 00:46:45,553 onto the island of Singapore. 451 00:46:47,472 --> 00:46:51,267 No defences had been built on the northern shore of the island, 452 00:46:51,351 --> 00:46:54,604 so the Japanese were able to land relatively unmolested. 453 00:46:54,729 --> 00:46:56,731 What is more, they were able to capture 454 00:46:56,815 --> 00:47:00,276 most of Singapore's water supplies with ease. 455 00:47:03,905 --> 00:47:08,368 By now, the Japanese bombers raided Singapore at will, 456 00:47:08,451 --> 00:47:10,787 for there was virtually no air defence. 457 00:47:11,996 --> 00:47:14,916 The Japanese, in fact, were almost out of ammunition 458 00:47:15,041 --> 00:47:18,461 and were considering withdrawing to the mainland, 459 00:47:18,545 --> 00:47:22,715 but, unknown to them, British morale had collapsed. 460 00:47:31,182 --> 00:47:34,352 General Yamashita had not prepared any plans 461 00:47:34,435 --> 00:47:37,730 in the event of a British surrender. 462 00:47:39,315 --> 00:47:44,779 And so when, on February 15, Major Wild, General Percival's emissary, 463 00:47:44,863 --> 00:47:48,825 arrived at our forward headquarters at 3pm, 464 00:47:48,908 --> 00:47:51,035 no one there believed him. 465 00:47:53,997 --> 00:47:56,624 I was ordered to discuss with him 466 00:47:56,749 --> 00:48:02,255 his suggestion of a meeting between General Percival and General Yamashita. 467 00:48:02,338 --> 00:48:04,549 Major Wild wanted General Yamashita 468 00:48:04,632 --> 00:48:07,218 to go to the governor general's residence, 469 00:48:07,302 --> 00:48:09,596 but did not mention surrender. 470 00:48:09,679 --> 00:48:14,601 I told him it was out of the question for General Yamashita to go anywhere 471 00:48:14,684 --> 00:48:17,520 and that his general must come to us. 472 00:48:17,604 --> 00:48:23,359 Eventually Major Wild agreed to this and said he would bring him at 6pm, 473 00:48:23,443 --> 00:48:26,529 but again made no mention of surrender. 474 00:48:26,613 --> 00:48:32,327 When I reported this to my superiors, they were suspicious and unbelieving. 475 00:48:32,410 --> 00:48:37,081 However, I returned at six to meet General Percival and Major Wild. 476 00:48:37,749 --> 00:48:40,251 I guided them to the Ford factory, 477 00:48:40,335 --> 00:48:44,672 where the meeting with General Yamashita was to take place. 478 00:48:44,756 --> 00:48:48,092 Because of this disbelief on the Japanese side, 479 00:48:48,176 --> 00:48:53,056 they were still setting up tables when we arrived. 480 00:48:53,139 --> 00:48:56,184 Straight away General Yamashita asked General Percival 481 00:48:56,267 --> 00:48:58,061 whether he was surrendering. 482 00:48:58,144 --> 00:49:02,899 But the British general merely talked about wanting to keep 1,500 soldiers 483 00:49:02,982 --> 00:49:05,944 to maintain peace and order in Singapore. 484 00:49:06,027 --> 00:49:08,947 General Yamashita again asked about surrender, 485 00:49:09,030 --> 00:49:13,618 but General Percival went on talking about these 1,500 troops. 486 00:49:13,701 --> 00:49:17,538 And so these two conversations continued in parallel 487 00:49:17,622 --> 00:49:19,540 and time was passing. 488 00:49:19,624 --> 00:49:22,460 Finally, General Yamashita could wait no longer. 489 00:49:22,543 --> 00:49:27,131 He banged the table and asked General Percival if he was surrendering. 490 00:49:27,215 --> 00:49:31,386 Otherwise, the Japanese would launch an immediate night attack. 491 00:49:31,469 --> 00:49:33,554 Would that be all right? 492 00:49:33,638 --> 00:49:39,018 Percival replied, no, he did not want any more attacks. 493 00:49:39,102 --> 00:49:43,272 So again General Yamashita asked, "Will you surrender?" 494 00:49:43,356 --> 00:49:46,818 And at last General Percival said yes. 495 00:50:00,248 --> 00:50:04,252 Singapore had been thought by the British to be impregnable, 496 00:50:04,335 --> 00:50:07,005 but they were thinking of an attack from the sea. 497 00:50:07,088 --> 00:50:12,719 Indeed, all the big fortress guns pointed seaward, not landward. 498 00:50:12,885 --> 00:50:17,306 Said Churchill later, "The possibility of Singapore having no landward defences 499 00:50:17,390 --> 00:50:19,183 no more entered into my mind 500 00:50:19,267 --> 00:50:23,688 than that of a battleship being launched without a bottom." 501 00:50:23,771 --> 00:50:28,484 We were so surprised, because we expected that 502 00:50:28,568 --> 00:50:36,576 your forces were about 50,000 in total. 503 00:50:36,659 --> 00:50:39,954 And we found out that there were about 504 00:50:40,038 --> 00:50:47,253 110,000 prisoners in Singapore. 505 00:50:47,336 --> 00:50:50,882 Singapore's fall was the worst military disaster 506 00:50:50,965 --> 00:50:53,551 in British history. 507 00:50:53,676 --> 00:50:57,513 More than 130,000 troops laid down their arms 508 00:50:57,597 --> 00:51:01,225 in the largest capitulation the British army has ever known. 509 00:51:01,309 --> 00:51:05,646 The Japanese soldiers are told not to be prisoners, 510 00:51:06,189 --> 00:51:08,107 so it's quite natural, 511 00:51:08,191 --> 00:51:14,030 when they see the tens of thousands of white prisoners at Singapore, 512 00:51:14,113 --> 00:51:16,199 they look down on them. 513 00:51:27,710 --> 00:51:30,421 Thousands of British and Commonwealth troops 514 00:51:30,505 --> 00:51:33,925 had arrived in Singapore only days before, 515 00:51:34,008 --> 00:51:36,719 just in time to surrender. 516 00:51:46,187 --> 00:51:50,483 Singapore's fall meant that the whole of Southeast Asia lay at Japan's feet. 517 00:51:50,566 --> 00:51:53,736 Within weeks, the Japanese army was at the borders of India 518 00:51:53,820 --> 00:51:57,406 and the Japanese navy was steaming close to the shores of Australia. 519 00:51:57,490 --> 00:52:01,702 They had succeeded beyond their wildest dreams. 520 00:52:06,833 --> 00:52:09,544 For the British, a last humiliation. 521 00:52:09,627 --> 00:52:14,715 The garrison was paraded before the triumphant Japanese. 522 00:52:48,124 --> 00:52:51,169 The sun had set on one imperial power. 523 00:52:55,882 --> 00:52:59,135 On another, the sun was still rising. 61519

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