http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/historians-rethink-key-soviet-role-in-japan-defeat/412380.html

Historians Rethink Key Soviet Role in Japan Defeat 
15 August 2010
AP

As the United States dropped its atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 
August 1945, 1.6 million Soviet troops launched a surprise attack on the 
Japanese army occupying eastern Asia. Within days, Emperor Hirohito's 
million-man army in the region had collapsed.

It was a momentous turn on the Pacific battleground of World War II, yet one 
that would be largely eclipsed in the history books by the atomic bombs dropped 
in the same week 65 years ago. But in recent years some historians have argued 
that the Soviet action served as effectively as - or possibly more than - the 
A-bombs in ending the war.

Now a new history by a professor at the University of California, Santa 
Barbara, seeks to reinforce that view, arguing that fear of Soviet invasion 
persuaded the Japanese to opt for surrendering to the Americans, whom they 
believed would treat them more generously than the Soviets.

Japan's forces in northeast Asia first tangled with the Russians in 1939 when 
the Japanese army tried to invade Mongolia. Their crushing defeat at the battle 
of Khalkin Gol induced Tokyo to sign a neutrality pact that kept the Soviet 
Union out of the Pacific war.

Tokyo turned its focus to confronting U.S., British and Dutch forces instead, 
which led to the Pearl Harbor attack on Dec. 7, 1941.

But following the German surrender on May 8, 1945, and having suffered a string 
of defeats in the Philippines, Okinawa and Iwo Jima, Japan turned to Moscow to 
mediate an end to the Pacific war.

However, Soviet leader Josef Stalin had already secretly promised Washington 
and London that he would attack Japan within three months of Germany's defeat. 
He thus ignored Tokyo's plea, and mobilized more than a million troops along 
Manchuria's border.

Operation August Storm was launched on Aug. 9, 1945, as the Nagasaki bomb was 
dropped, and would claim the lives of 84,000 Japanese and 12,000 Soviet 
soldiers in two weeks of fighting. The Soviets ended up just 50 kilometers from 
Japan's main northern island, Hokkaido.

"The Soviet entry into the war played a much greater role than the atomic bombs 
in inducing Japan to surrender because it dashed any hope that Japan could 
terminate the war through Moscow's mediation," said Tsuyoshi Hasegawa, whose 
recently published "Racing the Enemy" examines the conclusion of the Pacific 
war and is based on recently declassified Soviet archives as well as U.S. and 
Japanese documents.

"The emperor and the peace party [within the government] hastened to end the 
war, expecting that the Americans would deal with Japan more generously than 
the Soviets," Hasegawa, a Russian-speaking American scholar, said in an 
interview.

Despite the death toll from the atomic bombings - 140,000 in Hiroshima and 
80,000 in Nagasaki - the Imperial Military Command believed that it could hold 
out against an Allied invasion if it retained control of Manchuria and Korea, 
which provided Japan with the resources for war, according to Hasegawa and 
Terry Charman, a historian of World War II at London's Imperial War Museum.

"The Soviet attack changed all that," Charman said. "The leadership in Tokyo 
realized they had no hope now, and in that sense August Storm did have a 
greater effect on the Japanese decision to surrender than the dropping of the 
A-bombs."

In the United States, the bombings are still widely seen as a decision of last 
resort against an enemy that appeared determined to fight to the death. 
President Harry Truman and U.S. military leaders believed that an invasion of 
Japan would cost hundreds of thousands of American lives.

American historian Richard Frank has argued that as terrible as the atomic 
bombs were, they saved hundreds of thousands of American soldiers and millions 
of Japanese troops and civilians who would have perished if the conflict had 
gone on until 1946.

"In the famous words of Secretary of War Henry Stimson, [the bombs] were the 
'least abhorrent choice' of a dreadful array of options facing American 
leaders," he said in an interview. "Alternatives to the atomic bombs carried no 
guarantee as to when they would end the war and carried a far higher price in 
human death and suffering."

Frank, who is writing a three-volume history of the Pacific war, said he 
continued to disagree with Hasegawa on the relative importance of the Soviet 
intervention and the A-bombs in forcing the surrender decision.

But he said they agreed that ultimate responsibility for what happened lay with 
Japan's government and Hirohito, who had decided in June to draft almost the 
entire population, men and most women, to fight to the death.

"Since no provision had been made to place these people in uniform, invading 
Allied troops would have not been able to distinguish combatants from 
noncombatants, effectively turning each village in Japan into a military 
target," Frank said.

The impact of the lightning Soviet advance comes through in the words of 
Japan's wartime prime minister, Kantaro Suzuki, urging his cabinet to surrender.

He is quoted in Hasegawa's book as saying, "If we miss [the chance] today, the 
Soviet Union will take not only Manchuria, Korea and Sakhalin, but also 
Hokkaido. We must end the war while we can deal with the United States."

V-J Day, the day Japan ceased fighting, came on Aug. 15 (Aug. 14 in the United 
States), and Japan's formal surrender followed on Sept. 2.

Dominic Lieven, a professor of Russian government at the London School of 
Economics, said anti-Soviet sentiment in the West tended to minimize Soviet 
military achievements.

Also, "very few Anglo-Americans saw the Soviet offensive in the Far East with 
their own eyes, and Soviet archives were not open to Western historians 
subsequently," he said.

More surprising, even in Russia the campaign was largely ignored. Although the 
scale of the Soviet victory was unprecedented, 12,000 dead against Japan hardly 
compared with the life-and-death struggle against Nazi Germany, in which 27 
million Soviets died.

"The importance of the operation was huge," said retired General Makhmut 
Gareyev, president of the Russian Academy of Military Sciences, who took part 
in the 1945 campaign. "By entering the war with militarist Japan . the Soviet 
Union precipitated the end of World War II."






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