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The European invasions of East Asia: Part Eight …after Hiroshima US ‘colonises’ Japan

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TO end the war with Japan in 1945, the US and its European allies introduced a type of weapon never seen before, a weapon that would confirm the US as the dominant force on the world scene; the atomic bomb.
The development of the bomb was done in the US as the Manhattan Project.
It involved white Jewish freemasons, including the renowned scientist, Albert Einstein.
In 1945 CE, two nuclear bombs were detonated by the US on the Japanese islands of Nagasaki and Hiroshima.
The number of people that died as a result of the bombs was incalculable and the radioactive nature of the explosions has since led to several health problem with the people that survived.
After Japan’s defeat, the East Asians found themselves with a new enemy — the US.
The US was just as hostile to the South East Asians as were the Japanese until they, too, were defeated in places like Vietnam.
The US dislodged Japan not as liberators of the East Asians, but eliminators of competition in their quest for world dominance.
Until the defeat of Japan by the US, European nations like Britain were the biggest imperial powers of the modern era.
But after defeating Japan, the US overtook Europe as the biggest imperial power on earth.
On the other hand was the Soviet Union which was busy exporting the Communist ideology to nations in Eastern Europe, China and North Korea.
Japan today is a clear puppet of the Western nations, particularly the US.
The US troops have been present in their land in great numbers since Japan’s defeat and places like Okinawa are full of mixed race children as a result of miscegenation between the Japanese women and the white men that are all over the country.
The culture that the Japanese used to possess has been diluted and replaced with a loose Western lifestyle.
Japanese TV, uncharacteristically, now shows pictures of nudity and sexual acts — a direct result of the Westernisation of their people, which has undermined indigenous culture and beliefs.
When the Japanese Prime Minister Yakio Hatoyama tried and failed to close down the notorious US military base in Okinawa which accommodates over 47 000 foreign troops, he was forced to resign almost overnight for challenging US presence in Japan.
The current Prime Minister of Japan, Shinzo Abe, is clearly a puppet of the West who upholds US’s interests above Japan’s relation with neighbouring countries such as China.
China, North Korea and South Korea have all raised alarm at Japan’s numerous joint military operations with the US.
All of Japan’s technical knowhow is now serving the interests of the West, including US nuclear projects.
The Japanese, as the losers of the Second World War, have been subdued by their victors into this predicament and many Japanese people are against their subtle colonisation by the US, but are fearful to speak out.
By way of tying up issues raised in this series it is necessary to go back to China to highlight some of the important developments during and after the period of Japanese occupation.
In October of 1917 CE, Russia went through a socialist revolution.
From that period onwards, communist and socialist schools of thought, such as Marxism began to attract Chinese intellectuals.
Marxism was studied and seen as a better option as opposed to capitalism which had plagued the nation.
China rejected an order by the Western nations to hand over Taiwan to Japan.
This was in 1919 CE after the so-called First World War, when the victor nations of the West met in France to eventually establish the League of Nations.
Germany had laid claim to Taiwan after the Opium wars and since Germany was among the losers of the First World War, the Western nations chose to give it to Japan instead of returning it to China.
Such sentiment from the West led to China being bullied by Japan.
On May 4 of that year, the Chinese started a resistance movement against the Western order and the scholars behind the movement followed communist ideology.
When the West insisted on handing Taiwan to Japan, the Chinese nationals that were in France surrounded the residence of the Chinese delegation, urging them to not to accept the deal.
At home in China, universities protested against the deal and the northern warlord government killed and arrested many of them.
China did not agree to the deal and this was the one of the first bald acts by China against the West.
The Chinese stance was largely inspired by the socialist, communist and Marxist ideology.
The aftermath of this diplomatic victory was the founding of numerous communist parties in and outside China.
On August 20 of that year, the first communist group was established in Shanghai by Chen Du Xiu, Li Da and Hanjun.
Another communist group followed in October of that year in Beijing and was established by Li Da Zhao, Zhang Guotao and Deng Zhong Xia.
More and more communist groups emerged in the major provinces of China.
It is interesting to note that most of the liberation movements that later emerged in Africa and other developing countries adopted the Socialist/Marxist ideology that spurred them to victory against the colonial occupation forces.
On July of 1923 CE, 13 representatives from the different communist groups of China, including the legendary Mao Zedong, met secretly in Shanghai and founded the Communist Party of China (CPC).
At the time China was led by Dr San Yat Sen and his party was called KMT and was not communist.
He was struggling to control the country because of pressure from the northern warlords.
The KMT was forced to accept and invite help from communists such as the CPC and Soviet Russia.
In June 1923 CE, a formal policy of cooperation between members of the KMT and CPC was agreed.
This led to the first KMT – CPC cooperation which strengthened San Yat Sen’s rule over China and weakened the Northern warlords.

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