U.S. and Australian brutalisation of women on the Japanese mainland
“There
was a far darker side to the U.S. and allied occupation of Japan, one
which is little mentioned in the vast majority of histories – American
or otherwise. When Japan surrendered in August 1945, mass rapes by
occupying forces were expected… [despite setting up of a comfort women
which recruited or otherwise trafficked desperate women to brothels]
such crimes were still common and several of them were extremely brutal
and resulted in the deaths of the victims. Political science professor
Eiji Takemae wrote regard- ing the conduct of American soldiers
occupying Japan:
‘U.S.
troops comported themselves like conquerors, especially in the early
weeks and months of occupation. Misbehavior ranged from
black-marketeering, petty theft, reckless driving and disorderly conduct
to vandalism, assault, arson, murder and rape. Much of the violence was
directed against women, the first attacks beginning within hours after
the landing of advanced units. In Yokohama, China and elsewhere,
soldiers and sailors broke the law with impunity, and incidents of
robbery, rape and occasionally murder were widely reported in the press
[which had not yet been censored by the U.S. military government].
When U.S. paratroopers landed in Sapporo an orgy of looting,
sexual violence and drunken brawling ensued. Gang rapes and other sex
atrocities were not infrequent [...] Military courts arrested relatively
few soldiers for their offences and convicted even fewer, and
restitution for the victims was rare. Japanese attempts at self-defense
were punished severely. In the sole instance of self-help that General
Eichberger records in his memoirs, when local residents formed a
vigilante group and retaliated against off-duty GIs, the Eighth Army
ordered armored vehicles in battle array into the streets and arrested
the ringleaders, who received lengthy prison terms.’
The
U.S. and Australian militaries did not maintain rule of law when it
came to violations of Japanese women by their own forces, neither were
the Japanese population allowed to do so themselves. Occupation forces
could loot and rape as they pleased and were effectively above the law.
An
example of such an incident was in April 1946, when approximately U.S.
personnel in three trucks attacked the Nakamura Hospital in Omori
district. The soldiers raped over 40 patients and 37 female staff. One
woman who had given birth just two days prior had her child thrown on
the floor and killed, and she was then raped as well. Male patients
trying to protect the women were also killed. The following week several
dozen U.S. military personnel cut the phone lines to a housing block in
Nagoya and raped all the women they could capture there – including
girls as young as ten years old and women as old as fifty-five.
Such
behavior was far from unique to American soldiers. Australian forces
conducted themselves in much the same way during their own deployment in
Japan. As one Japanese witness testified: ‘As soon as Australian troops
arrived in Kure in early 1946, they ‘dragged young women into their
jeeps, took them to the mountain, and then raped them. I heard them
screaming for help nearly every night.’ Such behavior was commonplace,
but news of criminal activity by Occupation forces was quickly
suppressed.
Australian officer Allan Clifton recalled his own experience of the sexual violence committed in Japan:
‘I
stood beside a bed in hospital. On it lay a girl, unconscious, her
long, black hair in wild tumult on the pillow. A doctor and two nurses
were working to revive her. An hour before she had been raped by twenty
soldiers. We found her where they had left her, on a piece of waste
land. The hospital was in Hiroshima.
The girl
was Japanese. The soldiers were Australians. The moaning and wailing had
ceased and she was quiet now. The tortured tension on her face had
slipped away, and the soft brown skin was smooth and unwrinkled, stained
with tears like the face of a child that has cried herself to sleep.’
Australians
committing such crimes in Japan were, when discovered, given very minor
sentences. Even these were most often later mitigated or quashed by
Australian courts. Clifton recounted one such event himself, when an
Australian court quashed a sentence given by a military court martial
citing ‘insufficient evidence,’ despite the incident having several
witnesses. It was clear that courts overseeing Western occupation forces
took measures to protect their own from crimes committed against the
Japanese – crimes which were largely regarded as just access to ‘spoils
of war’ at the time by the Western occupiers.
As
had been the case during the war, underreporting of rapes in peace-
time due to the associated shame in a traditional society and inaction
on the part of authorities (rapes in both cases occurred when Western
militaries were themselves in power) would lower the figures
significantly. In order to prevent ill feeling towards their occupation
from increasing, the United States military government implemented very
strict censorship of the media. Mention of crimes committed by Western
military personnel against Japanese civilians was strictly forbidden.
The occupying forces ‘issued press and pre-censorship codes
outlawing the publication of all reports and statistics “inimical to the
objectives of the Occupation.”’ When a few weeks into the occupation
Japanese press mentioned the rape and widespread looting by American
soldiers, the occupying forces quickly responded by censoring all media
and imposing a zero tolerance policy against the reporting of such
crimes. It was not only the crimes committed by Western forces, but any
criticism of the Western allied powers whatsoever which was strictly
forbidden during the occupation period – for over six years. This left
the U.S. military government, the supreme authority in the country,
beyond accountability.
Topics such as the
establishment of comfort stations and encouragement of vulnerable women
into the sex trade, critical analysis of the black market, the
population’s starvation level calorie intakes and even references to the
Great Depression’s impact on Western economies, anti-colonialism,
pan-Asianism and emerging Cold War tensions were all off limits.
What
was particularly notable about the censorship imposed under American
occupation was that it was intended to conceal its own existence. This
meant that not only were certain subjects strictly off limits, but the
mention of censorship was also forbidden.
As
Columbia University Professor Donald Keene noted: ‘the Occupation
censorship was even more exasperating than Japanese military censorship
had been because it insisted that all traces of censorship be concealed.
This meant that articles had to be rewritten in full, rather than
merely submitting XXs for the offending phrases.’ For the U.S. military
government it was essential not only to control information – but also
to give the illusion of a free press when the press was in fact more
restricted than it had been even in wartime under imperial rule.
By
going one step further to censor even the mention of censorship itself,
the United States could claim to stand for freedom of press and freedom
of expression. By controlling the media the American military
government could attempt to foster goodwill among the Japanese people
while making crimes committed by their personnel and those of their
allies appear as isolated incidents. While the brutality of American and
Australian militaries against Japanese civilians was evident during the
war and in its immediate aftermath, it did not end with occupation.
The
United States has maintained a significant military presence in Japan
ever since and crimes including sexual violence and murder against
Japanese civilians continue to occur.”


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