• WWW.THECOLLECTOR.COM
    Operation Downfall: How Would an Allied Invasion of Japan Go?
    By mid-1945, the Empire of Japan was at its breaking point. Its navy had been all but destroyed, and the rest of the Axis Powers in Europe had been defeated. Over half of its four-million-strong army was bogged down in China, an ongoing campaign since 1937. In short, Japan was beaten but not yet willing to surrender. Historically, Japan finally surrendered after the atomic bombings and the Soviet invasion of Manchuria. However, before these developments, the United States planned to go through with a full-scale invasion: Operation Downfall.The Pacific War and the War in ChinaExtent of Japanese Occupation, territories occupied by Japan as of June 4, 1942 the pinnacle of Japanese expansion during World War II. Source: The National WWII Museum, New OrleansIn 1937, the Empire of Japan launched an invasion of China. While initially successful, their conquests stalled in 1939, and the Second Sino-Japanese War became a bloody war of attrition. In 1941, Japan, taking advantage of the German victories in Europe, began its own lightning-fast series of campaigns across the Pacific. While the most famous of these attacks was the attack on Pearl Harbor, Japan also rapidly and successfully invaded American (Guam, Wake Island, and the Philippines) and British territories (Hong Kong, Malaya, and Burma) in the region.Despite initial victories in the Pacific, the Imperial Japanese Navys gamble at Pearl Harbor did not pay off. Instead of scaring the US into negotiating peace and continuing its isolationism, the assault enraged the American populace and ensured that the United States would fight Japan to the bitter end.In the following years, the early Japanese gains in the Pacific were reversed as the US embarked on a naval and island-hopping campaign, defeating the Japanese at nearly every turn. By mid-1945, Japan had lost its grip on much of its occupied territories in the Pacific, with the American victory in the Battle of Okinawa placing the Allies within striking distance of the Japanese home islands. However, this battle proved bloody for the Americans, resulting in 12,520 Americans killed or missing, the bloodiest of the Pacific War. With each successive invasion of the Pacific War getting increasingly bloody, the planned final campaign would certainly be even worse.The First Steps: Operation OlympicUS Marines and amphibious vehicles gathering on a narrow beach on Easter morning, Okinawa 1945. Source: The National WW2 Museum, New OrleansOperation Downfall was divided into two distinct phases, the first of which was Operation Olympic. Olympic was a plan to occupy Kyushu, the southernmost island of the Japanese home islands. Scheduled for November 1, 1945 (called X-Day), Olympic was to be an amphibious invasion of a scale never before seen in human history. For comparison, the initial landings of Operation Overlord (more commonly referred to as D-Day), the largest amphibious invasion in history, involved around 160,000 men. The initial landing of Operation Coronet called for 14 divisions, roughly 582,000 men.Following the establishment of beachheads in Kyushu, several hundred thousand more Allied troops were scheduled to reinforce the first forces on the island. These reinforcements would bring the total Allied troops in Kyushu to around 767,000. Applying the same 35% casualty rate experienced on Okinawa, the planners of Operation Olympic expected around 268,000 casualties (killed, wounded, or captured). While Operation Olympic would have led to huge casualties, there is no reason to suggest that the invasion of Kyushu would have failed. With the battles of Normandy and Okinawa as models, one could expect heavy initial resistance from Japanese forces followed by months of heavy fighting that would likely last into 1946 until the end of the war.Plans for Operation Downfall, 28 May 1945. Source: US Army Center of Military HistoryBefore the actual troop landings, Downfall called for increased bombing raids across the Japanese home islands, which were carried out using incendiary bombs. Large swathes of Tokyo were burned to the ground, and roughly 400,000 Japanese died in these bombing raids across the country.In the ten days preceding X-Day, bombings would be increased and target important fortifications and bases across Japan. On the day before the landings on Kyushu, both air and sea forces would heavily bombard the landing beaches in hopes of softening the Japanese defenses.Finally, on X-Day, US Marine and Army forces would land simultaneously in southern Kyushu on three separate landing sites, quickly moving to secure important objectives and clear the way for reinforcements to follow. However, the Imperial Japanese Army had anticipated an invasion of Kyushu and made its own plans to respondplans that the Allies might not have been prepared to handle.The Japanese Response: Operation KetsugoJapanese Kamikaze pilots prepare for battle. Source: Naval History and Heritage CommandIn 1274, Japan had fought off an attempted invasion by the Mongol Empire thanks to a Kamikaze (Divine Wind, a typhoon that sank the Mongol fleet). When the Mongols returned in another, even larger invasion attempt in 1281, it too was destroyed by a typhoon. This defeat was even more destructive for the Mongols, with some accounts even claiming 100,000 losses for the Mongol army.While this might not seem relevant to Operation Downfall, the Japanese might have been greatly helped by another Divine Wind. The originally planned date for Operation Coronet, November 1, was amid a particularly terrible typhoon season, meaning Coronet would likely need to be postponed. Early December was the earliest, but 1946 was more likely to avoid the winter storms. This would have given Japanese forces even more time to prepare for the seemingly inevitable conflict.While Japanese forces overseas had suffered massive defeats across all fronts, the Imperial Japanese Army still had significant forces in the home islands. Knowing an American invasion would most likely land in Kyushu, it was the closest of the home islands to the now American-controlled Okinawa; the Japanese planned on confronting the invasion there. The Japanese defense plan, called Operation Ketsugo (translating to Decisive Operation), called for the construction of new airfields in Kyushu, primarily for use by kamikaze pilots. By the historical date of the Japanese surrender (August 14, 1945), the Imperial Japanese Army had amassed a force of over 900,000 troops for the defense of Kyushu, a number that likely would have ballooned even further given more time.Japanese female students train with firearms. Source: Polish National ArchivesIn addition to a massive wave of kamikaze strikes, the Imperial Japanese Navy also had several hundred two-man midget submarines to harass American ships, at least 800 suicide Shinyo motor boats assigned to Kyushu, and a planned 4,000 Fukuryu, suicide divers. The Japanese even planned to mobilize their Civilian Volunteer Corps, an army of conscripted civilians, both men and women, armed with hand grenades, swords, spears, and anything else they could use to inflict death. Approximately 2.4 million civilians lived in Kyushu, and many of them (men aged 15-60 and women aged 17-40) would be sent to die under the slogan the glorious death of the 100 million.Ketsugo was not intended to stop the invasion; in fact, it relied on allowing American landings. Ketsugo was designed to cause as many American casualties as possible, no matter the cost to the Japanese people. The hope was that inflicting so many casualties on American forces would make the US public demand peace, thus avoiding a foreign occupation of Japan through a negotiated peace.It was a desperate final gambit, not a serious chance at victory. However, this was not likely to work. The American public was still enraged at the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and fully committed to seeing the war to its end. In the eyes of the United States, Japans unconditional surrender was the only path to peace, and this was not likely to change.The Final Blow: Operation CoronetPlans for Operation Coronet. Source: US Army Center of Military HistoryThe second phase of Downfall, Operation Coronet, was intended to land on Honshu, the largest of the Japanese home islands. According to the plan, US forces would land on the Kanto Plain near Tokyo on March 1, 1946, called Y-Day. Theoretically, they would capture the Japanese capital, deal a knockout blow, and end the war. Coronet called for landing 25 divisions, a significantly larger force than that used in the Kyushu landings. Overall, Coronet was intended to include 1,171,646 American troops and Australian, Canadian, British, and French reinforcements following the initial landings in the Kanto Plain. Unlike Olympic, American forces would also include two armored divisions sent from Europe, which would have a significant advantage over weaker Japanese tanks. Like the invasion of Kyushu, Coronet would be preceded by major bombardments of the Kanto Plain by land and sea, with many planes taking off from airfields in occupied Kyushu.Japanese defenses were significantly weaker near Tokyo than those in Kyushu, and they lacked sizable forces to defend the city. While Japanese forces were prepared to defend Tokyo to the last man, the Japanese military knew the region was indefensible due to the flat plains of the region. Instead of simply inflicting casualties as was planned for Kyushu, the defense plan of Honshu relied on driving the American forces into the sea and preventing them from establishing a beachhead. The Japanese understood that should a significant American force land in the Kanto Plain and successfully establish a beachhead, it would inevitably succeed in capturing Tokyo. Because of the more powerful Allied force planned for landing on Honshu and the weaker Japanese defenses, Coronet would likely be less bloody than Olympic and, should the Japanese high command or even the emperor himself be captured, a war-winning decisive battle.Would Operation Downfall Have Succeeded?Plans for Operation Downfall, 28 May 1945. Source: US Army Center of Military HistoryWhile an invasion of Japan would have been enormously deadly, American combat deaths in WWII would likely have more than doubled, and the Japanese population would have suffered even more, Downfall would almost certainly have resulted in an Allied victory. The United States massively outmatched Japan in population, industry, and resources, and the American populace was fully committed to seeing the war through to its end. The Allies were unwilling to allow anything less than Japans unconditional surrender.Regardless of Ketsugo and the increased casualties it would undoubtedly cause, Japans defeat was inevitable. Of course, Operation Downfall was never carried out. Instead of months of brutal combat in a land invasion of Japan, the war ended only a few days after two atomic bombings and the loss of Japanese territories in mainland Asia to a Soviet invasion. While it is impossible to say for certain how Operation Downfall would play out, an American victory at enormous cost for both sides seems the most likely scenario.
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  • ALLTHATSINTERESTING.COM
    Meet Hugh Thompson, The Hero Who Stopped The M Lai Massacre And Was Branded A Traitor For It
    On March 16, 1968, a company of U.S. soldiers stormed into the Vietnamese village of Sn M and began shooting. For hours, they raped, mutilated, and slaughtered innocent civilians until a helicopter pilot named Hugh Thompson Jr. put his own life on the line to stop the massacre.By the end of what has become known as the M Lai massacre, the Vietnamese government estimates that American soldiers killed at least 504 people, mainly women and children.The troops also burned the village and Sn Ms surrounding hamlets to the ground and slaughtered the livestock.U.S. ArmyHugh Thompson in his Army uniform, c. 1966.And the Army company only stopped because Thompson literally put himself between the soldiers and the civilians and threatened to shoot them if they didnt end the killings.But despite Thompsons heroic actions, the Army tried to cover up the massacre. And when Hugh Thompson testified against William Calley, the officer who ordered the massacre, Thompson received death threats.Why An Army Officer Ordered The Mass Killing Of Civilians In VietnamThe M Lai massacre started when the U.S. Army declared everyone in a broad region of Vietnam either part of the Viet Cong or sympathizers. Charlie Company arrived in M Lai with orders to destroy the village.On the morning of March 16, 1968, the people of M Lai were making breakfast when soldiers stormed in. U.S. ArmyWilliam Calley, the officer who ordered the slaughter at M Lai.William Calley, the officer in charge of Charlie Company, ordered American soldiers to round up the villagers and open fire. As children ran for safety, soldiers gunned them down.I saw them shoot an M79 [grenade launcher] into a group of people who were still alive, said Sgt. Michael Bernhardt, who was at M Lai. But it was mostly done with a machine gun. They were shooting women and children just like anybody else.The villagers offered no resistance as U.S. soldiers shoved them into a ditch and opened fire with machine guns.While the massacre took place, helicopter pilot Hugh Thompson and his crew flew over the jungle, offering air support.We kept flying back and forth, Thompson recalled, and it didnt take very long until we started noticing the large number of bodies everywhere. Everywhere wed look, wed see bodies. These were infants, two-, three-, four-, five-year-olds, women, very old men, no draft-age people whatsoever.From the air, Thompson and his two-person crew quickly realized American soldiers were slaughtering innocent civilians.We started thinking what might have happened, but you didnt want to accept that thought, Thompson said in a 2000 interview, because if you accepted it, that means your own fellow Americans, people you were there to protect, were doing something very evil.How Hugh Thompson Stopped The M Lai MassacreFrom his helicopter, Hugh Thompson could not communicate with Charlie Company on the ground.When Hugh realized it was our people doing this killing, he knew he had to take drastic measures, recalled Larry Colburn, a gunner on Thompsons crew.Thompson landed his helicopter next to a ditch that contained 150 people many dead, but many others wounded and trying to escape. A sergeant stood by the ditch. Thompson ran over and said, These are civilians, we got to help them out. Ronald L. Haeberle/U.S. ArmyThe bodies of massacred villagers at M Lai, as captured by a U.S. Army photographer.The sergeant waited until Thompson left and then fired on the helpless civilians.Furious, Hugh Thompson landed again, this time in front of a bunker where civilians were hiding. Nearby, a squad of soldiers approached with weapons drawn.These people are going to die, Thompson said to his crew. Im not going to let this happen, weve got to do something. Are you guys with me?To see people herded up like so many animals, marched into a ditch and machine-gunned? Colburn said. Id never seen nor heard of anything like that before, except in World War II. Hugh told me that was what was going through his mind, he was thinking of Nazi Germany, people digging trenches, forced to march into those trenches, mass graves.Thompson and his crew stood in front of the bunker, protecting the civilians. The squad leader ordered Thompson and his men to get out of the way.Thompson told his crew, Im going to go over to the bunker myself and get these people out. If they fire on these people, or fire on me while Im doing that, shoot em! Thompson and his crew managed to evacuate the civilians and stop the massacre. Back at the base, Thompson threw his flight helmet on the ground. Ill never fly again, he vowed. This is not what Im here for. This is not how this military organization is supposed to conduct operations. Ill have no part of this, Ill tear these wings off and never fly again!And when Thomson reported the horrific actions, the Army tried to cover up the M Lai massacre.Hugh Thompsons Testimony Against The Culprits Of The M Lai MassacreHugh Thompson reported the massacre to his commanding officer. Then he assumed the Army initiated an investigation. Instead, the Army hid the slaughter of hundreds of innocent people, including 182 women and 173 children. Among those numbers were 17 pregnant women and 56 infants.The truth of the M Lai massacre did not come out until a year and a half later when a soldier who had seen reports on the massacre contacted a journalist.Finally, the Army launched an inquiry. They interviewed Hugh Thompson and his crew, and they recommended charging 28 officers for the massacre and coverup.Bettmann/Getty ImagesHugh Thompson on his way to testify against William Calley on November 23, 1970.In November 1970, the M Lai trials started and Hugh Thompson testified against William Calley. But many in the Army and the public supported Calley over Thompson. The hero received death threats for speaking out about the massacre.It was denial on the part of the public, said Colburn. Hell, I didnt want to believe it, either, but I had no choice because I saw it.Calley was the only person found guilty out of the 14 charged. He received a life sentence in 1971 for premeditated murder which was later reduced to 10 years. Calley was paroled just three years later, in 1974, after Richard Nixon commuted his sentence.After the trial, Hugh Thompson received death threats. Id received death threats over the phone, Thompson said in 2004. Dead animals on your porch, mutilated animals on your porch some mornings when you get up. So I was not a good guy.HOANG DINH NAM/AFP via Getty ImagesHugh Thompson returned to M Lai in 1998 and met some of the people he saved. Thompson spent the rest of his life wondering if he could have saved more lives.Thompson left the Army in 1983 and became a private helicopter pilot in the South. And although he lived with post-traumatic stress disorder, alcoholism, and nightmare disorder for decades, he eventually became a veterans counselor for the Louisiana Department of Veterans Affairs.Then, in 1998, the Army awarded him the Soldiers Medal for heroism. And on the 30th anniversary of the massacre, Hugh Thompson returned to M Lai.One of the ladies that we had helped out that day came up to me and asked, Why didnt the people who committed these acts come back with you?' Thompson recalled.And I was just devastated. And then she finished her sentence: she said, So we could forgive them.'After learning about the heroism of Hugh Thompson Jr. during the M Lai Massacre, read about the Gulf of Tonkin incident that started the Vietnam War. Then, take a look through these declassified Vietnam War photos.The post Meet Hugh Thompson, The Hero Who Stopped The M Lai Massacre And Was Branded A Traitor For It appeared first on All That's Interesting.
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  • WWW.DUALSHOCKERS.COM
    After Nearly 3 Years, Baldur's Gate 3 Remains the Most Authentic Role-Playing Game
    It's no surprise that a game based on Dungeons & Dragons would do a tremendous job with how it handles roleplay, but to this day, Baldur's Gate 3 remains a whole different level, setting a near-impossible standard for open world fantasy developers. It's even funnier when you consider that Baldur's Gate isn't a wholly open world, especially as you're locked out of everywhere else come Act Three.
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    Marathon Season 2 Bets on Darkness to Forget the Ghost of Destiny 2
    As Destiny 2's live service comes to an end, Bungie is going all-in on their new extraction shooter, Marathon, with a ton of exciting new content being added in Season 2, including a brand-new shell called the Sentinel, and a Dire Marsh night mode.
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  • WWW.DUALSHOCKERS.COM
    10 Video Game Bugs That Improved Gameplay
    The history of game development is full of moments where something went wrong and turned out to be the best thing that could have happened. Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin because his petri dishes got contaminated. Notch accidentally made the most iconic mob in Minecraft history because he mixed up some coordinates. It is a pattern that repeats across decades of games a quirk in the code, a developer who notices something strange and decides to keep it, and suddenly a feature exists that nobody planned for and everyone loves.
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  • WWW.BGR.COM
    Motorola Razr Fold Review: The Complete Foldable Package
    It's anything but cheap at $1,899, but the Motorola Razr Fold holds its own against similarly-priced foldable offerings from Samsung and Google.
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  • WWW.BGR.COM
    This 3D Food Printer Feels Straight Out Of Star Trek
    A food tech company has reimagined edible creation with a 3D printer emulating Star Trek's replicator through robotics and preprogrammed patterns.
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  • TECHCRUNCH.COM
    UK Visa Portal exposed thousands of applicants passports and selfies then called the lawyers on us
    The third-party website exposed passports, selfies, and the location data of applicants who submitted their documents as part of the U.K. visa application process. Instead of fixing the issue, the website sent attorneys.
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  • TECHCRUNCH.COM
    Google just broke SEO. Heres what replaces it.
    Google I/O made it official: AI-generated answers are now front andcenterin search, and most brands have almost no visibility into how AI is describing them to their customers.For anyone who has spent years building a strategy around 10 blue links, the rules just changed in a pretty significant way. On this episode of TechCrunchsEquitypodcast, Rebecca []
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  • TECHCRUNCH.COM
    ClickHouse triples annualized revenue to $250M, charting a path toward an IPO
    The database provider is eyeing a public debut within the next few years.
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