Unit 731

Disease Prevention and Water Supply Unit 731 was a very large Japanese biological warfare team, that primarily experimented on civilians of various ethnicities, mainly Russian and Chinese, but also Manchus, Mongolians, and others. It was part of the Kwantung Army (關東軍), which was the most prestigious of Japan's armies. It was located in Pingfang (平房区 or 平房區), in what was then Japanese Manchukuo (Manchuria) and is now part of China. It started operations in 1932 and continued through World War II. Victims at Pingfang included hapless civilians, common criminals, and alleged spies.[1] From 1942-1945, more than 1000 Allied soldiers were also experimented upon by Unit 731 at a prisoner of war camp located in Mukden (now known as Shenyang, 沈阳).[1] General Shirō IshiiFile:Wikipedia's W.svg (石井 四郎) was the mastermind, creator and leader of the unit.[1]

It never changes
War
A view to kill
v - t - e

The Unit 731 annual budget was larger than that of any Japanese university,[1] and was reportedly as large as the total tax revenue of Manchoukuo.[2]

The unit performed vivisections without anesthetic and conducted experiments in the field of biological warfare on their unfortunate victims. Other experiments on victims included frostbite treatment, syphilis experimentation (including rape and forced pregnancy), grenade testing, centrifuge testing, testing of flamethrowers, and other gruesome experiments. After the war ended the entirety of Unit 731 was given immunity by the United States in return for the unit's data.[2] An estimated 3,000 prisoners were killed at Pingfang during the experiments which left no prisoner alive.[3] There were survivors at the Mukden camp, but attrition was very high.[1]

Unit 731 also spread biological weapons over Chinese cities and against Chinese troops. These usually resulted in minor epidemics, but in the case of the 1942 Chekiang (Zhejiang-Jiangxi, 浙赣战役) campaignFile:Wikipedia's W.svg, "germs of cholera, dysentery, typhoid, plague, anthrax and paratyphoid were all used", and Chinese losses from disease were very high but "inestimable". Disease spread back to the Japanese army with casualties of more than 10,000.[4][1][notes 1]

A smaller Japanese army unit, also located in Manchuria, known as Unit 100 was also conducting germ warfare testing on prisoners. Unit 100 was operated under the Kempeitai, the Japanese military police.[1] Two other units were involved in biological warfare research: Detachment Nami 8604 (or Unit 8604) and Detachment Ei 1644 (or Unit 1644). Unit 8604 was under the command of the Japanese Southern China Area Army was located in Canton (Guangzhou), China. Unit 1644 was located in Nanking, China and conducted human vivisections.[2][5]

Post-war

From then on, a curtain of secrecy was lowered. Unit 731 was not part of the Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal. One reference to "poisonous serums" being used on the Chinese was allowed to slip by for lack of evidence.

Lawyers for the International Prosecution Section gathered evidence which was sent directly to President Truman. No more was heard of it.

The Tokyo War Crimes Trials lasted from 1946 to 1949. These were not the only trials of Japanese war criminals, but they were the primary ones.

The Americans took the view that all this valuable research data could end up in the hands of the Soviets if they did not act fast. This was, after all, the kind of information that no other nation would have had the ruthlessness to collect.[6]

Japanese activity in the area of biological warfare was strongly suspected by the US as early as 1939,[1] and the first public documentation of Japanese biological weapons was on April 9, 1942 with a thorough report by Dr. P. Z. King that was published in July 1943 in The China Handbook (pp. 679-682).[4]

Towards the end of the war, the Soviet Union invaded Manchuria (under the terms of the Yalta Conference between the Allied Powers) and captured a few key personnel from Unit 731. Other members of the unit eventually managed to return to Japan, often secretly.[1] The Pingfang site was found in near total destruction, having been destroyed by Unit 731 before the advance of Soviet troops. Almost all of the documents were destroyed by the unit.[1]

The Tokyo War Crimes Trials took place during 1946 to 1948. They were not the only war crime trials of the Japanese, but they were the primary trials. Despite having copious evidence of biological warfare having been conducted by the Japanese, no charges were filed against members of Unit 731. The United States government had contact with Unit 731 members in Japan and interviewed them extensively, including Ishii.[1] General Douglas MacArthur (who was then the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers in Japan) gave immunity to Ishii and all other members of the unit.[1] The Soviet Union had repeatedly asked that Ishii and the other members of Unit 731 located in Japan be tried as war criminals, but they had little influence within Japan.[1] Among the enormous amounts of documents presented at the Tokyo War Crimes Trials, only brief and perhaps accidental mention was given to biological weapons.[1]

In December 1949 in the border city of Khabarovsk, the Soviet Union tried and convicted 11 members of Unit 731 and one member of Unit 100. The trial was based on evidence from a few key documents and the confessions of those on trial. The trial closed to Western observers. The prison sentences ranged from 2 to 25 years in a labor prison camp.[notes 2][1][5]

According to Kojima Takeo, a captain in the Shantung Army who spent time at Unit 731, he was among the 1050 prisoners who were considered war criminals and were sent to China from Russia in 1949 for further imprisonment.[2] Not all of the prisoners were necessarily affiliated with Unit 731, but they all would have been captured in northern China.

The unpunished

Why were the Unit 731 members, other than those captured by the Soviets, never tried? Both the Soviet Union and the US were keen to get as much information as possible on biological weapons. This was shown by the extensive interviews by US officials of Unit 731 members, the closed Khabarovsk trial, and the one-time joint interrogation of Ishii by the Soviets and the US (later denied by the Soviets).[1] The United States wanted to obtain Japanese information about biological weapons and the only way to gain detailed information seemed to be to offer immunity. The Soviet trial at Khabarovsk showed that this was not necessarily the case, but a closed trial in Japan was probably not feasible. MacArthur's offer of complete and total immunity may have been excessively broad. The immunity, however, was a betrayal by MacArthur of his own troops, a few of whom were abandoned by MacArthur in the Philippines, and later transported to Mukden by the Japanese, winding up as guinea pigs for infection experiments.[1] The Khabarovsk trial had been essentially dismissed by the US as a show trial by the Soviets,[1] though it has now been established that the confessions and evidence reported from the trial were essentially completely accurate.[1][5]

Many of the scientists and medical doctors of Unit 731 went on to have scientific careers after the war at universities, research institutes and pharmaceutical companies. Two important figures at Unit 731, Lieutenant-Colonel Ryoichi Naitō and Lieutenant-General Masaji KitanoFile:Wikipedia's W.svg founded a multinational company, the Green Cross CorporationFile:Wikipedia's W.svg, which would later be embroiled in a scandal for knowingly importing HIV-tainted blood into Japanese blood banks. Naitō even became a member of the New York Academy of Sciences.[1][7]

The nearly-complete list of members of Unit 731 was finally revealed by the National Archives of Japan in 2018 after being petitioned by a group led by Katsuo Nishiyama, professor emeritus of Shiga University of Medical Science.[8] The list of 3,607 members includes "52 surgeons, 49 engineers, 38 nurses and 1,117 combat medics".[8]

The table below shows the activities before and after the war of unpunished members of Units 731, 100 and 1644, and of people who held academic positions that facilitated the units' activities. All information is based on Williams & Wallace[1] and Gold.[2] All positions during the war are at Unit 731 unless otherwise noted.

NameActivity during the warPosition after the war
Shiro IshiiChief of Unit 731Cambridge University lecturer Richard Drayton has claimed that Ishii served as a bioweapons consultant to the US military at Fort Detrick, Maryland.[9] It was also alleged that he converted to Christianity and opened a free clinic for children in Japan. He died in 1959 from throat cancer.
Prince Tsuneyoshi TakedaFile:Wikipedia's W.svg (lieutenant colonel)chief financial officer of the Kwantung Army (and therefore in charge of Unit 731 finances), observed poison gas experimentation on humans at Pingfanraised horses, started a failed business, was active in several International Olympics committees
Dr. Kiyoshi AsanumaIdentified the tick insect vector of epidemic hemorrhagic feverWorked at the Research Institute for Natural Resources
Dr. AsahinaAssisted Dr. AsanumaChief of the Entomology Section of the Health and Welfare Ministry's Preventive Health Research laboratories
Dr. Ken'ichi KanazawaPerformed tests on ticksChief of the research section of the Takeda Pharmaceutical Company
Dr. Kōji AndōHeaded the vaccine-producing laboratory at DairenProfessor of Tokyo University's Infectious Diseases Research Institute
Dr. Tachiomaru IshikawaPathologistPresident at Kanazawa University's medical school
Professor Ren KimuraBacteriologist under whom Ishii studied, sent young medical graduates to Unit 731Dean of Nagoya Municipal Medical School, won the Japan Academic Institute Prize, was a member of the New York Academy of Sciences (NYAS)
Dr. Masao KusamiLeader of the pathology squadProfessor at the Showa University of Pharmacology
Dr. Tōru OgawaResearcher on typhoid and paratyphoid, Unit 1644Professor, Faculty of Medicine, Nagoya City University
Kōzō OkamotoPathology squad leader at Pingfang, carried out human vivisectionDirector of both the Kyoto University and Kinki University medical departments
Dr. Kazu TabeiResearched dysentery, typhoid, and paratyphoid at Pingfang, fed typhoid to human experimenteesProfessor of bacteriology at Kyoto University
Dr. Takeo Tamiya"Talent scout" at Tokyo Imperial UniversityDean of Tokyo Imperial University's Medical School, director of the Japanese National Cancer Centre, president of the Japan Medical Association
Dr. Yoshi TsuchiyaLeader of diagnostic division in NankingHonorary professor at Juntendo University
Dr. Toshikazu YamadaDirector of a bacteriological unitProfessor of Kumamoto University, temporary director of Hygiene for the City of Yokohama
Dr. Taboku YamanakaCivilian technician at NankingDean of Osaka Medical School
Dr. Hisato YoshimuraDirected frostbite experiments on humansPresident of Kyoto Prefectural Medical College, adviser to the Japanese Antarctic Expedition, President of the Japanese Meteorological Society, received the Order of the Rising Sun, Third Class, President of Kobe Women's University
Dr. Shinpei EjimaDysentery researchJoined the Japanese National Institute of Health (JNIH)
Major Dr. Jun'ichi KanekoBomb expertJoined the JNIH
Professor Saburō KojimaTokyo University Laboratory for Communicable Diseases, Director of the Den Ken research department, visited the Nanking human experimentation unitDirector of Second Division, National Institute of Health; worked in the Health and Welfare Ministry's National Preventive Health Research Centre
Lieutenant-General Yujirō WakamatsuCommander of Unit 100Studied streptococcal infections in children at the JNIH
Dr. Yukimasa YagisawaPlant disease expertSecretary of the Japanese Penicillin Association who worked at JNIH
Dr. Kiyoshi HayakawaAttempted to obtain yellow fever virus samples from the US before the war, member of the Singapore DetachmentManager of the Hayakawa Medical Company
Colonel Tomosada MasudaIshi's deputyGeneral medical practice in Chiba Prefecture
Dr. Hideo FutakiHeaded the tuberculosis research squad, vivisection team leaderCo-founded Green Cross with Naitō & Kitano, President of S. J. Company
Colonel Dr. Kiyoshi ŌtaMilitary surgeon, led the raid on ChangtehGeneral medical practice in Yamaguchi Prefecture
Dr. Masahiko TakahashiPingfang's leading plague researcherGeneral medical practice in Chiba Prefecture
Lieutenant Shunichi SuzukiFile:Wikipedia's W.svgAccounting department in the Shansi detachment, later acknowledged that he knew of the unit's activitiesGovernor of Tokyo
Lieutenant-Colonel Seiichi NiizumaActively prevented information from becoming available to pre-war crime trial investigatorsWorked at the Tokyo Research Institute of the Japan Self-Defense Force
Lieutenant-Colonel Dr. Ryōichi NaitōAttempted to obtain yellow fever virus samples from the US before the war, duplicitously worked as an interpreter for a US war-crimes investigator immediately after the warWorked as a private surgeon, founded the Japan Blood Bank, co-founded the Green Cross Corporation with Masaji Kitano & Hideo Futaki, member of the NYAS, Japanese Science Society award, Order of the Rising Sun
Lieutenant-General Masaji KitanoSecond in commandCo-founded Green Cross with Naitō & Futaki, formed a vaccine-producing company with Tamiya which went bankrupt, chief of the Tokyo branch of the Japan Blood Bank under Naitō
Lieutenant-Colonel Dr. Naitō IkedaExperiments on humans with hemorrhagic fever and tetanusRan a blood disease clinic in Osaka, published some of the details of his Unit 731 work in a scientific journal[10]
Dr. Shirō KasaharaConducted experiments on humans of Songo (hemorrhagic) feverEmeritus vice-president of the Kitasato hospital and Research Unit
Tadashi YamashitaPhotographerRadiographer
Masakuni KurumizawaAssistant technician at vivisectionsFarmer
Amitani ShogoTokyo University Laboratory for Communicable DiseasesRemained at this lab after the war, received the Asahi Prize for outstanding scientific performance
Ando KojiHead of Dalian LaboratoryProfessor of the Tokyo University Laboratory for Communicable Diseases, Head of the Central Laboratory for Experimental Animals
Kasuga TadayoshiDalian LaboratoryKitasato Research Laboratory, Ministry of Education Pertussis Research Team
Kimura YasushiProfessor at Kyoto UniversityAssistant head of the Japan Medical Association, President of the Nagoya City University of Medicine
Kobayashi RokuzoProfessor at Keio UniversityDirector, First Division, National Institute of Health
Miyagawa YonejiHead of the Tokyo University Laboratory for Communicable DiseasesToshiba Biophysics and Biochemistry Research Laboratory
Murata YoshisukeUnit 1644JNIH
Ogata TomioAssistant professor at Tokyo University Laboratory for Communicable DiseasesProfessor, Faculty of Medicine, Tokyo University
Okamoto KozoPathology research teamDean of the Faculty of Medicine at Kyoto University and Kinki University
Sonoguchi TadaoBiological warfare developmentVice Principal, School of Hygiene at Japan Self-Defense Forces
Tanaka HideoPlague-carrying fleas teamDean, Faculty of Medicine, Osaka City University
Toda ShozoProfessor, Kyoto UniversityMember of the Special Committee for Antarctic Research, President of Kanazawa University
Yanagizawa KenTuberculosis research teamHead of the JNIH

Japanese exhibition

During 1993-1994, an exhibition concerning the activities of Unit 731 toured 61 locations in Japan. It included both written and in-person testimony from surviving Unit 731 members. A large part of the testimony was translated and published by Gold.[2] The testimony largely corroborated previously published evidence.

gollark: A little.
gollark: Perhaps, but "OS"es are mostly silly anyway.
gollark: Or `parallel` for higher-level use which is probably what you want.
gollark: That's an application *of* multitasking in general.
gollark: `parallel.waitFor{Any,All}(fn1, fn2)`

See also

Notes

  1. In addition to the 1942 use of biological weapons in Chekiang, Dr. P. Z. King documented the following uses of biological weapons in China by the Japanese Army. In all cases, a Japanese airplane(s) dropped suspicious material (grain, fleas, granules, cloth) into areas where plague was not endemic; the material was clinically identified to contain Yersinia pestis, the plague bacteria.
    • Chuhsien, Chekiang Province, October 4, 1940: bubonic plague, 21 deaths
    • Ningpo (宁波市), Chekiang Province, October 29, 1940: bubonic plague, 99 victims
    • Kinhwa (金东区), November 28, 1940: Japanese planes dropped granules containing Y. pestis, but no plague infections reported
    • Changteh (常德会战), Hunan Province, November 4, 1941: plague, 6 cases of plague
  2. The convicted members of Unit 731 were (years of prison sentence in parentheses):
    1. General Otozō YamadaFile:Wikipedia's W.svg (a.k.a., Otozoo Yamada) (山田 乙三), commander-in-chief of the Kwantung Army (25)
    2. Lieutenant General Ryuiji Kajitsuka, chief of Medical Administration in the Kwantung Army (25)
    3. Major General Kiyoshi Kawashima who was in charge of the experimental division (25)
    4. Lieutenant General Takaatsu Takahashi, who was head of the Veterinary Division (25)
    5. Major Tomio Karasawa who was in charge of a section that produced germs on large scale (25)
    6. Lieutenant Colonel Toshihide Nishi, who was responsible for breeding fleas, rats, mice, and guinea pigs (20)
    7. Major Masao Onoue bred laboratory animals and trained laboratory assistants (12)
    8. Major General Shunji SatoFile:Wikipedia's W.svg was chief of Unit 8604 and Unit 1644 (20)
    9. Lieutenant Zensaku Hirazakura produced bacteria and poisons while in Unit 100 (10)
    10. Senior Sergeant Kazuo Mitomo manufactured anthrax, glanders cattle plague and sheep plague (15)
    11. Corporal Norimtsu Kikuchi attempted to produce a medium for growing typhoid and other bacteria (2)
    12. Private Yuji Kurushima was a laboratory orderly who dissected fleas, caught rats and put bacteria in test tubes, and was involved in biological warfare against China (3)

References

  1. Unit 731: Japan's Secret Biological Warfare in World War II by Peter Williams & David Wallace (1989). Free Press. ISBN 0029353017.
  2. Gold, Hal. Unit 731 Testimony, Charles E Tuttle Co., 1996. ISBN 4-900737-39-9.
  3. http://www.unit731.org/Experiments.html Unit 731: Japan's Biological Warfare Project] Unit731.org.
  4. China Handbook 1937-1938: A Comprehensive Survey of Major Developments in China in Six Years of War, edited by Hollington K. Tong (July 1943) Chungking, China: The Chinese Ministry of Information.
  5. Materials on the Trial of Former Servicemen of the Japanese Army Charged with Manufacturing and Employing Bacteriological Weapons. Foreign Languages Publishing House, 1950, 535 pp.
  6. Doctors of Depravity by Christopher Hudson (Last updated at 23:50 02 March 2007) Daily Mail.
  7. Japan's sins of the past: The memories of Japanese biological attacks on China in the 1940s are still fresh. Many Chinese want an apology by Justin McCurry (Thursday 28 October 2004 11.21 EDT) The Guardian.
  8. Names of 3,607 members of Imperial Japanese Army’s notorious Unit 731 released by national archives (Apr 16, 2018) The Japan Times.
  9. An ethical blank cheque: British and US mythology about the second world war ignores our own crimes and legitimises Anglo-American warmaking by Richard Drayton (Monday 9 May 2005 19.37 EDT) The Guardian.
  10. Infection experiments with the flea and lice of epidemic hemorrhagic fever, Japan Infectious Diseases Society Journal, August 20, 1968, vol. 42, no. 5.
This article is issued from Rationalwiki. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.