ORIGINAL: bjmorgan
You've got to be kidding me.ORIGINAL: fbs
The reason that I raised the question is that from a Western point of view the war in Asia/Pacific was not a colonial war -- it was a war of defense against Japanese aggression in China, Pearl Harbor, DEI and Malaya/Burma. But, from a Japanese point of view, the war in the Pacific was a war of liberation against Western colonialism -- at least by those (Japanese Army not included) that believed in the concepts of Asia for Asians and the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere.
I mean, while the Japanese Army and the British Army both practiced something else, Asia for Asians is a precise counterpart to Rudyard Kipling's Burden of White Men -- and despite the despicable actions of the Japanese Army I tend to find the former a more acceptable concept than the latter.
Thanks,
fbs
Not at all. I'm a Westerner and I tend to think that Japan was a small empire trying to grab colonies from other empires, so I tend to think that WW2 in the Pacific was a colonial war just like the American-Spanish War, or the several French-British wars.
But I try to keep my mind open to other interpretations: in the context of most of Asia/Pacific under colonial rule and with few independent countries, the idea of Asia for Asians must have been a powerful drive to locals. Some Japanese believed in Japan leading Asia for Asians, and while the actual Japanese government was inept at promoting the idea, perhaps some of the locals believed that WW2 would be the way for independence.
Now, it's not that I believe that WW2 in the Pacific was fought in the context of Asia for Asians - I don't. I'm a Westerner. Yet, I would love to hear an Easterner's point of view about Asia for Asians vs. WW2 in the Pacific.
Thanks,
fbs









