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Post-WW2 Military and Naval Aviation Please use this forum to discuss Military and Naval Aviation after the Second World War. |
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Japanese Mercenaries?
Can anyone shed light on this statement "The People's Liberation Army Air Force managed to get hold of aircraft formerly belonging to 22nd and 85th Sentai, who had disbanded in Chosen, the Japanese name for Korea during their imperial rule (1910–1945) over that country. These aircraft were flown by Japanese mercenary pilots, who used them until the last two Ki-44s finally retired in the early 1950s." It's from WikiPedia.
best regards Keith |
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Re: Japanese Mercenaries?
This theme has been touched in this thread: http://forum.12oclockhigh.net/showthread.php?t=40458
Another interesting theme would be the Japanese who took part in the Indonesian Independence War against the Dutch after WW2. |
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Re: Japanese Mercenaries?
Quote:
Allan
__________________
Allan Hillman |
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Re: Japanese Mercenaries?
For the little that I have read about the subject there were not any skirmishes between those Japanese obeying Allied orders and those joining the Indonesian independence movement. The Japanese in autumn 1945 had absolutely no interest to take any action against Indonesian independence movement in behalf of the Allied (Dutch) but were in many cases sympathetic and cooperative to Indonesian independence movement: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z9tYurVJKG4
There has been some academic studies of the theme: http://journals.cambridge.org/action...ne&aid=7445000 This is one of those points when things are more complicated than the simple perfection of WW2 combatants as the "evil Axis" and the "good Allied". In Indonesia many Japanese soldiers ended up to be the "good guys" - freedom fighters against the "bad guys" = the Western Allied (British/Dutch) who tried to restore the colonial yoke of Europeans. The "bad guy/good guy" depends from the point of view and is complicated issue here. Interestingly some Japanese soldiers ended up to be at the winning side after all when Indonesia gained its independence. More of the theme: http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2...a-dies-95.html http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/201.../#.VfAvaPysV8E http://www.amazon.com/Japanese-Memoi.../dp/6028397199 About the Japanese who fought for the Indonesian independence their motives may have been mixed: it seems some indeed genuinely supported the Indonesian cause and perhaps some were mercenaries - I wonder if the latter category included the Japanese pilots of the nascent Indonesian Air Force. In any case the Japanese played a very important, even fundamental role in building up, training and equipping the Indonesians for the later independence war against the Dutch. |
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