Try GOLD - Free

The dream of a glorious new Empire ended in two blinding nuclear flashes

Daily Express

|

August 13, 2025

WHAT began with blood and pride ended in ashes and bone.

The dream of a glorious new empire run from Tokyo, in which the peoples of Asia would gratefully accept the protection of Japan's unstoppable young warriors, culminated in August 1945 amid a storm of fire and then two blinding nuclear flashes.

Nobody knows the true casualty count of the Second World War in the East. But if we include the 15-year campaign in China - as we should it's likely to eclipse even Hitler's Eastern Front. An estimated 20 million Chinese died, to which we should add at least three million Japanese, hundreds of thousands of British, American and Indian troops, plus millions more who died because of famine generated by war, and the civilians of the numerous towns and cities that were fought over, from Jakarta to Hanoi.

No war is ever civilised but the campaigns in this region were distinguished by a level of irrational cruelty that almost defies description. And they started long before Pearl Harbor. The Japanese had been fighting China in Manchuria since 1931 but when the Second Sino-Japanese War erupted in 1937 it took the conflict to a horrific new level.

Caught up in a civil war between communists and nationalists, China faced a confident and technologically superior enemy. And as city after city fell, the Japanese revealed what lay behind all its propaganda about "Pan-Asian co-prosperity and brotherhood" - namely a vicious and explicitly racist bloodlust.

During a six-week rampage in 1938 that went down in infamy as the "Rape of Nanking", soldiers of Emperor Hirohito indulged in crimes that even now are too upsetting to recount in detail. Coming from a society renowned then as now for its discipline and decorum, something truly bestial took hold as Japanese soldiers targeted young and old, especially women and children, and inflicted upon them acts of sexual violence on a scale as spectacular as it was stomach-turning.

MORE STORIES FROM Daily Express

Daily Express

Daily Express

Masks return after hospital's Covid alert

TWO hospitals have reintroduced compulsory face masks in certain areas, following an alarming rise in Covid cases.

time to read

1 min

October 09, 2025

Daily Express

CAN WE ESCAPE OUR FISCAL BLACK HOLE?

As Kemi Badenoch introduces a new 'economic golden rule' to tackle Britain's £2.9trillion debt pile, three experts outline how worried we should be about the prospect of national bankruptcy

time to read

6 mins

October 09, 2025

Daily Express

Myleene's 'Fort Knox' home after air gun hell

MYLEENE Klass's home is like \"Fort Knox\" after a man posted her an air pistol and handcuffs.

time to read

1 min

October 09, 2025

Daily Express

Mrs Thatcher towered above them all... 100%

NEXT Monday marks a momentous occasion: the 100th anniversary of Margaret Thatcher's birth.

time to read

2 mins

October 09, 2025

Daily Express

Malick is having a good Tyne

MALICK THIAW is falling in love with life in the North-East already after his summer move from AC Milan.

time to read

1 min

October 09, 2025

Daily Express

Next we'll cut the MUSTARD

SIR JIM: I WAS SAVAGED FOR SCRAPPING FREE LUNCHES BUT BRUTAL SAVINGS WILL PUT UNITED BACK AT TOP TABLE

time to read

2 mins

October 09, 2025

Daily Express

It's what you've got, not where you're from

PROUD Welshman Craig Bellamy insists “everyone gets caught up” in Thomas Tuchel being German - when winning is all that matters.

time to read

2 mins

October 09, 2025

Daily Express

‘It takes a magic moment’

MIKEY LEWIS has been urged to seize his Super League Grand Final chance this Saturday - just as Reece Walsh did with a standout performance in Brisbane Broncos’ triumph over Melbourne Storm in the NRL showdown.

time to read

1 min

October 09, 2025

Daily Express

Daily Express

Victoria 'breaking down' as fashion losses soared

Designer wept daily after Becks invested millions in her brand

time to read

2 mins

October 09, 2025

Daily Express

Anzadam to take on Constitution Hill

ANZADAM, the Champion Hurdle ‘dark horse’ ruled out of Cheltenham last March by a setback, is taking aim at Constitution Hill.

time to read

1 min

October 09, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size