The Kamikazes
Kamikaze was a type of Japanese pilot who flew suicide missions during the last months of World War II (1939-1945). The kamikazes were trained to dive airplanes loaded with the explosives into certain targets, usually American naval vessels. They were much like a human bullet. The suicide planes were also called kamikazes. Japan was desperate when it launched the kamikaze missions. Its military leaders viewed the kamikazes as the last hope of stopping the powerful Allied advance. But the plan didn't work. The first kamikaze attacks occurred in October 1944, when the Allies invaded the Japanese-held Philippines. More than a thousand kamikazes took part in the defense of Okinawa in 1945. Kamikaze pilots, sacrificing their lives in a last-ditch effort to stop the American advance, sank about 30-40 ships and damaged more than 350 others. They thought the Allied forces would have some trouble because they were losing so many warships. America would've been long time ago. In those days naval vessels were so abundant that the U.S. were having trouble finding enough sailors to man the ship. But the kamikazes failed to sink any large aircraft carriers-their main targets-and in time proved to be a costly failure. They be
The Japanese fought valiantly, but with the enormous resources of the Mongols breached the defenses. As the storm ended, the pitiful remnants of the great fighting force struggled back to Korea. The problem that this paper will analyze is what were the reasons of the Japanese that made them go on these suicide missions. The Japanese believed that the living god dwelled among the people, and no act in his name, or for the cause of patriotic duty, was too much to ask. Most of the high officers truly believed the propaganda line they had developed over twenty years: that twentieth-century Japan sailor and soldier were reincarnations of the old samurai; that the holy spirit of bushido could conquer materialism. In The Kamikazes, Hoyt explains that in the Japanese society suicide was acceptable and even honorable, from the schoolboy atoning for the shame of flunking an examination to the defeated general writing his report with his life's blood. But because of his misbehavior, Ninigi grandson of the sun goddess Amaterasu replaced Susanowo. Bibliography Hoyt, Edwin P. I believe when they become adults that they should distinguish the thin line between fact and fiction. Since the Meiji restoration, the mystique of the samurai and their code of honor bushido, had again seized the Japanese imagination. I also believe in this reasoning because the majority of people think of their parents and loved ones when they die.
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