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China-Japan-Koreas
Kamikaze Cult Revived in Japan
2007-07-09
CHIRAN, Japan — On April 12, 1945, Lt. Shinichi Uchida faced a terrifying mission — crash his plane into a U.S. warship. But the young kamikaze's final letter to his grandparents was full of bravado. "Now I'll go and get rid of those devils," the 18-year-old wrote shortly before his final flight, vowing to "bring back the neck" of President Roosevelt. He never returned.

For many, such words are redolent of the militarism that drove Japan to ruin in World War II. But for an increasingly bold cadre of conservatives, Uchida's words symbolize something else: just the kind of guts and commitment that Japanese youth need today.

Long a synonym for the waste of war, the suicidal flyers are now being glorified in a film written by Tokyo's governor, Shintaro Ishihara, a well-known nationalist and co-author of the 1989 book "The Japan that Can Say No." And a museum about the kamikazes in the southern town of Chiran, near the airstrip where Uchida and others took off, gets more than 500,000 visitors a year.

"The worries, sufferings, and misgivings of these young people ... are something we cannot find in today's society," Ishihara said when his movie, "I Go to Die For You," opened this spring. "That is what makes this portrait of youth poignant and cruel, and yet so exceptionally beautiful," he said.

No one is publicly calling for young Japanese to kill themselves for the nation these days. But the renewed hero-worship of the kamikazes coincides with a general trend in Japanese society toward seeing the country's war effort as noble, and mourning the fading of the ethic of self-sacrifice amid today's wealth.

The government has stepped up efforts to expunge accounts of Japanese atrocities from history books and reinstate patriotic instruction in the public schools. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, like his popular predecessor, Junichiro Koizumi, is pushing to revise the pacifist constitution.

The estimated 4,000 kamikaze — or "divine wind" — pilots were named after a legendary typhoon that foiled the Mongol emperor Kublai Khan's invasion of Japan in 1281. Chiran museum officials say as many as 90 percent failed to reach the U.S. warships they were meant to attack.
Posted by:McZoid

#4  Nothing wrong with kamikazis that the right target won't cure - just point them to a certain couple of cities in the ME.... :-D
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2007-07-09 22:07  

#3  Next step: Raise the YAMATO!
Posted by: borgboy2001   2007-07-09 20:55  

#2  If you considered how many US flight crews perished to sink the 4 Jap carriers off Midway in June 1942, the odds for the kamikazes seem pretty good.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418   2007-07-09 18:41  

#1  Chiran museum officials say as many as 90 percent failed to reach the U.S. warships they were meant to attack

So it might take 20 kamikaze (two get through) to take out a ship with 500 sailors. Pretty good odds.
Posted by: KBK   2007-07-09 18:23  

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