https://www.milsurps.com/images/impo...eo1_1280-1.jpg
United States Marines after the Battle of the Marshall Islands guard a Japanese POW on the island of Namur. 2 February 1944.
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https://www.milsurps.com/images/impo...eo1_1280-1.jpg
United States Marines after the Battle of the Marshall Islands guard a Japanese POW on the island of Namur. 2 February 1944.
What a way to end the war, sitting in the dirt naked and watching the slow demise of your army.
Obviously the prisoner is undergoing a radical paradigm shift, but I can't help imagining a thought bubble over his head with
'Well, that didn't go as planned'
More to the point of the shame he has brought on the family now for being captured alive such was the Japanese Armed Services mind set of the day in WWII.
Was it mainly Japanese soldiers who also happened to be members of the small Japanese Cristian community that tended to surrender at the end of the war in 1945 or was there no particular pattern to it?