Reminds me of "Castaway" with Tom Hanks.matei said:Interesting info regarding Hiroo Ononda and Shoichi Yokoi and how they actually survived all that time here.
I wonder if I would be able to do it? To be honest I hope I never find out!
Sounds like a must read book. Truly a compelling story, and to think there just may even be another Japanese soldier in some remote corner of the world still holding out.Jedburgh OSS said:It's titled "No Surrender; My Thirty-Year War" by Hiroo Onoda and some author. My local library has it, and amazon.com has several copies. He finally came out in 1974 after his commanding officer was brought to him and ordered him to surrender. There was an episode of the old Six Million Dollar Man TV show in which Steve Austin (Lee Majors) ran across a holdout like this, obviously ripping off the then current news story. Funny thing was the Japanese uniform the actor was wearing was like it just came from the quartermaster and not dirty or raggedy. Steve even took a photo of him with a Polaroid to show him the advances in technology in the last thirty years. Glad this posting resurfaced. I remember when this was in the news. If it happened today the man would have to be at least in his early 80s.
MK said:That is nuts! I had heard mention of snipers and other soldiers not knowing the war was over. I thought it might have been a year or two,...perhaps as much as five years.....but TWENTY SEVEN YEARS?!?!?
You must realize these men were under orders. When the Japanese army retreated from these islands they left behind many men who were ordered to keep fighting to the death, or to hide out and await orders or the return of the Japanese army.
Their commanding officers considered this the best way to slow down the American advance, and did not think anything of sending thousands of men to certain death.
I would agree with you on this. I would also add that the civilians were also ready to fight to the death, not just the military. They were willing to die for their emperor, and he was considered a god.I'm not sure this a accurate summarization of the situation.
As the strategic situation in the Pacific shifted against Imperial Japan, moving men, materials, and supplies from island-to-island became increasingly difficult, and ultimately impossible on a large scale. Specifically, Allied submarine warfare virtually annihilated the Japanese merchant marine fleet and mass airlifts were not feasible due to a lack of transport aircraft. For example, in 1945, faced with the invasion of the home islands, the Japanese Army still had 1 million well equipped, highly motivated veteran troops in mainland China, but there was no way to transport them home to defend Japan!
Thus, Japanese garrisons often ended up isolated and surround, with no hope of resupply or evacuation. While these tactical situations were hopeless, the Japanese military high command (and probably the soldiers too) believed that overall strategic situation was not. They believed that the cumulative effect of every little last-ditch, to-the-death defense would ultimately bleed the Allies white. And but for the atomic bomb, this strategy might have worked...
These stories always remind me of a movie I watched when I was a kid. The name of it was "The Last Flight of Noah's Ark " and it's about a B-29 being used as a cargo plane carrying animals 35 years after WWII. It crash lands on an Island that has two Japanese soldiers that still think the war is going on.
That's right. The Japanese soldiers themselves confirm that they were ordered not to surrender, to hide out and wait for the return of the Japanese army. We have the testimony of the soldiers themselves to that. Ones who hid out for years rather than surrender.I'm not sure this a accurate summarization of the situation.
As the strategic situation in the Pacific shifted against Imperial Japan, moving men, materials, and supplies from island-to-island became increasingly difficult, and ultimately impossible on a large scale. Specifically, Allied submarine warfare virtually annihilated the Japanese merchant marine fleet and mass airlifts were not feasible due to a lack of transport aircraft. For example, in 1945, faced with the invasion of the home islands, the Japanese Army still had 1 million well equipped, highly motivated veteran troops in mainland China, but there was no way to transport them home to defend Japan!
Thus, Japanese garrisons often ended up isolated and surround, with no hope of resupply or evacuation. While these tactical situations were hopeless, the Japanese military high command (and probably the soldiers too) believed that overall strategic situation was not. They believed that the cumulative effect of every little last-ditch, to-the-death defense would ultimately bleed the Allies white. And but for the atomic bomb, this strategy might have worked...