Can you give me the sources for your first statement? I recently read the massive "At Dawn We Slept" by Gordon Prange and did not get that idea. They could've known for sure, if it wasn't for continuous problems with miscommunication. However, new information might've surfaced since that book came out. I'd be happy to get my hands on it!
Oops, I didnt mean attack on Pearl of course. But only a fool couldn't have thought the war between US and Japan wassnt very close after mid-November 1941 - out of the military and political leaders that.
I understand what you are saying, and agree in part. However, there are two differences I personally feel are crucial here. First, it is one thing to have an opinion (i.e. we are a superior people) and quite another actually putting in practise a doctrine of dehumanisation and massacre. I believe anti-semitism was prevalent in WWII in most nations - but only one nation went as far as "the final solution". The second point is that "evil" and "good" are given with respect to acceptable moral and human behaviour at a given time period. Something that was acceptable (i.e. "not evil") in the 17th century might no longer be acceptable in the 20th. It doesn't make colonial slavery any less wrong, but it makes it acceptable given the social norms of the time. I believe that the putting into practise of these doctrines of genocide is "evil" in the 20th century, by the moral standards prevalent at the time. If we allow backtracking to the morals of the past we're not making any progress as consciencious humans. We might as well have every able-bodied man (and boy) off to war, rape and cattle-raiding in the Spring and have'em back in time for Christmas...
I agree here, and if you've ever read The Three Musketeers, you know the reader very quickly finds out the moral standards were a tad bit different back in the 1600s.
But, Japan was no more than decades behind certain European powers' adventures in India, Middle East and Africa. Some of of which were just as bloody as, say, Nanking. Except usually without the raping part...
The last bit was an exagerations, of course And I obviously do not think those opinions of Churchill, or what the Americans did to the natives is anything decent... but it is inherently different, I feel...
I hope you dont believe that I'm "defending" wartime Japan's actions, which I think are 100% undefendable, but I believe we must always put things in context and take the highest possible POV. While much of the stuff Japanese did, even when similar to what Western powers did and while leaving just as many bodies, was more cruel, it is partly because we as westerners tend to think of those actions as more cruel largely due to our cultural background. To a Japanese it was no problem to shoot ones comrade who thought of surrender, and it was expected to submit oneself completely to the use of the society, nation, culture(all 3 the same thing there back then), and follow its rules literally. East Asian cultures are all very society-centric, compared to (modern) western individualism.
While Japan's military certainly did commit atrocities and even local genocides, it was usually to achieve the same goal the western powers had in their own colonies: make an example to make the people submit itself under new rule. In large scale, they didn't kill people just because they thought it was fun(although many individuals certainly did, committed and ordered such actions).
Japanese were also able of good. The Navy had no problem picking up survivors as POWs and treat them (usually) well, and it wasn't unheard of Army either to take POWs, or treat them. Considerably more rare, but no more rare than it was to Soviets or Germans in the Eastern Front(as the single greatest conflict in history between 2 nations it was also another barbaric, brutal war in too many ways...).