In 1945, while at war with Japan, the
United States dropped atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki, killing over 100,000 innocent civilians
and injuring hundreds of thousands more. The Japanese
surrendered. But what if things had turned out differently? What
if the US had actually lost the war? What if the Japanese had
invaded America and begun a long military occupation of the
American mainland?
We can imagine that the Japanese at first let much of life
in America go on as it had before, but with their military
commanders reviewing most significant decisions. Americans had to
get Japanese permits and pay fees for building anything, buying a
house, land, or car, getting a job, or traveling from one
administrative area to another. The Japanese imposed their own
military law and courts. They didn’t hide their disdain for the
inferior, "round-eye" Americans they had conquered, and seemed to
enjoy demonstrating their superiority with daily of unnecessary
control and humiliation. They even claimed that they had the
moral right to rule America since their descendents, the American
Indians, had lived there for thousands of years before the white
man invaded their land and exterminated them. The Japanese didn’t
want the Americans to get desperate and resist their occupation,
so they reassured them that the occupation would end as soon as a
proper negotiated settlement could be reached. However, as the
years dragged on, the only thing that the Japanese settled were
more and more of there own people in America, taking land and
homes arbitrarily without compensation; grabbing what they wanted
and leaving the Americans to beg for their basic rights.
Americans became increasingly impoverished and angry. A
generation of Americans grew up only knowing life under
occupation. Any American who had the money or the opportunity
emigrated to a free country.
Some Americans formed resistance groups. They harassed
the Japanese soldiers and installations, but with little effect as
they had only light arms against the Japanese’ tanks, artillery,
and planes. The Japanese responded with tightened controls,
identity checks, roadblocks, house-to-house searches, arrests, and
even torture. Americans were increasingly harassed, humiliated,
and beaten by Japanese soldiers and settlers. Any American
suspected of terrorism or of supporting terrorism was arrested and
his home destroyed. Maybe the Americans would have been
smarter to just cooperate with the occupation and adjust to it!
The Japanese and their allies certainly thought so. However, too
many chose to resist. With every act of resistance, the Japanese
postponed the talks of ending the occupation. After many years,
the Japanese mad a "generous offer" to withdraw from parts of
America, keeping California and splitting the rest of the country
into blocks separated by Japanese settlements, roads, and
crossing. The Japanese also insisted on retaining control of
America's resources and international borders. Of course the
Americans had to refuse.
As their lives became increasingly unbearable and hope
disappeared, some Americans began to attack any Japanese
civilians they could reach, even when it meant certain death.
This, of course, just caused the Japanese to react with
increasingly violent reprisals. A vicious cycle of attacks and
reprisals commenced and the situation steadily worsened over 35
years. Eventually, so many Americans supported the resistance
that the Japanese began to view and treat them all as terrorists.
Americans became so enraged that they felt exhilarated whenever
any Japanese were killed by freedom fighters. Americans had
become killers.
One group of American scientists, refugees in Canada,
secretly finished the research they had begun during the war.
They produced two working atomic bombs. After much debate, they
decided that the best way to end the occupation was to secretly
transport the bombs to Japan and explode them in cities where they
would kill the most Japanese. They would then claim that they had
more bombs readied and demand a full Japanese withdrawal from
America. Two groups of Americans succeeded in smuggling the bombs
into Japan and positioning them in two cities. Not wanting to
rely on a timer, each bomb was manually detonated by a
volunteer. Their plan worked and the Japanese withdrew
immediately. The bomb makers and the martyrs became the greatest
American heroes.
In either scenario, Americans murdered over 100,000
innocent civilians. I ask you, in which case was the killing of
100,000 "innocent" civilians easier to justify? 1) To bring a
brief overseas war to a quicker end and thereby save the lives of
American soldiers? 2) Or to free America itself from a grueling
35-year racist military occupation that traumatized everyone,
ruined its civil society and infrastructure, and maimed the lives
of two generations of Americans? It's not a very difficult
question, is it?
If you chose 2), then you support massive violence against
civilians, including suicide bombings, for the purpose of ending a
military occupation. Congratulations, you are a terrorist. Meet
the Palestinians of the occupied West Bank and Gaza. If you chose
1), as Americans once did, not only are you a terrorist, but you
condone violence against civilians in circumstances far, far less
grave than those suffered by the Palestinians.
The occupation is the problem. Occupation
is a form of violence much worse than any war between armies!
DEMAND AN IMMEDIATE ISRAELI WITHDRAWAL FROM
THE WEST BANK AND GAZA!
Source: