WHY PRC PRESIDENT CANNOT RESPOND TO OPEN QUESTIONS
CONCERNING NANKING “MASSACRE”
Moteki Hiromichi
Deputy Chairman
SOCIETY FOR THE DISSEMINATION OF HISTORICAL FACT
Japan
On December 13, 1937, the Japanese captured Nanking, the capital of the Republic of China. Subsequently (although not
until well after World War II had ended), accusations were leveled to the
effect that Japanese military personnel had committed atrocities, including the
massacre of 300,000 Chinese, in connection with their occupation of Nanking. Those accusations were
brought before the IMTFE (International Military Tribune for the Far East, commonly known as the
Tokyo Trials) and the Nanking Public Prosecutor’s Office. To make
matters worse, even today, the PRC government stubbornly insists that there was
a massacre in Nanking. To mark the 70th anniversary of the Nanking “massacre,” the Chinese
renovated the Nanjing Massacre Memorial Hall in 2007, expanding it to three
times its former size. Exhibits on display there still bear extravagant
allegations of “300,000 victims.”
However, we can now state with assurance
that those allegations are patently fallacious. Let us backtrack a bit, to
1938, when the Chinese Nationalist government attempted to persuade the League of Nations to issue a
resolution denouncing Japanese encroachment. Please note that that same
government never passed a resolution condemning a massacre in Nanking, nor did it pursue a
resolution condemning the Japanese for perpetrating a massacre in that city.
Furthermore, over a one-year period (a time frame that straddled the Battle of
Nanking), the Nationalist Party’s International Propaganda Section, which had
relocated from Nanking to Hankou, held 300 press conferences for Western
journalists. Not once during any of those conferences, did the Chinese tell
reporters that the Japanese murdered civilians in Nanking, or conducted unlawful
executions of prisoners of war. In the face of such evidence, it would be
preposterous to claim that the news of the massacre of the century perpetrated
in China’s capital would not have traveled to Hankou, located less than 500
kilometers away from Nanking. It would be even more preposterous to claim that officials in
Hankou were aware of the massacre, but neglected to mention it to members of the
foreign press, especially since the very purpose of the press conferences was
to elicit sympathy from the nations of Europe and the United
States by spouting
hyperbole about the Japanese and their evil deeds.
Incredible as it may seem, Communist China
maintained its stranglehold on information even into the 21st
century, and continued to make these ridiculous allegations. But that
stranglehold has now been broken, and definitively so.
PRC Premier Wen Jiabao paid an official
visit to Japan in April 2007, followed by President Hu Jintao in May, 2008. On
both occasions, the Committee for the Examination of the Facts about Nanking (chaired by Kase
Hideaki) submitted open questions compiled by eminent historians to the
visiting dignitaries. We have appended the open questions posed to Hu Jintao at
the end of this essay. There are five of them, all of which deal with matters
of the utmost importance.
President Hu did not respond to our
questions (nor did Premier Wen before him). It is possible that both men ignored
them, which we find exceedingly unfortunate in that they were accompanied by a
very courteous letter. However, it is more likely that Mr. Hu was unable
to respond. He can build a mammoth museum to commemorate a myth, but he cannot
provide underpinning for the myth — historical fact. Anyone who reads the open
questions will immediately see our point, but we would like to add some
explanations and background information.
1. Mao Zedong never mentioned a massacre in
Nanking
The authors of Mao: The Unknown Story
are critical of Mao Zedong because “not once in his long life did he mention
another event that took place at exactly the same time: a huge massacre in Nanjing.”[1]
In fact, Mao does refer to the Battle of Nanking in an essay entitled “On
Protracted War.” He faults the Japanese for a strategic blunder, writing that
they surrounded many Chinese but killed few. Mao failed to mention a massacre
in Nanking because there was no massacre. When we asked an American scholar, a
firm believer in the massacre myth, to explain Mao’s silence on Nanking, he replied that Mao
Zedong was delighted by the deaths of so many Nationalists, both military men
and civilians.” We pointed out that by December 1937, the Communists and
Nationalists had already agreed to work together (the Second United Front), and
that Zhou Enlai was second in command of one of the Nationalist propaganda
organizations. The American’s curious response was “That’s because Mao Zedong
was cruel.” Incidentally, Zhou Enlai never even hinted at anything resembling a
massacre in Nanking. We are not surprised that Hu Jintao could offer no response to
this question.
2. No reference to Nanking “massacre” at 300 press
conferences
In 2005, Asia University Professor
Higashinakano Shudo found top-secret documents compiled under the title “Outline
of International Propaganda Operations” at the Museum of Chinese Nationalist Party History in Taipei. On the basis of these primary references, Prof. Higashinakano
wrote a book entitled Top-Secret Chinese Nationalist Documents Reveal the
Truth about Nanking Incident[2](see http://www.sdh-fact.com/CL02_1/27_S4.pdf
). The documents contain detailed descriptions of 300 press conferences for
foreign journalists held during the 11-month period between December 1, 1937 and October 24, 1938. However, as we
mentioned earlier, no announcement was made about a massacre in Nanking at any of those press
conferences. The Chinese Nationalist Party (in other words, the Chinese
government) never made any formal reference to a massacre at that time and,
understandably, did not condemn the Japanese for having perpetrated a massacre.
Confronted with these facts, Mr. Hu could not respond to this question, either.
Our efforts to explode a myth that has
persisted far too long have prompted many to label us Holocaust deniers. (Of
course, the accusers never offer a rebuttal based on facts or logic.) But the
facts demonstrate that if we are Holocaust deniers, then so were Mao Zedong and
the Chinese Nationalist Party in the late 1930s. Like the authors of Mao:
The Unknown Story, we must also censure Mao Zedong. However, since there
was no Nanking massacre, such censure would be misplaced.
3. Nanking’s
population increases during Japanese occupation
Documents of the Nanking Safety Zone is a compilation of records describing the activities of the
International Committee for the Nanking Safety Zone. It was issued in book form
by the Shanghai publisher Kelly & Walsh in 1939, under the supervision of the
Nationalist government’s Council of International Affairs. Prior to the
Japanese invasion, Tang Shengzhi, commander in chief of the Nanking Defense
Corps, had ordered all civilians to assemble in a safety zone. However, it was
15 foreign nationals (Americans, Germans, etc.) who formed the International Committee
and saw to those civilians’ needs. Therefore, its members were in a better
position than anyone to observe the situation there.
According
to the records in Documents of the Nanking Safety Zone, Nanking’s population was
200,000 immediately before the city fell to the Japanese. Statistics dated December
17, 18, 21 and 27 show that the population was, again, 200,000.[3]Obviously, there was no decrease in December 1937, and certainly none
numbering in the tens of thousands. Moreover, by January 14, 1938, the population had increased to 250,000.[4]
Note that these are records kept by the members of the International Committee,
the overseers of the Safety Zone; we can assume that they are reasonably
accurate. They alone soundly discredit the claim that 300,000 Chinese were
massacred in Nanking.
4.
Witnesses in only one of 26 murder cases
Documents
of the Nanking Safety Zone contains accounts of
crimes reported by Chinese civilians and attributed to Japanese military
personnel. These records contain reports of 26 murders, but only one of them
mentions a witness. Furthermore, a case involving a Chinese soldier shot while
attempting to escape is described as a lawful killing. In other words, the
records kept by the International Committee list absolutely no witnessed
unlawful killings. Committee members prepared case records for every crime
reported by civilians; they did not, however, investigate the crimes, which
makes the records less than reliable. Of the 25 remaining murders, in only
three cases was there a body at the alleged crime scene. Therefore, the other
22 reports may have been hearsay.
Nanking is smaller than the
Borough of Manhattan in New York
City. Two hundred thousand
people were crowded into the Safety Zone, which was about the size of Central Park (843 acres). The
number of murder cases recorded in Documents of the Nanking Safety Zone corresponds
well with the lack of a decrease in population (see 3. above). Hu Jintao could
not possibly explain how a 300,000-victim massacre occurred in Nanking.
5.
Photographs purportedly substantiating massacre claim are fakes
Books
asserting that there was a massacre in Nanking (including Iris Chang’s The Rape of Nanking) and the exhibits at
the Nanjing Massacre Memorial Hall include a large number of photographs that
purportedly substantiate their position. However, scientific investigations
have proven beyond a shadow of doubt that not one of those photographs is
authentic. For details, please refer to Analyzing the “Photographic Evidence”
of the Nanking Massacre,[5]
available at http://www.sdh-fact.com/CL02_1/27_S4.pdf.
Most of the photographs can be traced to two propaganda books produced by the
Nationalist government’s Propaganda Bureau: Japanese Atrocities Witnessed by
Foreigners and Record of Atrocities Committed by the Japanese Enemy.
All of them are fakes, some of which have been “transformed” by simply rewriting
their captions. One of them appears to show a Japanese soldier about to behead
a Chinese. Even a cursory examination reveals inconsistencies in the way
shadows of the men are cast; the photograph is a composite. Furthermore, no one
but a member of the Japanese military, or someone authorized by the Japanese
military, would have been permitted to take such a photograph. But the Japanese
military would never have had any reason to engage in such an act, much less photograph
it. And indeed, no photograph even remotely resembling this one has been found
in Japan. This is, pure and simple, a photograph that was staged for propaganda
purposes. A summary of the aforementioned book can be found at http://www.sdh-fact.com/CL02_1/42_S4.pdf.
In the
open questions addressed to President Hu Jintao, we urged him to produce
photographic evidence of a massacre in Nanking so that we can analyze it scientifically. We doubt that Mr. Hu is
not foolish enough to hand over more counterfeit photographs for our scrutiny.
Our
open questions prove, in the most basic ways, that there was no massacre in Nanking. Primary contemporary
sources like Documents of the Safety Zone negate counterfeit photographs
and specious testimonies, no matter how numerous. And only in a propagandist
scenario can there be a massacre without a decrease in population.
* * * * *
OPEN QUESTIONS FOR
HIS EXCELLENCY HU JINTAO,
PRESIDENT OF THE
PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF CHINA
May 5, 2008
As
enthusiastic supporters of friendly relations between Japan and the PRC, we would like to
extend the warmest of welcomes to President Hu Jintao on the occasion of Your
Excellency’s visit to Japan.
For some
years, our organization has been engaged in an investigation into the events
that transpired in Nanking in connection with the Battle of Nanking, which took place in December
1937. We are profoundly concerned about the PRC’s position on and approach to
these events. Additionally, we are exceedingly uncomfortable with the duplicity
of the PRC in its pursuit of friendship with Japan on the one hand, and actions that
are most unfriendly in nature — the expansion and renovation of the Nanjing
Massacre Memorial Hall in 2007 — on the other. Recent research has proven that
there is absolutely no basis for the claim that there was a massacre in that
city. We respectfully request Your Excellency’s responses to five important
questions, which follow.
1.Chinese Communist Party
Chairman Mao Zedong never referred to a massacre in Nanking. He made exactly one
mention of the Battle of Nanking during a lecture delivered at Yan’an six months
after the conflict, reproduced in On Protracted War. Chairman Mao
criticized the Japanese for failing to annihilate Chinese troops after having
surrounded them. If there had been slaughter in Nanking of a magnitude so great
(300,000 civilian victims) as to prompt the description “holocaust of the
century,” there is not the slightest chance that he would have been silent on
the matter. What are Your Excellency’s thoughts on the facts presented here?
2.In November 1937, during the
Second United Front and prior to the Battle of Nanking, the Nationalist Party
established a new section at the Central Propaganda Bureau — the International
Propaganda Section. We would like to direct Your Excellency’s attention to a
top-secret document entitled “Outline of International Propaganda Operations,”
which states that the International Propaganda Section held 300 press
conferences in Hankou between December 1, 1937 and October 24, 1938 (a period
that includes the Battle of Nanking); they were attended by 35 foreign journalists
and diplomats, on the average. How does Your Excellency explain the fact that
not once during any of these 300 conferences was a statement or announcement
made to the effect that a massacre had been perpetrated, or that prisoners of
war had been unlawfully killed in Nanking? Does Your Excellency, too, find
these circumstances extraordinary?
3.The International Committee
administered to the civilians remaining in Nanking, who were gathered in the Safety Zone. Records of the International
Committee’s activities were published in 1939 as Documents of the Nanking
Safety Zone by a British company in Shanghai, under the
auspices of the Nationalist Government’s Council of International Affairs.
According to those records, the population of Nanking prior to its occupation
by the Japanese was 200,000. That figure remained unchanged, at 200,000,
throughout the remainder of 1937. By the end of January, it had increased to
250,000. These statistics completely and utterly destroy the credibility of any
accusation of a massacre that claimed 300,000 victims. What are Your
Excellency’s views on this matter?
4.Among the records in the
aforementioned Documents of the Nanking Safety Zone are detailed
complaints about misconduct attributed to Japanese military personnel. They
include a total of 26 murders, only one of which was witnessed (to that account
is appended a note describing the “murder” as a lawful execution). Can Your
Excellency reconcile these records with the PRC’s claim of a massacre with
300,000 victims?
5.Photographs purported to be
evidence of a massacre in Nanking are on display at the Nanjing Massacre Memorial Hall, at other
exhibitions, and in printed publications. However, Analyzing Photographic “Evidence” of the Nanking Massacre by Higashinakano Shudo (Soshisha, 2005) and other recent scientific
research reveal that there are no photographs attesting to a massacre in Nanking. If Your Excellency is
aware of photographic evidence of a massacre, please have it forwarded to us so
that we may examine it.
On the basis of the factual
information contained in these five questions, we are completely and totally
convinced that there was no massacre in Nanking. We would greatly appreciate Your
Excellency’s responses to our questions. Please note that we have selected the
open-question format precisely because the matter at hand is clearly one of the
prime concerns of many citizens of Japan and the PRC. Our hopes for
friendly relations between our two nations, for all generations to come, rest
in Your Excellency’s hands.
COMMITTEE FOR THE EXAMINATION OF THE
FACTS ABOUT NANKING
[5] Higashinakano Shudo et al., Nankin
no gyakusatsu no “shoko shashin” wo kensho suru (Analyzing the Aphotographic evidence@ of the Nanking massacre) (Tokyo: Soshisha, 2005).