Shiro Ishii and the Unit 731 Prison Camp

The Japanese Army Experimented on Prisoners in China During WWII

Shiro Ishii and Unit 731 - Nostalgia2
Shiro Ishii and Unit 731 - Nostalgia2
Under the leadership of Shiro Ishii the Japanese carried out experiments on human guinea pigs - known as marutas - from 1933 until the end of the Second World War.

The focal point of these experiments into biological warfare was the prisoner of war camp known as Unit 731 located in Pingfan, Manchuria, where Chinese inmates were subjected to gruesome experiments aimed at testing the limits of the human body and the effectiveness of biological and chemical agents. These experiments were replicated elsewhere on allied POW's in the puppet state of Manchukou created by the Japanese and nominally ruled by Pu Yi the last emperor of China.

Shiro Ishii, a Japanese Doctor Mengele

Born on 25th June 1892, Shiro Ishii was a brilliant medical student at the Imperial University in Kyoto who then went on to become a surgeon in the Imperial Guard. Further studies cemented Ishii's status as one of the country's pre-eminent specialists in the field of bacterial research and he is credited with inventing a revolutionary filtration system which could remove all traces of bacteria from stagnant water.

From 1933, Ishii switched his attention away from the prevention of infections and begun to concentrate his research on how dangerous bacterium could be best employed in warfare.

Unit 731, the Centre of Japan's Wartime Experiments on Humans

In 1933, Shiro Ishii moved his team of researchers to Manchuria in China and assumed leadership of a centre of experimentation into biological warfare which would later come to be known as Unit No. 731, and eventually be responsible for the deaths of around 3,000 inmates. The human guinea pigs of Unit 731 were mostly captured Chinese soldiers or locals thought hostile to the occupation, while at the nearby camps of Hogoin and Moukden similar experiments were repeated on captured Russian and Allied soldiers respectively, and the results transmitted back to Ishii's personnel for verification.

Inmates of both camps were subjected to a terrifying array of experiments. Bombs containing gangrene or various bacterium were set-off in close proximity to prisoners, not with the intention of causing death by explosion, but in order to study the effectiveness of airborne infection. Among many other atrocities, subjects were exposed to extremes of temperature, decompression, bombarded by x-rays, starved, deprived of sleep, boiled alive, killed in giant centrifuges, or even subjected to vivisection whilst still alive.

The Aims of Unit 731 and Shiro Ishii's Research

The horrific experiments carried out within the walls of Unit 731 were not just a case of cruelty for cruelty's sake, the aim of Shiro Ishii's research was the development of an effective chemical and biological weapons programme that could turn the tide of the war in Japan's favour. Shiro Ishii was particularly interested in the plague and a significant amount of Unit 731's resources were expended on breeding rats to sustain plague carrying fleas.

Several outbreaks of plague in China during the early 1940's can be directly attributed to Ishii's experiments on the local populace. When running at full capacity, Unit 731 was theoretically capable of producing three hundred kilos of plague germs per month and enough bacteria of various sorts to kill the entire population of the world several times over.

The Destruction of Unit 731 and the War Crimes Tribunals

In August 1945 as the Soviet army swept into Manchuria, Shiro Ishii evacuated around 2,000 members of Unit 731 back to Japan; everyone was under strict instructions to separate and not to talk to anyone of what had happened at the camp. The retreating Japanese army destroyed all traces of Unit 731 and other similar camps, although some documents still fell into Soviet hands and were used to set up their own programmes after the war. At Unit 731 alone, the army killed all of the prisoners and machine-gunned six hundred local workers.

Once Japan formally surrendered Shiro Ishii and others deemed responsible for carrying out atrocities in the pursuit of biological warfare were regularly interrogated by the Americans, who refused all Soviet requests to hand them over. Shiro Ishii never faced a war crimes tribunal, the subject of biological warfare was never raised during any of the trials of suspected Japanese war criminals, and General MacArthur himself officially denied the existence of any Japanese experiments on American soldiers.

The reason for this is simple: a deal had been struck whereby Ishii told the Americans everything he knew about biological and chemical warfare in return for immunity from prosecution. Shiro Ishii died of throat cancer in 1959 but the last years of his life are the subject of some dispute: it is claimed that he continued his research into biological warfare in America, but his daughter denies this and asserts that he spent the post-war period in Japan.

References

Japan Focus

Century China

Rich Ward, Xiaoxiao Ma

Rich Ward - Rich Ward is a freelance writer with a passion for South-East Asian politics and history, especially the very peculiar beast that is North ...

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