» Insurance
» Sponsors
Corbin Pacific Inc.
EPG MotoATV.com - Write Your Review and Win!SportbikeTrackGearDan Vance RacingRiders Discount
Snowmobile.com
PartsPitStopBikeBanditMotorcycle.com Classifieds!Motorcycle.comAdvertise With Us
» Sponsors
Go Back   TwoWheelForum: Motorcycle and Sportbike forums

Corbin Pacific Inc.
TwoWheelForum: Motorcycle and Sportbike forums

TwoWheelForum: Motorcycle and Sportbike forums (http://www.twowheelforum.com/index.php)
-   General Off Topic (http://www.twowheelforum.com/forumdisplay.php?f=21)
-   -   June 21, time to remember... (http://www.twowheelforum.com/showthread.php?t=5201)

bumblebee 06-21-2005 10:43 AM

June 21, time to remember...
 
On June 21, 1945, Japanese troops surrendered the Pacific Island of Okinawa to the United States after one of the longest and bloodiest battles of World War II. Having recovered the South Pacific islands from Japanese control, the United States was ready next to launch an onslaught on the Japanese mainland
The American strategy for conquering Japan was to capture a succession of weaker Japanese outposts, "island-hopping" toward the Japanese mainland. Slowly, in many bloody battles in the Pacific jungle, at Guadalcanal, the Solomon Islands, the Philippines and Iwo Jima, the U.S. forces wrested the Pacific territory from the Japanese, island by island.

On April 1, 1945, 60,000 U.S. troops landed on the beaches, where they met with little resistance. However, more than 75,000 Japanese troops were on the island under the command of Lieutenant General Ushijima Mitsuru, who withdrew his soldiers to the southern section of the island. There, the Japanese held out for nearly three months, hiding in the jungle, in caves, and engaging the Americans in intense guerilla warfare.


On June 21, Lieutenant General Ushijima Mitsuru surrendered Okinawa to the United States. The next day he committed suicide. The United States had taken the island with the loss of 12,000 American lives and 100,000 Japanese lives. Still Japan refused to concede that the Second World War was in effect over. The ultimate surrender of Japan to the Allies would be, according to Japanese cultural norms, an unthinkable dishonor.

jdog 06-21-2005 08:57 PM

Duely noted. I compliment you on your writing. :dthumb:

Need4Speed 06-21-2005 10:14 PM

Well said bee !!! :yesnod:

bumblebee 06-22-2005 07:31 AM

I believe the biggest point here is that we, Americans, lost 12,000 brave souls on 1 island in 3 months, and the Japanese lost 100,000 young soldiers...We are fortunate that less than 2000 have been killed in Iraq in 2 years...regardless of your political point of view, liberty and freedom are paid for with the blood of the young and we at home have a duty to support them every way and time we can, until they all get to come home...

Grafixx01 06-22-2005 01:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bumblebee
I believe the biggest point here is that we, Americans, lost 12,000 brave souls on 1 island in 3 months, and the Japanese lost 100,000 young soldiers...We are fortunate that less than 2000 have been killed in Iraq in 2 years...regardless of your political point of view, liberty and freedom are paid for with the blood of the young and we at home have a duty to support them every way and time we can, until they all get to come home...


Well, that'd be nice if EVERY American thought that way for people who are serving or served. I've gotten all the extremes from "Mommie, look a soldier." and people coming up to me, shaking my hand and thanking me to ingored to even spit on. Though I also have views that differ from the policy and decision makers in the U.S. Government.

Gas Man 06-22-2005 02:48 PM

:pat: :pat:

bumblebee 06-22-2005 03:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Grafixx01
Well, that'd be nice if EVERY American thought that way for people who are serving or served. I've gotten all the extremes from "Mommie, look a soldier." and people coming up to me, shaking my hand and thanking me to ingored to even spit on. Though I also have views that differ from the policy and decision makers in the U.S. Government.


Be very thankful you weren't in uniform between 1970 and 1976...

Grafixx01 06-22-2005 07:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bumblebee
Be very thankful you weren't in uniform between 1970 and 1976...


My dad was, he was in Vietnam. I'll have to ask him if he ever got like spit on and stuff like that.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 12:55 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2010, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v3.2.2

All times are GMT -5. The time now is 12:55 PM.

Motorcycle News, Videos and Reviews
Kawasaki ForumDucati ForumHarley DavidsonYamaha R1BMW S1000RR Forum
Vulcan Forums Ducati MonsterV-Rod Forum Yamaha R6 Kawasaki Z1000
Kawasaki ZX Forum Honda 600RR Harley ForumYZF-R6 ForumSportbike Forum
Kawasaki ZX-10RHonda 1000RRSuzuki SVYamaha FZ8Can Am Spyder
Kawasaki KLR 650Honda RC51Suzuki V-StromStar Motorcycles Aprilia Forum
Kawasaki VersysHonda FurySuzuki GSXR Triumph ForumKTM Forum
Kawasaki EX-500Honda GoldwingGSX-R ForumTriumph 675Victory Forums

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2010, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.