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Japan

The occupation of Japan was, from start to finish, an American 
operation. General Douglans MacArthur, sole supreme commander of the 
Allied Power was in charge. The Americans had insufficient men to make 
a military government of Japan possible; so t hey decided to act 
through the existing Japanese gobernment. General Mac Arthur became, 
except in name, dictator of Japan. He imposed his will on Japan. 
Demilitarization was speedily carried out, demobilization of the former 
imperial forces was complet ed by early 1946.
Japan was extensively fire bomded during the second world war. 
The stench of sewer gas, rotting garbage, and the acrid smell of ashes 
and scorched debris pervaded the air. The Japanese people had to live 
in the damp, and col d of the concrete buildings, because they were the 
only ones left. Little remained of the vulnerable wooden frame, tile 
roof dwelling lived in by most Japanese. When the first signs of 
winter set in, the occupation forces immediately took over all the s 
team-heated buildings. The Japanese were out in the cold in the first 
post war winter fuel was very hard to find, a family was considered 
lucky if they had a small barely glowing charcoal brazier to huddle 
around. That next summer in random spots new ho uses were built, each 
house was standardized at 216 square feet, and required 2400 board feet 
of material in order to be built. A master plan for a modernistic city 
had been drafted, but it was cast aside because of the lack of time 
before the next winte r. The thousands of people who lived in railroad 
stations and public parks needed housing.
All the Japanese heard was democracy from the Americans. All they 
cared about was food. General MacAruther asked the government to send 
food, when they refus ed he sent another telegram that said, "Send me 
food, or send me bullets."
American troops were forbidden to eat local food, as to keep from 
cutting from cutting into the sparse local supply.
No food was was brought in expressly for the Japanese durning the 
first six months after the American presence there. Herbert Hoover, 
serving as chairman of a special presidential advisory committee, 
recommended minimum imports to Japan of 870,000 tons of food to be 
distributed in different urban areas. Fi sh, the source of so much of 
the protein in the Japanese diet, were no longer available in adequate 
quantities because the fishing fleet, particularly the large vessels, 
had been badly decimated by the war and because the U.S.S.R. closed 
off the fishing g rounds in the north.
The most important aspect of the democratization policy was the 
adoption of a new constitution and its supporting legislation. When 
the Japanese government proved too confused or too reluctant to come up 
with a constitutional reform that satisfied MacArthur, he had his own 
staff draft a new constitution in February 1946. This, with only minor 
changes, was then adopted by the Japanese government in the form of an 
imperial amendment to the 1889 constitution and went into effect on May 
3, 1947. The new Constitution was a perfection of the British 
parliamentary form of government that the Japanese had been moving 
toward in the 1920s. Supreme political power was assigned to the Diet. 
Cabinets were made responsible to the Diet by having the prime minister 
elected by the lower house. The House of Peers was replaced by an 
elected House of Councillors. The judicial system was made as 
independent of executive interference as possible, and a newly created 
supreme court was given the power to review the constitutionality of 
laws. Local governments were given greatly increased powers.
The Emperor was reduced to being a symbol of the unity of the 
nation. Japanese began to see him in person. He went to hospitals, 
schools, mines, industrial plants; he broke ground for public buildings 
and snipped tape at the opening of gates and highways. He was steered 
here and there, shown things, and kept muttering, "Ah so, ah so." 
People started to call him "Ah-so-san." Suddenly the puybli c began to 
take this shy, ill-at-ease man to their hearts. They saw in him 
something of their own conqured selves, force to do what was alien to 
them. In 1948, in a newspaper poll, Emperior Hirohito was voted the 
most popular man in Japan.
Civil li berties were emphasized, women were given full equality 
with men. Article 13 and 19 in the new Constitution, prohibits 
discrimination in political, economic, and social relations because of 
race, creed, sex, social status, or family origen. This is one of the 
most explicitly progressive statements on human rights anywhere in law. 
Gerneral Douglas MacArthur emerged as a radical feminist because he was 
"convinced that the place of women in Japan must be brought to a level 
consistent with that of women in the western democracies." So the 
Japanese women got their equal rights amendment long before a concerted 
effort was made to obtain one in America.
Compulsory education was extened to nine years, efforts were made 
to make education more a traning in thinking than in rote memory, and 
the school system above the six elementary grades was revised to 
conform to the American pattern. This last mechanical change produced 
great confusion and dissatisfaction but became so entrenched that it 
could not be re vised even after the Americans departed.
Japan's agriculture was the quickest of national activities to 
recover because of land reform. The Australians came up with the best 
plan. It was basis was this: There were to be no absentee landlards. 
A person who actually worked the land could own up to 7.5 arcers. 
Anyone living in a village near by could keep 2.5 acres. Larger plots 
of land, exceeding these limits, were bought up by the government and 
sold on easy terms to former tenants. Within two years 2 million 
tenants became landowners. The American occupation immediately gained 
not only a large constituency, for the new owners had a vested interest 
in preserving the change, but also a psychological momentum for other 
changes they wanted to ini tiate.
The American labor policy in Japan had a double goal: to 
encourage the growth of democratic unions while keeping them free of 
communists. Union organization was used as a balance to the power of 
management. To the surprise of the American authorties, this movement 
took a decidedly more radical turn. In the desperate economic 
conditions of early postwar Japan, there was little room for successful 
bargaining over wages, and many labor unions instead made a bid to take 
over industry and o perate it in their own behalf. Moreover large 
numbers of workers in Japan were government employees, such as railroad 
workers and teachers, whose wages were set not by management but by the 
government. Direct political action therefore seemed more meani ngful 
to these people than wage bargaining. The Japanese unions called for a 
general strike on February 1, 1947. MacArthur warned the union 
leadership that he would not countenace a nationwide strike. The 
strike leaders yieled to MacArthur's will. The re after the political 
appeal of radical labor action appeared to wane.
The Americans wanted to disband the great Zaibatsu trust as a 
means of reducing Japan's war-making potential. There were about 15 
Zaibatsu families such as - Mitsui, Mitsubishi, Yasuda, and Sumitomo. 
The Zaibatsu controled the industry of Japan. MacArthur's liaison men 
pressured the Diet into passing the Deconcentration Law in December 
1947. In the eyes of most Japanese this law was designed to cripple 
Japanese business and i ndustry forever. The first step in breaking up 
the Zaibatsu was to spread their ownership out among the people and to 
prevent the old owners from ever again exercising control. The stocks 
of all the key holding companies were to be sold to the public. 
Friends of the old Zaibatsu bought the stock. In the long run the 
Zaibatsu were not exactly destroyed, but a few were weakened and others 
underwent a considerable shuffle.
The initial period of the occupation from 1945 to 1948 was marked 
by reform, the second phase was one of stabilization. Greater 
attention was given to improvement of the economy. Japan was a heavy 
expense to the United States. The ordered breakup of the Zaibatsu was 
slowed down. The union movement continued to grow, to the ult imate 
benefit of the worker. Unremitting pressure on employers brought 
swelling wages, which meant the steady expansion of Japan domestic 
consumer market. This market was a major reason for Japan's subsequent 
economic boom. Another boom to the economy was the Korean War which 
proved to be a blessing in disguise. Japan became the main staging 
area for military action in Korea and went on a war boom economy with 
out having to fight in or pay for a war.
The treaty of peace with Japan was signed at San Francisco in 
September 1951 by Japan, the United States, and forty-seven other 
nations. The Soviet Union refused to sign it. The treaty went into 
effect in April 1952, officially terminating the United States military 
occupation and restoring full independence.
What is extraordinary in the Occupation and its aftermath was the 
insignificance of the unpleasant. For the Japanese, the nobility of 
American ideals and the essential benignity of the American presence 
assuaged much of the bitterness and anguish of defeat. For the 
Americans, the joys of promoting peace and democracy triumphed over the 
attendant fustrations and grievances. Consequently, the Occupation 
served to lay down a substantial capital of good will on which both 
America and Jap an would draw in the years ahead.

BIBLIOGRAPHY
Christopher, Robert C. /The Japanese Mind/. New York: Fawcett 
Columbine, 1983
La Cerda, John. /The Conqueror Comes to Tea/. New Brunswick: R utgers 
University Press, 1946
Manchester, William. /American Caesar/. New York: Dell Publishing 
Company, Inc., 1978
Perry, John Curtis. /Beneath the Eagle's Wings/. New York: Dodd, Mead 
And Company, 1980
Reischauer, Edwin O. / The Japanese/. London: Belknap Press, 1977
Seth, Ronald. /Milestones in Japanese History/. Philadelphia: Chilton 
Book Company, 1969
Sheldon, Walt. /The Honorable Conquerors/. New York: The Macmillan 
Company., 1965




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