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Authors: Yuki Tanaka
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Japan’s Comfort Women
This groundbreaking and highly controversial book reveals how sex is used and abused to maintain military morale and discipline. It reveals the story of the “comfort women” who were forced to enter prostitution as sexual slaves of the Japanese Imperial Army in the period immediately before and during World War II.
Using previously untapped personal testimonies and an unprecedented range of archival and documentary research, Yuki Tanaka exposes Japanese military and political leaders who ordered and controlled this regime of sexual exploitation, and movingly describes its devastating effects on the lives of scores of thousands of Asian women victims.
Controversially,
Japan’s Comfort Women
also examines the sexual conduct of the Allied forces in this period and the nature of the postwar “comfort women”
system that Japan created to service US soldiers during the Occupation. The author’s exhaustive research in Japanese, American and Australian archives reveals how the US government, for reasons of political expediency, failed to prosecute as war criminals those responsible for the “comfort women” system.
This book offers unique insights into this terrible episode in Japanese, Asian and American history and the broader dimensions of military violence against women.
Yuki Tanaka
is a Professor at the Hiroshima Peace Institute, Hiroshima City University, Japan. He is the author of the provocative, bestselling book
Hidden
Horrors: Japanese War Crimes in World War II
, and was the historical advisor on a recent BBC TV documentary film series,
Horror in the East
.
Asia’s Transformations
Edited by Mark Selden
Binghamton University and Cornell University, USA
The books in this series explore the political, social, economic and cultural consequences of Asia’s twentieth-century transformations. The series emphasizes the tumultuous interplay of local, national, regional and global forces as Asia bids to become the hub of the world economy. While focusing on the contemporary, it also looks back to analyze the antecedents of Asia’s contested rise.
This series comprises two strands:
Asia’s Transformations
aims to address the needs of students and teachers, and the titles will be published in hardback and paperback. Titles include:
Debating Human Rights
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Critical essays from the United States and
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Carl A Trocki
Edited by Peter Van Ness
Chinese Society
Hong Kong’s History
Change, conflict and resistance
State and society under colonial rule
Edited by Elizabeth J Perry and Mark Selden
Edited by Tak-Wing Ngo
Mao’s Children in the New China
Japan’s Comfort Women
Voices from the Red Guard generation
Sexual slavery and prostitution during
Yarong Jiang and David Ashley
World War II and the US occupation
Yuki Tanaka
Remaking the Chinese State
Strategies, society and security
Edited by Chien-min Chao and Bruce J Dickson
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Pacific Relations in war and peace, 1919–1945
Michael Molasky
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4. Imperialism in South East Asia
Critical voices from the margin
‘A fleeting, passing phase’
Edited by Sonia Ryang
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* Now available in paperback
Japan’s Comfort Women
Sexual slavery and prostitution during
World War II and the US occupation
Yuki Tanaka
London and New York
What our fathers did not tell us
First published 2002 by Routledge
11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE
Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada
by Routledge
29 West 35th Street, New York, NY 10001
Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group
This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2003.
© 2002 Yuki Tanaka
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Tanaka, Toshiyuki, 1949– Japan’s comfort women: sexual slavery and prostitution during World War II and the U.S. occupation / Yuki Tanaka.
p. cm. — (Asia’s transformations)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. Comfort women—Asia. 2. World War, 1939–1945—Women—Asia. 3.
Japan—History—Allied occupation, 1945–1952. 4. Soldiers—Japan—Sexual behavior. 5.
Soldiers—United States—Sexual behavior. I. Title. II. Series.
D810.C698 T36 2001
940.54 ′05′0922519—dc21
2001048307
ISBN 0-203-30275-3 Master e-book ISBN
ISBN 0-203-34456-1 (Adobe eReader Format)
ISBN 0–415–19400–8 (hbk)
ISBN 0–415–19401–6 (pbk)
For Mika and Alisa
Contents
List of figure and tables
xi
List of plates
xii
Foreword
xv
Acknowledgments
xvii
Author’s note
xx
Introduction
1
1
The origins of the comfort women system
8
The initial establishment of comfort stations
8
A rapid increase in comfort stations after the
“
Rape of Nanjing
”
12
The organizational structure of the comfort women system
19
Why comfort women?
28
2
Procurement of comfort women and their lives as
sexual slaves
33
The colonization of Korea and the growth of the prostitution
industry
33
Procurement of Korean and Taiwanese women
37
Procurement of women in China and the Philippines
44
Life as a comfort woman
50
3
Comfort women in the Dutch East Indies
61
Japan’s invasion of the Dutch East Indies and military violence
against women
61
Exploitation of existing prostitutes by the Japanese troops
64
Procurement of Dutch women
67
x
Contents
Enforced prostitution at comfort stations in Semarang
72
The Dutch military authorities’ indifference towards Indonesian
comfort women
77
4
Why did the US forces ignore the comfort women issue?
84
US military indifference towards comfort women
84
US military policies on the prevention of venereal disease in
World War II
87
The Brumfield Report and military-controlled prostitution
92
Military prostitution in the Caribbean, Australia and elsewhere
99
Criticism, cover-up and a change in the War Department’s attitude
106
5
Sexual violence committed by the Allied occupation forces against Japanese women: 1945 –1946
110
Sexual violence prior to the Allied occupation of Japan
110
Fear and confusion before the landing of the Allied occupation
forces
112
Official reports on sexual violence committed by the occupation
forces against Japanese women
116
Testimonies of victims of sexual violence committed by the
occupation troops
127
6
Japanese comfort women for the Allied occupation forces 133
The Japanese government creates a comfort women system for the
occupation forces
133
The Recreation and Amusement Association
141
Occupation policies and the spread of prostitution
150
VD problems and the failure of GHQ’s VD prevention policies
155
Epilogue
167
From karayuki-san to comfort woman
167
Sexual slavery, social death, and military violence
173
Imperialism, the patriarchal state, and the control of sexuality
180
Notes
183
Index
206
Figure and tables
Figure
1.1
Japanese Imperial Army chain of command
22
Tables
1.1
Number of comfort stations and comfort women,
east-central China, 1938–1939
15
1.2
The distribution of comfort stations and the sanitary conditions [southern China, 1939]
17
2.1
Established rates of South Sector Billet Brothel [ Manila, c. 1943 or 1944]
54
4.1
Incidence of VD, Australian Infantry forces in the Middle East, 1940–1942
97
5.1
Reported cases of rape and attempted rape in the Tokyo and Kanagawa areas, March–September 1946
125
Plates
1.1
Japanese comfort women in northern China
9
1.2
Japanese officer beside victims of the Nanjing Massacre 12
1.3
Comfort women being transferred to a barge for landing 17
1.4
Comfort women and Japanese soldiers on a military ship 25
1.5
The image of Japanese womanhood: healthy baby contest 31
2.1
Comfort woman entertaining a drunken member of the Japanese Imperial Navy
36
2.2
Korean comfort women captured in Burma
41
2.3
Taiwanese nurses leaving Taipei, some of whom were later exploited as comfort women
43
2.4
A Filipina girl who was stabbed with a bayonet
48
2.5
Japanese soldiers waiting outside a comfort station in China 58
3.1
Japanese soldiers cycling in Batavia, Java
63
3.2
A woman and children in a house at Kampon Makassar Internment Camp, Batavia
67
3.3
Houses at Kampon Makassar Internment Camp
68
3.4
Women at the Kampon Makassar Internment Camp
70
3.5
Forty-six Javanese comfort women found by Australian troops in the southwest of Timoa Island
81
3.6
A Javanese comfort woman on Timoa Island after the Japanese surrender
82
4.1
Allied soldiers queuing outside a brothel in Cairo during World War II
94
4.2
RAAF soldiers in a nightclub in Cairo with some of the club’s women “entertainers”
95
4.3
US soldiers with Australian girls in Melbourne
104
4.4
Japanese propaganda leaflets designed to exploit the tension between US and Australian troops over Australian women
105
5.1
A US soldier fondles the hair of an Okinawan girl 111
5.2
General MacArthur arrives at Atsugi airport,
August 30, 1945
117
5.3
Japanese policemen in Yokohama
119
Plates
xiii
5.4
Commander US 8th Army, R. L. Eichelberger, General MacArthur and H. Robertson, Commander-in-Chief BCOF
review the US Independence Day parade, Tokyo
123
5.5
Japanese women employed as telephone operators at the headquarters Signal Regiment, BCOF, Kure