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KAMIKAZE

Muradk

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Kamikaze
1944-1945 Japan's Suicide Pilots of World War II
The introduction of Japanese kamikaze pilots was one of the most dramatic developments of the second world war. But what motivated these young men to fly their fatal missions? There are some clues in the manual they carried in their cockpits for inspiration, and which is now published in English for the first time. Here are some extracts.


The mission of to-go units
Transcend life and death. When you eliminate all thoughts about life and death, you will be able to totally disregard your earthly life. This will also enable you to concentrate your attention on eradicating the enemy with unwavering determination, meanwhile reinforcing your excellence in flight skills.
Exert the best in yourself
Strike an enemy vessel that is either moored or at sea. Sink the enemy and thus pave the road for our people's victory.
Take a walk around the airfield
When you take this walk, be aware of your surroundings. This airstrip is the key to the success or failure of your mission. Devote all your attention to it. Look at the terrain. What are the characteristics of the ground? What are the length and width of the airstrip? In case you will take off at dusk, or early morning, or after sundown, what are the obstacles to be remembered: an electric pole, a tree, a house, a hill?
How to pilot a fully dressed-up [heavily equipped] aircraft that you dearly love
Before taking off. (After taxiing the plane from the camouflaged emplacement to the airstrip.) You can envision your target firmly in your mind as you bring your plane to a standstill.
Breathe deeply three times. Say in your mind: "Yah" (field), "Kyu" (ball), "Joh" (all right) as you breathe deeply. Proceed straight ahead on the airstrip. Otherwise you may damage the landing gears.
Circle above the airstrip right after take-off. Do so at the minimum height of 200m. Circle at an angle within five degrees and keep your nose pointed downwards.
Principles you should know
Keep your health in the very best condition. If you are not in top physical condition, you will not be able to achieve an ideal hit by tai-atari (body-crashing).
Just as you cannot fight well on an empty stomach, you cannot deftly manipulate the control stick if you are suffering from diarrhoea, and cannot exert calm judgment if you are tormented by fever.
Be always pure-hearted and cheerful
A loyal fighting man is a pure-hearted and filial son.
Attain a high level of spiritual training
In order that you can exert the highest possible capability, you must prepare well your inner self. Some people say that spirit must come first before skill, but they are wrong. Spirit and skill are one. The two elements must be mastered together. Spirit supports skill and skill supports spirit.
Aborting your mission and returning to base
In the event of poor weather conditions when you cannot locate the target, or under other adverse circumstances, you may decide to return to base. Don't be discouraged. Do not waste your life lightly. You should not be possessed by petty emotions. Think how you can best defend the motherland. Remember what the wing commander has told you. You should return to the base jovially and without remorse.
When turning back and landing at the base
Discard the bomb at the area designated by the commanding officer. Fly in circles over the airfield. Observe conditions of the airstrip carefully. If you feel nervous, piss. Next, ascertain the direction of the wind and wind speed. Do you see any holes in the runway? Take three deep breaths.
The attack
Single-plane attack. Upon sighting a target, remove the (bomb's) safety pin. Go full speed ahead towards the target. Dive! Surprise the enemy. Don't let the enemy take time to counter your attack. Charge! Remember: the enemy may change course but be prepared for the enemy's evasive action. Be alert and avoid enemy fighters and flak fire.
Dive attack
This varies depending on the type of the aircraft. If you are approaching the enemy from a height of 6,000m, adjust your speed twice; or from a lower height of 4,000m, adjust speed once.
When you begin your dive, you must harmonise the height at which you commence the final attack with your speed. Beware of over-speeding and a too-steep angle of dive that will make the controls harder to respond to your touch. But an angle of dive that is too small will result in reduced speed and not enough impact on crashing.
Where to crash (the enemy's fatal spots)
Where should you aim? When diving and crashing on to a ship, aim for a point between the bridge tower and the smoke stack(s). Entering the stack is also effective.
Avoid hitting the bridge tower or a gun turret. In the case of an aircraft carrier, aim at the elevators. Or if that is difficult, hit the flight deck at the ship's stern.
For a low-altitude horizontal attack, aim at the middle of the vessel, slightly higher than the waterline. If that is difficult, in the case of an aircraft carrier, aim at the entrance to the aircraft hangar, or the bottom of the stack. For other vessels, aim close to the aft engine room.
Just before the crash
Your speed is at maximum. The plane tends to lift. But you can prevent this by pushing the elevator control forward sufficiently to allow for the increase in speed. Do your best. Push forward with all your might.
You have lived for 20 years or more. You must exert your full might for the last time in your life. Exert supernatural strength.
At the very moment of impact: do your best. Every deity and the spirits of your dead comrades are watching you intently. Just before the collision it is essential that you do not shut your eyes for a moment so as not to miss the target. Many have crashed into the targets with wide-open eyes. They will tell you what fun they had.
You are now 30m from the target
You will sense that your speed has suddenly and abruptly increased. You feel that the speed has increased by a few thousand-fold. It is like a long shot in a movie suddenly turning into a close-up, and the scene expands in your face.
The moment of the crash
You are two or three meters from the target. You can see clearly the muzzles of the enemy's guns. You feel that you are suddenly floating in the air. At that moment, you see your mother's face. She is not smiling or crying. It is her usual face.
All the happy memories
You won't precisely remember them but they are like a dream or a fantasy. You are relaxed and a smile creases your face. The sweet atmosphere of your boyhood days returns.
You view all that you experienced in your 20-odd years of life in rapid succession. But these things are not very clear.
In any event, only delightful memories come back to you. You cannot see your own face at that moment. But because of a succession of pleasant memories flashing through your mind, you feel that you smiled at the last moment. You may nod then, or wonder what happened. You may even hear a final sound like the breaking of crystal. Then you are no more.
Points to remember when making your last dive
Crashing bodily into a target is not easy. It causes the enemy great damage. Therefore the enemy will exert every means to avoid a hit.
Suddenly, you may become confused. You are liable to make an error. But hold on to the unshakeable conviction to the last moment that you will sink the enemy ship.
Remember when diving into the enemy to shout at the top of your lungs: "Hissatsu!" ("Sink without fail!") At that moment, all the cherry blossoms at Yasukuni shrine in Tokyo will smile brightly at you.
· Extracted from Kamikaze by Albert Axell.

In the year 1281, Japan was under attack by a Mongol invasion — led by the powerful Kublai Khan. However, just as it appeared that the invading Mongols were about to overwhelm the Japanese, a catastrophic typhoon swept through the land, eliminating the entire Mongol army. From that point on, the typhoon that saved Japan became known as the Kamikaze or Divine Wind.
Background
After the defeat at the Battle of Midway, and the fall of Saipanin July 1944, the Japanese revived the name Kamikaze and ascribed it to the suicide missions of their air force.
Japanese Vice Admiral Takashiro Ohnishi, commander of the First Air Fleet in the Philippines, had noted that the most effective way to inflict damage upon Allied warships was to crash planes into them. He noted that one accidental crash could do more damage than 10 planes firing machine guns. It was decided then that pilots would purposely crash their planes — with half a ton of explosives — into American warships.
Kamikaze pilot
The Kamikaze pilot
Generally, Kamikaze pilots were university students motivated by obligation, and loyalty to family and country. A typical pilot was a science student in his twenties. He prepared for his fiery destiny by writing farewell letters and poems to loved ones, receiving a "thousand-stitch sash*," and by holding a ceremony — a drink of water that gave him a "spiritual lifting" before wedging himself between 550-pound bombs.
It was adamantly believed that, because they were fighting for their Emperor God, the Kamikaze would bring them deliverance at the darkest hour, just as it had in the 13th century. In fact, the call for Kamikaze pilots drew a staggering response. Three times as many applied for suicide flights as the number of planes available. Experienced pilots were turned down. They were needed to train the younger men how to fly to their deaths.
The fact that they were to go on suicide missions was accepted without question by the Japanese pilots. All inductees into the Japanese armed forces were indoctrinated with the following five-point oath:

A soldier must make loyalty his obligation.
A soldier must make propriety his way of life.
A soldier must highly esteem military valor.
A soldier must have a high regard for righteousness.
A soldier must live a simple life.



The Mitsubishi A6M2

Nicknamed the "Zero," the Mitsubishi A6M2 was the Kamikaze pilot's personal "flying coffin." It had a maximum speed of 332 mph and a range of 1,930 miles. The A6M2 was 29 feet nine inches long, with a wingspan of about 39 feet. The aircraft was armed with two machine guns and could carry 264 pounds of bombs; however, the Japanese modified its structure to accommodate a heavier arsenal. The Zero was the main strike aircraft used at Pearl Harbor — dominating the skies during the early stages of World War II. A large number were shot down during the Battle of Midway, and it eventually became outperformed by the latest allied aircraft, such as the P-51 Mustang.

First attacks

Beginning with the Pearl Harbor Attack, Japanese suicide bombers sporadically crashed their planes into the enemy as a spur-of-the-moment decision.

On October 21, 1944, the flagship of the Royal Australian Navy, the heavy cruiser HMAS Australia, was hit by a Japanese plane carrying a 441-pound bomb, off Leyte Island. Although the bomb did not explode, the damage was devastating — killing at least 30 crew members.

On October 25, the Australia was hit again and was forced to retire to the New Hebrides for repairs. That same day, five Zeros attacked a U.S. escort carrier, the USS St. Lo off the Philippines coast, although only one Kamikaze actually hit the ship. Its bomb caused massive fires that resulted in the ship's bomb magazine exploding, sinking the carrier. Japanese pilots also hit and damaged several other Allied ships.

The initial successes of those attacks sparked an immediate expansion of the program. During the next few months, more than 2,000 planes staged such attacks. Those included new types of suicide attacks and explosives, including purpose-built Yokosuka MXY7 Ohka rocket-bombs, small boats packed with explosives, and manned torpedoes (equipped with a 3000-pound warhead) called the Kaiten.

Iwo Jima and Okinawa

On February 19th, 1945, the USS Enterprise and other carriers took up stations off Iwo Jima, attacking nearby enemy airfields, and providing close air support for the Marines that landed. By the time the marines unfurled the U.S. flag on Iwo Jima's summit, Kamikaze attacks had sunk the escort flattop Bismarck Sea CVE-95, knocked the USS Saratoga CV 3 out of the war for good, and temporarily halted the Enterprise — all while regularly harassing amphibious forces at the beachhead.

The day of April 6th, 1945, proved to be most telling for the use of Kamikazes in the battle for Okinawa. More than 350 aircraft at a time dove at the Allied fleet. Just the anticipation of Kamikaze attacks drove some American sailors literally insane. The destroyer Laffey was attacked by 20 aircraft at once. Her gunners stopped nine Kamikazes, but six others rammed into the ship. As on the similarly damaged USS Franklin, ineffable courage, and intensive training in firefighting, kept the Laffey afloat.

On the 7th of April, Kamikazes were still attacking in great numbers off the coast of Okinawa, severely damaging the carrier Hancock. By April 16th, suicide bombers desperately, but effectively damaged the USS Enterprise yet again, as well as the flattop USS Intrepid, and numerous picket destroyers were sunk or damaged. Admiral Marc A. Mitscher led Task Force 58 from his flagship, the carrier Bunker Hill CV-17. On May 11th, 1945, the flagship was hit by a Kamikaze pilot that killed 350 of his men.

The final Japanese defense of Okinawa was hard fought. For the Americans, victory brought a heavy price. The capture of Okinawa cost the Americans 49,000 in casualties, of whom 12,520 died. More than 110,000 Japanese were killed on the island. When it was clear that he had been defeated, General Mitsuru Ushijima committed ritual suicide (hara-kiri).

War's end

From October 25, 1944, to January 25, 1945, Kamikazes managed to sink two escort carriers and three destroyers. They also damaged 23 carriers, five battleships, nine cruisers, 23 destroyers and 27 other ships. American casualties amounted to 738 killed and another 1,300 wounded as the result of those attacks.

Several thousand Kamikaze planes had been set aside for an invasion of the Japanese mainland that never happened. Kamikaze pilots were one of the reasons President Harry S. Truman decided to drop the atomic bombs.

On the eve of the Japanese surrender, Takijiro Onishi ended his own life, leaving a note of apology to his dead pilots — their sacrifice had been in vain.


I have been sitting for hours and hours reading it again and again but cannot grab the emotion, theory or sense.
 
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I have been sitting for hours and hours reading it again and again but cannot grab the emotion, theory or sense.


Sir, this only the japanese people can explain - it comes from their Samuri traditions.
 
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For the Japanese, honour and duty are everything. You have to realize that during WWII, Japan was a very militarized and nationalist society. Japanese then saw living a life after loosing the war as something inferior. They used to believe, and some still do, that the highest reverence is awarded to a fighter who dies fighting. The Kamikaze attacks were instances of Japanese ensuring that their honour does not go vain. They had no tactical value.

Do remember that when the Emperor of Japan gave the surrender speech after the atomic bombings, he did so in the Imperial Palace. The speech was recorded and while the recording was being transported to the radio station, it was attacked by some military personnel.

So you can imagine where the Kamikaze attacks came from. Most of my company clients are Japanese, and we have many books on Japanese and Japan. Believe me, it’s a strange land.
 
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I believe Kamikaze and suicide bombings are very related. Both are something to inflict a higher damage on the enemy while totally eliminating one's self.
 
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I believe Kamikaze and suicide bombings are very related. Both are something to inflict a higher damage on the enemy while totally eliminating one's self.

They are similar no doubt.The underlying principle is the same. However unlike the Japanese Kamikaze tactics which were used during war, suicide bombings have been generally used to kill innocent civilians. Even in Iraq the suicide bombers who supposedly want to drive out the americans have killed a lot more iraqi civilians than american soldiers.
 
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Japanese are a very nationalistic, and cohesive society. It is very difficult for foreigners to assimilate.

In this sense, Indian society and Japanese society are total opposites.
 
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They are similar no doubt.The underlying principle is the same. However unlike the Japanese Kamikaze tactics which were used during war, suicide bombings have been generally used to kill innocent civilians. Even in Iraq the suicide bombers who supposedly want to drive out the americans have killed a lot more iraqi civilians than american soldiers.

Well, the justification for that is all non-muslims are enemy combatants, and all muslim victims of the suicide bombings shall go to heaven.
 
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Well, the justification for that is all non-muslims are enemy combatants, and all muslim victims of the suicide bombings shall go to heaven.
to those suicide bombers and the few clerics that support them. for the rest of us, suicide bombing would be the easy way out except it's not allowed even against military targets.

there's no question of harming civilians in warfare.
 
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to those suicide bombers and the few clerics that support them. for the rest of us, suicide bombing would be the easy way out except it's not allowed even against military targets.

there's no question of harming civilians in warfare.

In 1965 when India had atack Pakistan Front near Lahore and Sialkot with about 2500 tanks ....we had only 50 at this time at this Position to defence the Citys ....so that mean not enough Tanks !

From HQ came the order the put Bombs ( TNT)on the Body of the Soldiers!
They should run near, or run under the Tank and than Blow them self with the tank!

Ohh man my father had tell me this Story ! He said many Soldiers have do it to defence their Nation but they also would miss their familys and children ...My good
 
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In 1965 when India had atack Pakistan Front near Lahore and Sialkot with about 2500 tanks ....we had only 50 at this time at this Position to defence the Citys ....so that mean not enough Tanks !

From HQ came the order the put Bombs ( TNT)on the Body of the Soldiers!
They should run near, or run under the Tank and than Blow them self with the tank!

Ohh man my father had tell me this Story ! He said many Soldiers have do it to defence their Nation but they also would miss their familys and children ...My good

in Sialkot area it was not just the Army personal but also civilians who gave their lives to defend that piece of land, n yes they were succesfull at doin that, can't say anythin abut Lahore.

Even i remember my dad tellin me that young men use to tie explosives to themselves n blow themselves up when they were near the enemy tanks or underneath them, really very brave, when u have no choice left but to give ur own blood for ur Country, n this is the reason why we have withstood a numerically superior army in all the 3 wars fought. Mashallah.
 
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I hate to break this to you guys, not a single case of soldiers strapping bombs and taking out tanks has been recorded. This is another myth that has been making rounds ever since the 1965 days. Officers and soldiers did fight it out to the last man in many cases but there was no "laying under the tank with TNT strapped".
 
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Well, the justification for that is all non-muslims are enemy combatants, and all muslim victims of the suicide bombings shall go to heaven.

Sorry but where do you get that?

In case you didnt notice, Americans have successfully started a civil war between the Shias and Sunnis. Thats why there are so many civilian casualties in Iraq atm.
Before the Civil war started, it was just the American bombs and air strikes on populated cities.
 
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Sorry but where do you get that?

In case you didnt notice, Americans have successfully started a civil war between the Shias and Sunnis. Thats why there are so many civilian casualties in Iraq atm.
Before the Civil war started, it was just the American bombs and air strikes on populated cities.

Where did I get that? I got that from the suicide bombers themselves.

That's how they justify their acts. Go ask them.

Its a very complex web of social and religious expectations.

Similar logic applies for Kamikaze as well...
 
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Well, the justification for that is all non-muslims are enemy combatants, and all muslim victims of the suicide bombings shall go to heaven.

The Iraqis who died in suicide bombings were muslims. Suicide bombings have taken place recently in pakistan where both the perpetrators and victims were muslims. Both Rajiv Gandhi and the bomber who killed him were hindus.
 
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