Originally posted by chegitz guevara
Nope. Cuz the Allies took over governing the city right away.
In the Pacific, when Japan surrendered, the Allies required the Japanese troops to continue governing the areas they still held until Allied troops could arrive to relieve them and accept their surrender. We knew then that governence was important, not merely victory.
As an aside, in most cases this was done becuase local authorities were closely tied with Communists and the allies didn't want the Japanese surrender to result in Communist revolution across Asia (which did occur in the aftermath of the collapse of Japanese authority in Korea and Vietnam).
Nope. Cuz the Allies took over governing the city right away.
In the Pacific, when Japan surrendered, the Allies required the Japanese troops to continue governing the areas they still held until Allied troops could arrive to relieve them and accept their surrender. We knew then that governence was important, not merely victory.
As an aside, in most cases this was done becuase local authorities were closely tied with Communists and the allies didn't want the Japanese surrender to result in Communist revolution across Asia (which did occur in the aftermath of the collapse of Japanese authority in Korea and Vietnam).
How does it apply when an entire goverment, from top to bottom, takes its ball and goes home?
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