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  • "Comfort Women"

    • Historical documents show American GIs used a "comfort women" system
    • Brothels used despite reports of Asian women being coerced into prostitution
    • Tens of thousands of women employed to provide cheap sex to troops
    • Gen. MacArthur placed brothels, other places of prostitution off limits in 1946

    TOKYO, Japan (AP) -- Japan's abhorrent practice of enslaving women to provide sex for its troops in World War II has a little-known sequel: After its surrender -- with tacit approval from the U.S. occupation authorities -- Japan set up a similar "comfort women" system for American GIs.

    An Associated Press review of historical documents and records -- some never before translated into English -- shows American authorities permitted the official brothel system to operate despite internal reports that women were being coerced into prostitution. The Americans also had full knowledge by then of Japan's atrocious treatment of women in countries across Asia that it conquered during the war.

    Tens of thousands of women were employed to provide cheap sex to U.S. troops until the spring of 1946, when Gen. Douglas MacArthur shut the brothels down.

    The documents show the brothels were rushed into operation as American forces poured into Japan beginning in August 1945.

    "Sadly, we police had to set up sexual comfort stations for the occupation troops," recounts the official history of the Ibaraki Prefectural Police Department, whose jurisdiction is just northeast of Tokyo. "The strategy was, through the special work of experienced women, to create a breakwater to protect regular women and girls."

    The orders from the Ministry of the Interior came on August 18, 1945, one day before a Japanese delegation flew to the Philippines to negotiate the terms of their country's surrender and occupation.

    The Ibaraki police immediately set to work. The only suitable facility was a dormitory for single police officers, which they quickly converted into a brothel. Bedding from the navy was brought in, along with 20 comfort women. The brothel opened for business September 20.
    Brothel was 'elbow to elbow'

    "As expected, after it opened it was elbow to elbow," the history says. "The comfort women ... had some resistance to selling themselves to men who just yesterday were the enemy, and because of differences in language and race, there were a great deal of apprehensions at first. But they were paid highly, and they gradually came to accept their work peacefully."

    Police officials and Tokyo businessmen established a network of brothels under the auspices of the Recreation and Amusement Association, which operated with government funds. On August 28, 1945, an advance wave of occupation troops arrived in Atsugi, just south of Tokyo. By nightfall, the troops found the RAA's first brothel.

    "I rushed there with two or three RAA executives, and was surprised to see 500 or 600 soldiers standing in line on the street," Seiichi Kaburagi, the chief of public relations for the RAA, wrote in a 1972 memoir. He said American MPs were barely able to keep the troops under control.

    Though arranged and supervised by the police and civilian government, the system mirrored the comfort stations established by the Japanese military abroad during the war.

    Kaburagi wrote that occupation GIs paid upfront and were given tickets and condoms. The first RAA brothel, called Komachien -- The Babe Garden -- had 38 women, but due to high demand that was quickly increased to 100. Each woman serviced from 15 to 60 clients a day.

    American historian John Dower, in his book "Embracing Defeat: Japan in the Wake of WWII," says the charge for a short session with a prostitute was 15 yen, or about a dollar, roughly the cost of half a pack of cigarettes.

    Kaburagi said the sudden demand forced brothel operators to advertise for women who were not licensed prostitutes.

    Natsue Takita, a 19-year-old Komachien worker whose relatives had been killed in the war, responded to an ad seeking an office worker. She was told the only positions available were for comfort women and was persuaded to accept the offer.

    According to Kaburagi's memoirs, published in Japanese after the occupation ended in 1952, Takita jumped in front of a train a few days after the brothel started operations.

    "The worst victims ... were the women who, with no previous experience, answered the ads calling for `Women of the New Japan,"' he wrote.

    By the end of 1945, about 350,000 U.S. troops were occupying Japan. At its peak, Kaburagi wrote, the RAA employed 70,000 prostitutes to serve them. There are also suspicions -- though there is not clear evidence -- that non-Japanese comfort women were imported to Japan as part of the program.

    Toshiyuki Tanaka, a history professor at the Hiroshima Peace Institute, cautioned that Kaburagi's number is hard to document. But he added the RAA was also only part of the picture -- the number of private brothels outside the official system was likely even higher.

    The U.S. occupation leadership provided the Japanese government with penicillin for comfort women servicing occupation troops, established prophylactic stations near the RAA brothels and, initially, condoned the troops' use of them, according to documents discovered by Tanaka.

    Occupation leaders were not blind to the similarities between the comfort women procured by Japan for its own troops and those it recruited for the GIs.

    A December 6, 1945, memorandum from Lt. Col. Hugh McDonald, a senior officer with the Public Health and Welfare Division of the occupation's General Headquarters, shows U.S. occupation forces were aware the Japanese comfort women were often coerced.

    "The girl is impressed into contracting by the desperate financial straits of her parents and their urging, occasionally supplemented by her willingness to make such a sacrifice to help her family," he wrote. "It is the belief of our informants, however, that in urban districts the practice of enslaving girls, while much less prevalent than in the past, still exists."
    The RAA collapses

    Amid complaints from military chaplains and concerns that disclosure of the brothels would embarrass the occupation forces back in the United States, on March 25, 1946, MacArthur placed all brothels, comfort stations and other places of prostitution off limits. The RAA soon collapsed.

    MacArthur's primary concern was not only a moral one.

    By that time, Tanaka says, more than a quarter of all American GIs in the occupation forces had a sexually transmitted disease.

    "The nationwide off-limits policy suddenly put more than 150,000 Japanese women out of a job," Tanaka wrote in a 2002 book on sexual slavery. Most continued to serve the troops illegally. Many had VD and were destitute, he wrote.

    Under intense pressure, Japan's government apologized in 1993 for its role in running brothels around Asia and coercing women into serving its troops. The issue remains controversial today.

    In January, California Rep. Mike Honda offered a resolution in the House condemning Japan's use of sex slaves, in part to renew pressure on Japan ahead of the closure of the Asian Women's Fund, a private foundation created two years after the apology to compensate comfort women.

    The fund compensated only 285 women in the Philippines, South Korea and Taiwan, out of an estimated 50,000 to 200,000 comfort women enslaved by Japan's military in those countries during the war. Each received 2 million yen, about $17,800. A handful of Dutch and Indonesian women were also given assistance.

    The fund closed, as scheduled, on March 31.

    Haruki Wada, the fund's executive director, said its creation marked an important change in attitude among Japan's leadership and represented the will of Japan's "silent majority" to see that justice is done. He also noted that although it was a private organization, the government was its main sponsor, kicking in 4.625 billion yen, about $40 million.

    Even so, he admitted it fell short of expectations.

    "The vast majority of the women did not come forward," he said.

    As a step toward acknowledging and resolving the exploitation of Japanese women, however, it was a complete failure.

    Though they were free to do so, no Japanese women sought compensation.

    "Not one Japanese woman has come forward to seek compensation or an apology," Wada said. "Unless they feel they can say they were completely forced against their will, they feel they cannot come forward."


    Discuss.
    Blah

  • #2
    What is there left to discuss?

    Comment


    • #3
      "Each woman serviced from 15 to 60 clients a day."

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by aneeshm
        What is there left to discuss?
        Patriarchy
        Lime roots and treachery!
        "Eventually you're left with a bunch of unmemorable posters like Cyclotron, pretending that they actually know anything about who they're debating pointless crap with." - Drake Tungsten

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        • #5
          "more than a quarter of all American GIs in the occupation forces had a sexually transmitted disease."

          to the victor go the...??

          Perspective....as dreadful as this sounds, it was orders of magnitude better than the behaviour of the Red Army in east Germany.
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          • #6
            Also in perspective...McArthur did shut it down, so it isn't like some top down project.
            "Yay Apoc!!!!!!!" - bipolarbear
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            • #7
              Also in perspective: how is this supposed to surprise us?
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              • #8
                Originally posted by aneeshm
                What is there left to discuss?
                I thought "discuss" is the usual addition in case one doesn't know what to write...

                Seriously, I didn't expect a huge debate on this, but I think it's (at least) an interesting bit of history and you never know how a thread develops....so discuss....or don't.
                Last edited by BeBMan; April 26, 2007, 09:43.
                Blah

                Comment


                • #9
                  Bunch of 19 plus guys visit brothels? Shocking!
                  I've allways wanted to play "Russ Meyer's Civilization"

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    A lot of 'em older than 19, since the draft reached real deep, but most of them had been overseas for a long time, and spent far more time getting shot at and having the ****s from various tropical bugs than they did getting laid.

                    Nothing surprising, but it's really not even the tip of the iceberg as far as Japanese orchestrated or committed atrocities. It was done for a lot longer and under a lot worse conditions for the women in Korea and China.
                    When all else fails, blame brown people. | Hire a teen, while they still know it all. | Trump-Palin 2016. "You're fired." "I quit."

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                    • #11
                      A girl in my Historical Approaches class was going to write on this for her term paper. She didn't seem competent enough to do it well in 15 pages.
                      Resident Filipina Lady Boy Expert.

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Tattila the Hun
                        Bunch of 19 plus guys visit brothels? Shocking!
                        I don't think that's the main point here....
                        Blah

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Question: How many women are prostitutes because of "desperate financial straits" and a "willingness to make such a sacrifice to help her family?"

                          How many girls go to the big city looking for a job but end up turning tricks?

                          The only "new" thing is the gov't creating and sustaining the service. But then, were the girls treated better than they would be as a prostitute on their own, beaten by pimps and customers, etc?
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                          • #14
                            The Japanese (especially in Korea and China) weren't interested in allowing women to "go to the big city looking for jobs" or particularly concerned with their "desperate financial straights."

                            In occupied territories, "comfort women" were taken by force from the best available of the native population, and worn out quickly, then killed or simply discarded and left to die.

                            A lot of Koreans were "imported" for close to slave labor, and young Korean women were also brought back to Japan to be served out in their domestic "comfort stations." I don't know about now, but in the 80's, it was still not uncommon in western Japan, especially factory towns and the countryside, for pimps and madams to refer to prostitutes as "Korean women."

                            Throw in a few Japanese orphans and internally displaced (lots of refugees during the war, and you're not likely to have many women who "volunteered" for any such duty. Nobody in the Japanese government of the time would be particularly interested in the concept of their consent or lack thereof.

                            The bit about paying them well, etc., is just more of the same Japanese euphemisation, revisionism and denial about their conduct at the time. On the scale of the rape of Nanjing, human medical experimentation, the Bataan death march, the murder of civilian construction workers on Wake island, mass use of Chinese civilians for bayonet and sword practice, beheading contests, and the like, the treatment of "comfort women" was pretty minor on the scale of Japanese atrocities, so the vehemence and level of revisionism isn't quite as far out there as it is with the other sorts of Japanese actions.

                            Besides, they were only women, and women of no consequence, anyway.
                            When all else fails, blame brown people. | Hire a teen, while they still know it all. | Trump-Palin 2016. "You're fired." "I quit."

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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by MichaeltheGreat

                              Besides, they were only women, and women of no consequence, anyway.
                              QFT.

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