RT.com
05 Sep 2025, 02:36 GMT+10
Declassified documents show Tokyo planned covert killings of locals and foreigners in Manchuria in the event of war with the USSR
Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB) has released declassified documents revealing a secret Japanese plan for mass executions in occupied Manchuria during World War II.
Despite having a neutrality pact with Moscow, Japan - a wartime ally of Nazi Germany - drafted its own strategy to invade the USSR. In 1941, the General Staff of the Imperial Japanese Army approved the 'Kantokuen,' or 'Special Maneuvers of the Kwantung Army' plan, which envisioned defeating Soviet forces in the Far East and Siberia.
The operation was tied to the Wehrmacht's initial success, but when the Nazi blitzkrieg stalled, the Japanese high command ordered the Kwantung Army to maintain readiness for an attack. Its defeat by the Red Army in August 1945 marked the end of WWII and brought a trove of Japanese secret files into Soviet hands.
READ MORE: Putin and Xi issue WWII statement
The newly released records show that Japanese counterintelligence had prepared a secret system for identifying, arresting and eliminating individuals living in occupied Manchuria - both Chinese locals and foreign residents (Russians, Koreans, Japanese, and Mongolians) - deemed a threat to Tokyo's interests. The plans categorized "dangerous elements," including suspected spies, political dissidents, and foreigners, and detailed how they were to be executed if hostilities with the USSR broke out.
According to the files, five classifications were drawn up. The highest-risk group included foreigners who could not be leveraged by Japanese authorities or coerced into cooperation, such as religious leaders, business figures, and political dissidents, who were to be executed without trial.
The orders regulated the timing and methods of the killings. One directive from 1943 instructed that executions take place under cover of night or at dawn, preferably during moonlight. Firing squads were to be avoided, with bayonet stabbings or beheadings by sword listed as the methods of choice.
Other instructions emphasized secrecy, with officials told to leave no trace of the victims by destroying belongings that might serve as evidence. Aid was to be provided to families of executed locals to keep the killings quiet and prevent unrest.
The "crushing defeat" of the Kwantung Army by Soviet forces prevented the "bloody" Japanese plan from being carried out, the FSB concluded.
(RT.com)
Get a daily dose of Mexico Star news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Mexico Star.
More InformationDUBLIN, Ireland: Ireland now has 5,000 homeless children, a milestone that campaigners and politicians are calling evidence of the...
Declassified documents show Tokyo planned covert killings of locals and foreigners in Manchuria in the event of war with the USSR ...
New Delhi [India], September 5 (ANI): Bengaluru's M Chinnaswamy Stadium will be hosting cricket matches for the first time since the...
New Delhi [India], September 4 (ANI): The Central government on Thursday informed the Supreme Court that cadets who have been relieved...
New Delhi [India], September 4 (ANI): Delhi Police has launched an email ID dedicated to receiving innovative ideas and suggestions...
For earthquake survivors like Dalawar Khan, global solidarity offers a lifeline. But the urgent needs for shelter, resources, and reconstruction...
TIANJIN, China: Chinese President Xi Jinping has used China's major regional summit \to call on leaders to make better use of their...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: The independence of the U.S. Federal Reserve, long seen as a bedrock of economic stability, is facing its sharpest...
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti: The United Nations Security Council has started discussions on a new draft resolution for Haiti, aimed at strengthening...
SAO PAULO, Brazil: Automobile major Volkswagen must pay 165 million reais (around US$30 million) after a Brazilian labor court found...
BANGKOK, Thailand: Thailand's Constitutional Court has removed Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra from office, ruling that she broke...
OTTAWA, Canada: India and Canada have restored diplomatic ties by appointing new high commissioners to each other's capitals, ending...
