
Telegraph: Max Hastings reviews "Surviving the Sword" by Brian MacArthur
It is interesting to compare codes of massacre among the nastier participants in the Second World War. Throughout the struggle, the Soviets continued to kill their own people, as well as their enemies, in hundreds of thousands for supposed failures of courage or loyalty. The Germans murdered captive Russians, Poles, Jews and other "sub-humans" in millions, yet treated uniformed Western allied prisoners with relative humanity – only four per cent died. The Japanese conferred "sub-human" status on all allied prisoners. More than a quarter perished in consequence, 12,000 of them while working on the Burma railway. The survivors suffered experiences matching those of inmates of Hitler's concentration camps...One fact that emerges is that the survival rate of Australian captives was much higher than that of the British. Aussies, with their indomitable ingenuity, initiative and capacity for defiance, seemed to adapt better than many British soldiers...Today, it remains hard not to look warily upon modern Japan, a society in collective denial about its past crimes, even as Western historians publish relentless accounts of our own imperial falls of grace, most far less awful than those of Nippon...more...