Bill Woods wrote:The status of the Emperor was undetermined when the Japanese surrendered. Ultimately, Hirohito retained the title, but he was stripped of his power.cthia wrote:Capturing an enemy system involves unconditional surrender. Like the RMN's capture of Masada. Another example is the unconditional surrender of Japan to America. Though that was referred to as an unconditional surrender, it wasn't. It included a proviso that the Emperor would retain his power and be unharmed."Never" is a long time....... Would it include an acceptance of the conquered to never wage war against the conquerors again?
Indeed, but there has to be some messure of a grace period. Jus sayin.
That hardly mattered to the Japanese in the overall scheme of things as it were. The Japanese are a people of devout tradition. The Emperor is more than a figurehead but a super martyr waiting to happen. It was a psychological win for the Japanese when you boil everything down to its constituent parts. the Emperor is it.
I wonder what would have happened if Roosevelt didn't capitulate. I think Roosevelt knew as well as I.