The following is from Masayuki Takayama's serialized column that marks the end of Weekly Shincho, which was released today.
This article also proves that he is the one and only journalist in the postwar world.
It is a must-read not only for Japanese citizens but also for people around the world.
Defend Hokkaido!
The Slavic peoples inhabiting the Russian region have woven a sadly unfortunate history.
They inhabited the Volga River basin, where they were captured and sold into slavery by people from the west.
The ethnic name "Slav" is the origin of the word "slave."
Unable to believe in the happiness of the future, the slave people still tried their best to become Christians and established a country in Kyiv. However, their trials continued. The Mongols attacked from the east, killing the men and raping the women.
In the Americas, whites raped Indians and turned Latin America into a mestizo country.
In Russia, the opposite was true: whites were raped by the Mongols, and every child born had the face of Lenin.
Russia endured this and, like a white nation, aimed to become the champion of colonial imperialism.
However, it suffered a crushing defeat at the hands of the Japanese and thus bore the disgrace of being the only white nation to be defeated by a non-white country.
It is a lousy upbringing and bad luck.
It is a significant reason why Russians have become so bad-natured.
So, the rotten guts Russians attacked Japan from behind.
The Nomonhan Incident, as it is known, destroyed the entire Russian tank fleet, destruction of their air force, and caused the death of 10,000 generals.
Zhukov, who had never known defeat in a war against Germany, admitted defeat, saying, "It was the most challenging battle ever fought.
So Stalin devised a more cunning plan.
He believed that even the Russians could win if they waited until Japan accepted the Potsdam Declaration and disarmed them before attacking. The operation began on August 18, 1945, the final meteoric day of the disarmament.
First, the advance troops from Kamchatka conquered the Kuril Islands from the north and landed on and occupied Kushiro.
Kushiro was to be Russia's long-sought ice-free port exit to the Pacific Ocean.
Another unit landed in Rumoi, with the central team waiting in Vladivostok after capturing South Sakhalin.
They held 19 airfields, attacked Aomori, and seized the Tsugaru Straits. After stealing Hokkaido, the fleet moved southward across the Sea of Japan, capturing Tsushima for the first time since the Posadnick on the eve of the Meiji Restoration.
The plan was to "suppress the Tsushima, Tsugaru, and Soya Straits and make the Sea of Japan Russia's inland sea" (Tsutomu Saito, "Stalin's Secret Records").
However, the operation stumbled in the first phase of the advance party's campaign, the Shumshu offensive at the northern tip of the Kuril Islands. Upon receiving news of the "Russian attack," Commander Higuchi Kiichiro of the Fifth Area ordered the garrison to "repel the enemy forces for self-defense" (Higuchi Kiichiro's Posthumous Instructions).
The garrison rearmed and pounded the landing Russians, killing and wounding thousands.
The death toll exceeded 3,000, and the Izvestia newspaper acknowledged the "enormous damage" and temporarily halted the campaign from the Kuril Islands to Kushiro.
During this time, Higuchi "informed the Supreme Commander of the Allied Forces, MacArthur, of the illegal invasion of Allied forces of unknown nationality.
The telegram explicitly blamed the General Headquarters for its failure to restrain the Soviet Union.
Troubled, General Headquarters leaked the information to the Associated Press, informing the world of the Soviet atrocities.
On August 22, Stalin gave up the occupation of Hokkaido and, by way of revenge, torpedoed three salvage ships, including the Ogasawara Maru, returning to Rumoi from Sakhalin Island, killing 1,700 people.
Meanwhile, the advance party, which had fallen behind at Shumshu, landed at Kunashiri on September 1.
On September 3, after the surrender signing ceremony on board Missouri, "Colonel Chechelin and his men left for the occupation of the Habomai Islands and landed on September 4.
The Russians stole Habomai and Shikotan after the signing of the surrender.
Prime Minister Abe is said to have explained the timeline in detail during Putin's visit to Japan.
That explains why Putin's mood became so bad.
After his return to Japan, he even moved the September 2 V-J Day to September 3, the day he "inspected" the Habomai Islands.
Putin, the Russian's bad character, is in full view.
In honor of Kiichiro Higuchi, who saved the Jewish people and Hokkaido, a statue was erected on his birthplace, Awaji Island, and will be unveiled on October 11.
It is the first statue in military uniform after the war.
This article also proves that he is the one and only journalist in the postwar world.
It is a must-read not only for Japanese citizens but also for people around the world.
Defend Hokkaido!
The Slavic peoples inhabiting the Russian region have woven a sadly unfortunate history.
They inhabited the Volga River basin, where they were captured and sold into slavery by people from the west.
The ethnic name "Slav" is the origin of the word "slave."
Unable to believe in the happiness of the future, the slave people still tried their best to become Christians and established a country in Kyiv. However, their trials continued. The Mongols attacked from the east, killing the men and raping the women.
In the Americas, whites raped Indians and turned Latin America into a mestizo country.
In Russia, the opposite was true: whites were raped by the Mongols, and every child born had the face of Lenin.
Russia endured this and, like a white nation, aimed to become the champion of colonial imperialism.
However, it suffered a crushing defeat at the hands of the Japanese and thus bore the disgrace of being the only white nation to be defeated by a non-white country.
It is a lousy upbringing and bad luck.
It is a significant reason why Russians have become so bad-natured.
So, the rotten guts Russians attacked Japan from behind.
The Nomonhan Incident, as it is known, destroyed the entire Russian tank fleet, destruction of their air force, and caused the death of 10,000 generals.
Zhukov, who had never known defeat in a war against Germany, admitted defeat, saying, "It was the most challenging battle ever fought.
So Stalin devised a more cunning plan.
He believed that even the Russians could win if they waited until Japan accepted the Potsdam Declaration and disarmed them before attacking. The operation began on August 18, 1945, the final meteoric day of the disarmament.
First, the advance troops from Kamchatka conquered the Kuril Islands from the north and landed on and occupied Kushiro.
Kushiro was to be Russia's long-sought ice-free port exit to the Pacific Ocean.
Another unit landed in Rumoi, with the central team waiting in Vladivostok after capturing South Sakhalin.
They held 19 airfields, attacked Aomori, and seized the Tsugaru Straits. After stealing Hokkaido, the fleet moved southward across the Sea of Japan, capturing Tsushima for the first time since the Posadnick on the eve of the Meiji Restoration.
The plan was to "suppress the Tsushima, Tsugaru, and Soya Straits and make the Sea of Japan Russia's inland sea" (Tsutomu Saito, "Stalin's Secret Records").
However, the operation stumbled in the first phase of the advance party's campaign, the Shumshu offensive at the northern tip of the Kuril Islands. Upon receiving news of the "Russian attack," Commander Higuchi Kiichiro of the Fifth Area ordered the garrison to "repel the enemy forces for self-defense" (Higuchi Kiichiro's Posthumous Instructions).
The garrison rearmed and pounded the landing Russians, killing and wounding thousands.
The death toll exceeded 3,000, and the Izvestia newspaper acknowledged the "enormous damage" and temporarily halted the campaign from the Kuril Islands to Kushiro.
During this time, Higuchi "informed the Supreme Commander of the Allied Forces, MacArthur, of the illegal invasion of Allied forces of unknown nationality.
The telegram explicitly blamed the General Headquarters for its failure to restrain the Soviet Union.
Troubled, General Headquarters leaked the information to the Associated Press, informing the world of the Soviet atrocities.
On August 22, Stalin gave up the occupation of Hokkaido and, by way of revenge, torpedoed three salvage ships, including the Ogasawara Maru, returning to Rumoi from Sakhalin Island, killing 1,700 people.
Meanwhile, the advance party, which had fallen behind at Shumshu, landed at Kunashiri on September 1.
On September 3, after the surrender signing ceremony on board Missouri, "Colonel Chechelin and his men left for the occupation of the Habomai Islands and landed on September 4.
The Russians stole Habomai and Shikotan after the signing of the surrender.
Prime Minister Abe is said to have explained the timeline in detail during Putin's visit to Japan.
That explains why Putin's mood became so bad.
After his return to Japan, he even moved the September 2 V-J Day to September 3, the day he "inspected" the Habomai Islands.
Putin, the Russian's bad character, is in full view.
In honor of Kiichiro Higuchi, who saved the Jewish people and Hokkaido, a statue was erected on his birthplace, Awaji Island, and will be unveiled on October 11.
It is the first statue in military uniform after the war.