Falsehoods of the Allied Nations’ Victorious Views of History,
as Seen by a British Journalist
Chapter Five: “Nanking Massacre”: Denied by Chiang Kai-shek and Mao Zedong
By Henry S. Stokes, former Tokyo Bureau Chief of The New York Times
We now present Chapter Five, the most controversial chapter.
Mr. Stokes writes in Chapter One, “In international society, one will be ignored if he or she said “Nanking massacre did not take place.” Nanking massacre is a historical fact and nobody wants to debate seriously with deniers of historical facts.”
Nevertheless, he dares to thoroughly “deny” the “Nanking Massacre” in this chapter. Against this shocking statementKoyodotsushin, Japan’s leading news agency spread a press release saying that Japanese translator mistranslated Mr. Stokes’s original comment. However, Mr. Stokes immediately rebuffed this by a statement released from the Japanese publisher on May 9, 2014 that the Japanese translation correctly expressed his comment.
Now the full English version of Chapter Five is available. Mr. Stokes updates the beginning of this chapter emphasizing that The so-called “Nanking Massacre” was a Propaganda Strategy launched in China in the context of an Intelligence War dating to 1937-8. You can examine for yourself the facts and logic-based analysis on which he based his assertion.
Author profile: http://www.sdh-fact.com/CL02_1/114_S3.pdf
Questions are welcome.
Sincerely,
MOTEKI Hiromichi, Secretary General
for KASE Hideaki, Chairman
Society for the Dissemination of Historical Fact
Note: Japanese names are rendered surname first in accordance with Japanese custom.