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‘Nazi Creek' in Alaska Gets a New Name After More Than 70 Years
‘Nazi Creek' in Alaska Gets a New Name After More Than 70 Years

New York Times

time13-07-2025

  • General
  • New York Times

‘Nazi Creek' in Alaska Gets a New Name After More Than 70 Years

Little Kiska Island, at the far western end of the Aleutian Islands in Alaska, is a remote speck of land that was heavily contested during World War II. In an attack possibly timed to draw away U.S. forces before the planned invasion of Midway Island, about 1,100 miles northwest of Pearl Harbor, the Japanese military captured Kiska Island, along with Little Kiska, in June 1942. While the Japanese occupation lasted a little more than a year, it left a far longer imprint on the map of the three-square-mile Little Kiska. A one-mile creek that flows southeast into the Pacific Ocean was named Nazi Creek — a designation given by Americans, not by the Japanese. Until last week, when it was officially renamed, the creek was the only geographic feature in the United States with 'Nazi' in its name, according to a United States Geological Survey database of place names. The name was 'arbitrarily applied to features in this area' by the United States Army Air Forces for tactical purposes during World War II, an entry in the Dictionary of Alaska Place Names says. The name appeared on an Army map in 1953. The name was picked because the U.S. military needed a name beginning with 'N' to correspond with the 'N' square on an alphanumeric grid it had superimposed on the area. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Okinawa remains at mercy of armed forces, says expert
Okinawa remains at mercy of armed forces, says expert

Japan Times

time20-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Japan Times

Okinawa remains at mercy of armed forces, says expert

Residents of Okinawa Prefecture continue to be at the mercy of armed forces many decades since World War II, said Takeshi Yamaguchi, an expert working to share testimonies of war survivors in the southernmost prefecture. Survivors wish for the island prefecture to never become a battlefield again, said Yamaguchi, professor of social studies education at the University of the Ryukyus in Okinawa. The prefecture hosts many U.S. military bases, following its occupation by U.S. armed forces after Japan's defeat in the Battle of Okinawa in the closing days of World War II. The Battle of Okinawa was the biggest land battle in the Pacific Theater of the war, killing some 200,000 people including civilians. The U.S. military stormed the main island of Okinawa on April 1, 1945, after landing on the nearby Kerama Islands on March 26 that year. Fierce fighting lasted almost three months, with the former Japanese military intending to stall U.S. forces on Okinawa to delay their possible landing on the Japanese mainland. About 94,000 Okinawan residents are believed to have died in the war under the Japanese side's doctrine that the military, public officials and civilians should share the same fate in life and death. Academic research on the Battle of Okinawa began in earnest in the latter half of the 1960s, with records of testimonies created by municipal and prefectural officials, according to Yamaguchi. Many survivors shared their experiences of Japanese forces shooting civilians who tried to become captives of the U.S. military, which gave them food. There were documents from the former Japanese military that backed up such experiences. But Yamaguchi said that the U.S. military was not necessarily a liberation force, as residents placed in holding facilities faced threats to their human rights and lives due to sexual violence and other incidents by U.S. soldiers. After a period of U.S. occupation, Okinawa returned to Japanese rule in May 1972. However, roughly 70% of U.S. military facilities in Japan are concentrated in the prefecture. Sexual violence by U.S. service members is a persistent issue. Okinawans learned from their experiences that "the military does not protect residents," Yamaguchi said. "The fallout of the Battle of Okinawa remains in the continued threats to human rights." The proliferation of social media has raised concerns about division among people over their views on history. Last month, a lawmaker in the ruling Liberal Democratic Party was heavily criticized over his remark that descriptions on a monument commemorating the Himeyuri corps of female students who died in the Battle of Okinawa constituted "a revision of history." "(The remark) was delivered from a certain view of history, and many Okinawans felt their memories were distorted," Yamaguchi said. He said that the issue likely arose from the "reality in which people online, including on social media, are just declaring their views and not engaging in dialogue." That is why it is important to return to the testimonies of people who have firsthand experiences, and to talk about the incongruities, he said. As fighting continues around the world, including in Ukraine and Gaza, Yamaguchi stressed the importance of "making efforts to link the Battle of Okinawa with today's wars and think about peace."

China's Navy Expands Its Reach With Aircraft Carrier Drills
China's Navy Expands Its Reach With Aircraft Carrier Drills

Wall Street Journal

time09-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Wall Street Journal

China's Navy Expands Its Reach With Aircraft Carrier Drills

A Chinese aircraft carrier is conducting drills hundreds of miles south of Japan's main island, Japanese officials said Monday, venturing into waters that could be strategically vital in a conflict with the U.S. in the Pacific. The Liaoning, one of China's two operational aircraft carriers, and at least seven other Chinese navy ships were operating east of Iwo Jima for the first time over the weekend, the Japanese military said.

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