Japanese "death squads"

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Dmitry Peretolchin and Candidate of Biological Sciences, historian Fedor Lisitsyn talk about the secrets of the 731 squad and the secret developments of the Japanese empire during the Second World War. What role did these developments play for the USSR, China and the USA? Why the Americans were unable to start plague and smallpox epidemics during the Korean War. How the Japanese death squads affected medicine and the modern world. Can transnational corporations repeat the experience of the Japanese Empire and the Third Reich in creating biological weapons.

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  1. 0
    23 August 2017 10: 00
    A video where these Japanese from this detachment disembowel a Chinese woman as an experimental material is disgusting ... for the first time I understood what the Japanese could do to us if they had won over RUSSIA.
    1. +1
      23 August 2017 11: 15
      Not the Kuril Islands, but HELL in reality. Two atomic bombs are too few for them.
    2. +1
      23 August 2017 11: 35
      The most interesting thing they did. Above emigrants abducted by lost secular citizens. They committed sabotage on the territory of the MPR and the USSR. In particular, it was they who made the encephalitis tick massive and resistant to cold.
  2. +3
    23 August 2017 11: 14
    There is a lot of material about the atrocities of the Japanese military, starting with the materials of the Khabarovsk process of 1949, Morimura Seeti's book Devil’s Kitchen, ending with their participation in the Korean War, where non-humans from Detachments 731 and 100 advised Amers on how to use chemical and bacteriological weapons against the DPRK army. There is a wonderful film "The Man Behind the Sun." people with a weak mentality are not recommended to watch. In addition, there is a similar film by Elena Masyuk "The conveyor of death - Detachment 731" ............. the recommendations are the same. There was also the film "Devil's Gluttony." about the "military fraternity" of Japanese and American chemists and microbiologists.