OK, so it was just a 'I didn't know' question.
Dave Homewood wrote:
Now that it is quite clear to me that America and the world were aware after the massacre that it took place, and of other such massacres and attocities, I have to ask why is it that Nazis were put on trial for war crimes and even right now there are Jewish groups still heck bent one bringing 90 years olds to justice for what they did, but nothing of this nature seems to have been done to adress the war crimes of Japan. Where is the justice? Japan's monsters were never punished it seems and their crimes have been swept under the rug and forgotten within their country. Or am I wrong? Were some brought to trial?
Er, no? First - Wrong war. It's easy to regard W.W.II as a single 'war'; it wasn't, and certainly not when you look at China and Japan; an area the western allies fought Japan and only
supported the Chinese Nationalists; while Chinese warlords and the communists followed their own agenda.
Secondly, there
were significant war crimes trials for Japanese atrocities, as cited in the previous references in this thread, and numerous Japanese were tried and numbers executed when convicted. I'm surprised you have the impression there wasn't.
Crimes against the Chinese were harder to deal with due to the Civil War China found itself in post W.W.II; the western allied responsibility for trying Japanese soldiers for Chinese atrocities does seem to have occurred; remarkable considering the difficulties in the matter.
In all three cases, like justice in general, the prosecution and conviction rate was much lower than the number of atrocities. And there are pragmatic, good and bad reasons for that.
McArthur chose to reinstate the Emperor and build a stable, democratic Japan; to do that he drew a line under some of the areas of responsibility, such as the Emperor's. I'm no fan of McArthur's, but on a pragmatic basis for a stable country, it was not 'just' but it was effective.
For a useful article insight to much of the context, this article rounds out some of the issues, starting with the museum bdk mentioned earlier:
http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/ ... 810x1.html