Oliver Holmes, 'We Have Short Memories': Japan Unites with Former Foes to Resist China's Empire of Sand. The Guardian, June 26, 2015.
https://www.theguardian.com/worl ... inas-empire-of-sand
Quote:
“It was first time the Japanese military had conducted training operations in the south-east Asian country since Imperial Japan surrendered in 1945 following a three-year occupation of the Philippines. Their troops were pushed out by Americans allied with guerrilla Filipino resistance forces.
“ 'We Filipinos have very short memories,' joked one woman in Puerto Princesa, the town where the air base is located. Some also have Japanese blood — the children of Filipino women and Japanese soldiers who were based here.
"And with the military complaining that it is one of the weakest in Asia, the Philippines feels it needs Tokyo as a buffer against China, two months before the 70th anniversary of Japan’s surrender.
Note:
(a) "It was American soldiers held captive by Japanese troops during the second world war who first dug through the thick, damp mud to build an airstrip on the Philippine island of Palawan. * * * These fears [among all three countries--Japan, the Philippines and US-- of China's ambitions over the entire South China Sea] have brought 21 sweating Japanese pilots and engineers in grass-green jumpsuits back to Palawan this week, where they mingled and posed for selfies on the runway with their Filipino counterparts, in darker, greyer attire at Antonio Bautista air base."
The air strip American prisoners of war (POWs) built in World War II became a civilian airport, a portion of which was converted in 1775 to an air base.
(i) The Wikipedia page for Antonio Bautista Air Base states, "The base shares a single, 9,000 foot long runway with Puerto Princesa Airport."
(ii) in a Web page for Antonio Bautista Air Base, Globalsecurity.org says, "Antonio Bautista Air Base is located on [Puerto Princesa in] the narrow island of Palawan, making it the closest Philippine air base to the disputed Spratly Islands. The base shares a single, 9,000 foot long runway with Puerto Princesa [International] Airport."
(iii) Antonio Bautista
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antonio_Bautista
(1937-1974; pilot of the Philippine Air Force, battling insurgent separatist in Mindanao, "flew his F-86 Sabre Jet through a fusillade" of bullets, plane was hit and caught fire)
(iv) Puerto Princesa
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Puerto_Princesa
(view the map; section 1 History: folk etymology)
(v) Spanish English dictionary
* puerto (noun masculine; Latin noun masculine portus port, harbor): "port, harbor"
https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/puerto
* princesa (noun feminine; from French [noun feminine] princesse, and Latin [noun feminine principissa]; the male form in French and Latin are, respectively, prince and princeps]
(vi) history
(A) Survivor: Corporal Glenn McDole and the Palawan Massacre. Leatherneck Magazine, June 2009, at 26-27
https://www.marineheritage.org/Survivor.pdf
("On 12 Aug, 1942 he [McDole as a POW] landed on Palawan * * * his home for the next 2 1/2 years. In a courtyard in front of a U-shaped barracks, the prisoners were met by the commanders of the 131 1st Airfield Battalion, Captain Nagayoshi Kojima, nicknamed 'the weasel' by the POWs. 'Kojima stood on a pedestal so he could look down on us,' McDole remembered. 'In a squeaky voice, he would say, 'Americans,' and pause, 'today we build roads.' It wasn't long before we knew it was a lie. We were to build an airstrip.' " / [photo legend:] “Japanese fighter aircraft operated from the Palawan airstrip, which included a concrete runway down the middle, concrete turnoffs and two dirt strips, all built by the POWs")
* Leatherneck (disambiguation)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leatherneck_(disambiguation)
(Leatherneck [qv] is a military slang term for a member of the United States Marine Corps. Leatherneck may also refer to: "Leatherneck Magazine, a magazine for current and former members of the US Marine Corps")
(B) Before US invaded Palawan, Japanese massacred the POWs, but some escaped to tell the story, including McDole.
Map Showing Puerto Princesa at Palawan Island. Awesome Stories, undated
https://www.awesomestories.com/a ... t-Palawan-Island//1
("Japanese guards had transferred 150 Allied prisoners of war from Cabanatuan to the Puerto Princesa prison camp on Palawan Island. For 2½ years they worked to build an air strip. On the 14th of December, 1944, Japanese commanders at the prison camp decided to brutally execute their prisoners. Eleven prisoners escaped")
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