# Imperial Japanese Army
Latest news and articles about Imperial Japanese Army
Total: 7 articles found

A Chilling Record: New Archives Detail Imperial Japan’s Animal-to-Human Blood Experiments
Newly discovered archival documents provide primary evidence of the Imperial Japanese Army injecting animal blood into human subjects during World War II. These findings add to the historical record of war crimes committed in occupied China and continue to influence the strained diplomatic relations between Beijing and Tokyo.

Echoes of Unit 731: New Evidence Details Imperial Japan’s Human-Animal Blood Experiments
A 1940 military report has confirmed that the Imperial Japanese Army conducted lethal experiments injecting animal blood into humans during its occupation of China. These findings, recovered from internal medical journals, provide further evidence of systemic war crimes and continue to complicate historical reconciliation in Northeast Asia.

Unearthing the Depths of Depravity: New Evidence Reveals Japan's Wartime Human Injections of Animal Blood
Newly discovered archival documents from the Imperial Japanese Army reveal that military doctors conducted experiments injecting horse and chicken blood into human subjects in 1938. This evidence, which survived Japan's attempts to destroy wartime records, highlights the systemic and ethical collapse of Japan's military medical establishment during the Second Sino-Japanese War.

Echoes of the Death March: Sandakan’s Grinding History Challenges Modern Amnesia
The Sandakan Memorial Park in Malaysia preserves the tragic history of the 1945 Death March, where nearly 2,400 Allied POWs perished under Imperial Japanese forces. The site highlights both the systematic atrocities of the era and the courageous resistance efforts of the local Sabahan and Chinese communities.

Ghosts of Sandakan: Why a Jungle Death March Still Haunts Asia’s Modern Memory
The Sandakan Memorial Park in Malaysia preserves the harrowing history of the 1945 Death March, where only six out of 2,700 POWs survived. It serves as both a site of international mourning and a stark warning against the resurgence of militarism in the modern era.

Unearthing the Past: How a Teenager’s Discovery Reignites China’s Quest for Historical Accountability
A 16-year-old Chinese student has discovered a significant cache of wartime artifacts, including classified Japanese military letters and original invasion drafts, which he intends to donate to the Nanjing Massacre memorial museum. These findings offer new evidence of civilian casualties during the Zhongtiao Mountain Campaign and reinforce China's historical narrative regarding Japanese aggression.

The Ghost Rails of Fengtai: A Hidden Bridge Unearths Japan’s Secret War Logistics in Beijing
A previously undocumented military bridge and railway spur used by the Imperial Japanese Army have been discovered in Beijing’s Fengtai District. Identified through 1945 aerial photography and oral histories, the site is now being protected as a significant historical relic of the Second Sino-Japanese War.