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  2. Operation Texas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Texas

    Operation Texas was an alleged undercover operation to relocate European Jews to Texas, USA, away from Nazi persecution, first reported in a 1989 Ph.D. dissertation by Louis Stanislaus Gomolak at the University of Texas at Austin titled Prologue: LBJ's foreign-affairs background, 1908-1948. [1] The following are some of the key arguments of the ...

  3. Japan and the Holocaust - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japan_and_the_Holocaust

    Although Japan was a member of the Axis, and therefore an ally of Nazi Germany, it did not actively participate in the Holocaust. [a] Anti-semitic attitudes were insignificant in Japan during World War II and there was little interest in the Jewish question, which was seen as a European issue. [6]

  4. List of companies involved in the Holocaust - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_companies_involved...

    DEST employed slave labor, most of whom were Jews, in the quarries. From 1943 it played a key role, helping the SS to enter some key war industries. Human labor was used cruelly, becoming one of the main tenets of war crime charges in the Nuremberg Trials. (Copied content from de:Deutsche Erd- und Steinwerke). Dornier Flugzeugwerke [70] 1914

  5. International Military Tribunal for the Far East - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Military...

    The International Military Tribunal for the Far East (IMTFE), also known as the Tokyo Trial and the Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal, was a military trial convened on 29 April 1946 to try leaders of the Empire of Japan for their crimes against peace, conventional war crimes, and crimes against humanity, leading up to and during the Second World War. [1]

  6. Nazi War Crimes and Japanese Imperial Government Records ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_War_Crimes_and...

    The group was created by the Nazi War Crimes Disclosure Act, passed in 1998, [1] and the Japanese Imperial Government Disclosure Act of 2000. [2] Between 1999 and 2016, the working group declassified and opened to the public an estimated 8 million pages of documents, including 1.2 million pages of Office of Strategic Services records, over 100,000 pages of Central Intelligence Agency files, [3 ...

  7. American cover-up of Japanese war crimes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_cover-up_of...

    In 1981, one of the last surviving members of the Tokyo Tribunal, Judge Bert Röling, expressed his unhappiness that the war crimes committed in Unit 731 had been protected by the US government and wrote, "It is a bitter experience for me to be informed now that centrally ordered Japanese war criminality of the most disgusting kind was kept ...

  8. Japanese war crimes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_war_crimes

    The Tokyo Charter defines war crimes as "violations of the laws or customs of war," [22] which involves acts using prohibited weapons, violating battlefield norms while engaging in combat with the enemy combatants, or against protected persons, [23] including enemy civilians and citizens and property of neutral states as in the case of the attack on Pearl Harbor.

  9. Internment of Japanese Americans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internment_of_Japanese...

    The United States originally intended to trade these Latin American internees as part of a hostage exchange program with Japan and other Axis nations; [210] at least one trade occurred. [112] Over 1,300 persons of Japanese ancestry were exchanged for a like number of non-official Americans in October 1943, at the port of Marmagao, India. Over ...