Kimberly Jane Tan, ABS-CBN News
How hundreds of thousands were killed
in the 1945 Battle of Manila
In expressing his resentment against the Americans,
President Rodrigo Duterte on Tuesday recounted how thousands of Filipinos were
supposedly killed when the United States took back Manila from the Japanese in
1945.
"200,000 died here. Ang Manila talaga (Manila really)
flattened in just two days of bombing. These are historical [facts] that will
never go away," Duterte said just before leaving for his official trip to
Japan.
But just how accurate is the President's account of the
story?
Known as the "Battle of Manila,"
the 1945 conflict is the "fiercest and first urban fighting in the
region," according to HistoryNet.com, the website of the world's largest publisher
of history magazines.
"Very few battles during the last few months of WWII
[World War II] are known to have exceeded the brutality and destruction in
Manila," it said.
It began with the campaign of the US to recapture
the Philippines from the Japanese, whose soldiers launched a bloody war to keep
Manila.
The Japanese blew up historic bridges, burned
down houses, raped women and massacred innocent civilians, war crimes which
later became known as the "Manila Massacre."
The Americans, meanwhile, retaliated using heavy
artillery, including bombs that were dropped on the city daily.
During the month-long battle that battered
Manila from February 3 to March 3, 1945, at least 1,000 allies, 16,000 Japanese
and 100,000 Filipino civilians were killed, according to historians.
Seventy percent of utilities, 75 percent of
factories, 80 percent of the southern residential district and 100 percent of
the business district were also razed during the battle, according to
"American Caesar: Douglas MacArthur 1880 - 1964" author and historian
William Manchester.
This gave Manila the unfortunate title of being
the second most devastated city during World War II. After the battle, the
Americans reportedly bulldozed what
was left of Manila, flattening it to a pulp.
But there are some who say that this is a
conservative estimate and the damage might be even worse than other atrocities
committed during the war.
And this is already considering the US atomic
bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan, where at least
200,000 were killed, and the British-American bombing of Germany's
Dresden, which claimed the lives of at least 25,000, both in 1945.
But the only other atrocity that could rival the
Battle of Manila is the 1937 Nanjing Massacre or the Rape of Nanking, where
Japanese soldiers raped and killed at least 300,000 Chinese people.
"When you listen to and watch the people
who survived, you will feel their anger towards the heavy artillery shelling by
the Americans; but you will also sense their hatred of what the Japanese did.
On balance, then and today, they were glad to be
liberated even at great cost to themselves and their beautiful city,"
according to Peter Parsons, who authored "The Battle of
Manila - Myth and Fact."
This was not the first time Duterte brought up
atrocities allegedly committed by the Americans.
Last September, he raised the 1901 Balangiga, Samar
massacre, where residents over 10 were ordered killed by a US
general, and the 1906 Bud Dajo
massacre, where hundreds of Moros were killed by US forces in Sulu.
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