Comments by "Bruce Tucker" (@brucetucker4847) on "Military History Visualized" channel.

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  11. The Soviet invasion of Manchuria was certainly a shock to the Japanese, who had been hoping the Soviets would mediate a peace, but the Soviets had no ability to invade Japan itself or to compel a Japanese surrender. The US, with some help from the UK, was the only nation that had the means to defeat the Japanese in their home islands, whether by invasion, naval blockade, or massive aerial bombardment (including the atomic bombs). In the event, Japan surrendered to the USSR along with all the other Allied nations, and the fact that the Soviets were not allowed to occupy any of the main Japanese islands was decided by the Allies (particularly the US), not the Japanese - nothing was said on that subject in the instrument of surrender. sahil sing, watch the video. Some civilians wanted to surrender but the army, who had been running the government for over a decade, was adamantly opposed. The Japanese peace feelers were not for a surrender with retention of the emperor, they were for a negotiated settlement with no occupation of Japan and with Japan retaining its pre-1937 conquests including Korea and Manchuria, which was totally unacceptable to the Allies. When the Japanese government, after the bombs, the Soviet attack, and the intervention of the emperor, finally did offer surrender with the sole condition of the retention of the emperor, the Allies immediately accepted, with the proviso that the ultimate form of Japan's postwar government would be decided by its people through a democratic process.
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