Abstract
This chapter focuses on the blame for Japan's war responsibility. Within weeks of Japan's surrender, most areas and nations had fallen into social and economic turmoil. Moreover, death plays a feature role in many first-person accounts of the disorder following Japan's imperial collapse alongside the descriptions of willful disregard for others. Japan's surrender symbolized the rudderlessness of the European imperial powers' efforts to regain control of East and Southeast Asian colonies. The chapter discusses Japan's efforts to create the war responsibility council in correlation with the Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
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