"HOW unbearable to die in the sky," wrote Tadao Hayashi, a student pilot, in his diary on July 27th 1945, the night before his plane was shot down. Hayashi's writings, like those of the other Japanese student soldiers compiled in this book, contradict the caricature of the fanatical kamikaze pilot imagined by Americans and Britons during the war, and challenge the myth of the nationalist hero spun by conservative institutions in Japan.
The student soldiers, argues the author, were wantonly sacrificed in the military government's final gambit of the war. She reveals that the tokkotai ("special attack force", which is how the kamikaze are referred to in Japan) had no volunteers when it was formed in October 1944. Instead, new recruits were either assigned by their superiors or forced to sign up using pressure tactics. No senior officer offered his life for this mission; instead the "volunteer" corps comprised newly enlisted boy-soldiers barely of age and student conscripts from the nation's top universities.
http://www.economist.com/node/7138833?fsrc=scn/fb/te/bl/ed/propatriamori
The student soldiers, argues the author, were wantonly sacrificed in the military government's final gambit of the war. She reveals that the tokkotai ("special attack force", which is how the kamikaze are referred to in Japan) had no volunteers when it was formed in October 1944. Instead, new recruits were either assigned by their superiors or forced to sign up using pressure tactics. No senior officer offered his life for this mission; instead the "volunteer" corps comprised newly enlisted boy-soldiers barely of age and student conscripts from the nation's top universities.
http://www.economist.com/node/7138833?fsrc=scn/fb/te/bl/ed/propatriamori