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Japanese carrier-based pilot who was beaten to death by American people.

Japanese carrier-based pilot who was beaten to death by American people

On December 7, 1941, American time, the Japanese aircraft carrier Feilong lost two 99 ships and one zero fighter in the air raid on Pearl Harbor.

Among them, the pilot of the Zero fighter shot down was Cao Chang, a first-class pilot who paid attention to Germany in the west. After the oil tank of the fighter plane was leaked, it had to land in Niihao Island, the westernmost island of the Hawaiian Islands, which was designated by the Japanese navy before the war, waiting for the Japanese submarine to come to the rescue. However, the aborigines on the island flocked to capture them and took away the books (mistaken for code books) and pistols they carried.

After that, the aborigines were polite, and a Japanese immigrant named Yoshio Harada was hired as an interpreter. Unexpectedly, Harada did not convey the fact that Xikai participated in the attack on Pearl Harbor to the villagers, and then helped Xikai escape. The two found that the wireless motor was damaged and could not ask for help, so they set fire to the Zero fighter. Feeling betrayed (Harada lived with his Japanese wife and islanders for three years and had a good relationship), the islanders were furious, found Xikaidi and Harada, and besieged them to death. This incident, together with the fact that an American investigation later found that Japanese people living in Honolulu passed on American intelligence in Pearl Harbor for the Japanese army, became the fuse that American society generally believed that all Japanese people were potential dangerous elements and finally decided to put all Japanese people in centralized detention places.