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This two-hour documentary examines the final year of World War
II in the Pacific.
"Take no prisoners. Fight to the bitter end." Those were
everyday words to combat troops on both sides at the end of World
War II in the Pacific. And they led to an unprecedented orgy of
slaughter. This provocative, thorough examination of the final
months of the war looks at the escalation of bloodletting from both
Japanese and American vantage points. As the film shows, most of
Emperor Hirohito's inner circle was determined to continue the war
even after losses in the Philippines in February 1945 cut off
Japan's supply lines. And though he was warned that the country,
brought to its knees by the conflict, might erupt in a Communist
revolution, Hirohito believed that one last decisive battle could
reverse Japan's fortunes. The Americans, for their part, were
startled by the intensity and determination of the Japanese
defenders in the South Pacific. From the U.S. capture of the
Mariana Islands through the firebombing of Tokyo and the dropping
of the atomic bomb, this program chronicles the dreadful and
unprecedented loss of life, and the decisions made by leaders on
both sides that finally ended the war.