Last Mission to Tokyo
The Extraordinary Story of the Doolittle Raiders and Their Final Fight for Justice
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- $22.99
Publisher Description
Michel Paradis’s Last Mission to Tokyo, a “superb” (The Wall Street Journal) and “engrossing...richly researched” (The New York Times Book Review) account of a key but underreported moment in World War II: The Doolittle Raids and the international war crimes trial in 1945 that defined the Japanese-American relations and changed legal history.
In 1942, freshly humiliated from the attack on Pearl Harbor, the United States was in search of a plan. President Roosevelt, determined to show the world that our nation would not be intimidated or defeated by enemy powers, demanded recommendations for a show of strength. Jimmy Doolittle, a stunt pilot with a doctorate from MIT, came forward and led eighty young men, gathered together from the far-flung corners of Depression-era America, on a seemingly impossible mission across the Pacific. Sixteen planes in all, they only had enough fuel for a one-way trip. Together, the Raiders, as they were called, did what no one had successfully done for more than a thousand years. They struck the mainland of Japan and permanently turned the tide of the war in the Pacific.
Almost immediately, The Doolittle Raid captured the public imagination, and has remained a seminal moment in World War II history, but the heroism and bravery of the mission is only half the story. In Last Mission to Tokyo, Michel Paradis reveals the dramatic aftermath of the mission, which involved two lost crews captured, tried, and tortured at the hands of the Japanese, a dramatic rescue of the survivors in the last weeks of World War II, and an international manhunt and trial led by two dynamic and opposing young lawyers—in which both the United States and Japan accused the other of war crimes—that would change the face of our legal and military history. Perfect for fans of Lucky 666 and Nuremberg: Infamy on Trial, Last Mission to Tokyo is an unforgettable war story-meets-courtroom-drama that “captures the reader with the first sentence and never lets go” (John Grisham).
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Columbia Law School lecturer Paradis debuts with a deeply sourced account of the aftermath of one of WWII's most famous air raids. Under the command of U.S. Army Air Force officer Jimmy Doolittle, 16 planes bombed Tokyo in April 1942. Then, after crash-landing near Shanghai, eight crewmen were captured and tortured by Japanese soldiers. Three were convicted of "atrocities against civilians" in a show trial and executed; a fourth died in captivity. The surviving POWs were rescued from a Japanese internment camp on the outskirts of Beijing in 1945. The bulk of the book recounts U.S. military lawyer Robert Dwyer's efforts to hold those responsible for the mistreatment and executions of the Doolittle Raiders accountable. Paradis painstakingly recounts Dwyer's investigation and decision to prosecute four Japanese officers for torture and murder, and draws on transcripts, press coverage, war diaries, and interviews to recreate the trial, in which teams of American prosecutors and Japanese and American defense lawyers sparred over what constitutes a war crime. Though human elements of the story sometimes take a back seat to legal matters, Paradis persuasively argues that the case set a meaningful precedent for the Geneva Conventions. This finely wrought history rescues a dramatic WWII episode from obscurity.