History’s Deadliest Woman and Other Lesser Known Killers

History’s Deadliest Woman and Other Lesser Known Killers

Khalid Elhassan - September 6, 2019

History’s Deadliest Woman and Other Lesser Known Killers
Ruins of a boiler building in a Unit 731 biological warfare facility. War History Online

31. After Killing Over Half a Million People, Shiro Ishii Walked Away Scot Free

After the war, it was estimated that the Japanese germ warfare and experiments overseen by Shrio Ishii had killed anywhere from tens of thousands to 400,000 Chinese from bubonic plague, anthrax, cholera, and other diseases. According to the most reliable recent estimate, from the 2002 International Symposium on the Crimes of Biological Warfare, victims of the Japanese biological warfare overseen by Ishii numbered as high as 580,000. Yet, the Japanese doctor never faced a war crimes tribunal, nor was he ever prosecuted for his horrific deeds.

Unit 731 Evacuates

In August of 1945, just before the Soviets conquered Manchuria, Ishii evacuated Unit 731 back to Japan. He destroyed most traces of his camps, and had all remaining prisoners, plus 600 workers, murdered. The Soviets nonetheless captured some documents, which they used in their own biological warfare program. After the war, American microbiologists deemed Ishii’s work “absolutely invaluable .. [it] could never have been obtained in the United States because of scruples attached to experiments on humans“. So he cut a deal to avoid prosecution, in exchange for sharing the results of his experiments with American biological warfare experts. Although Unit 731’s victims included American POWs, General Douglas MacArthur, who ran the occupation of the Japan, officially denied the existence of any Japanese experiments upon Americans. Shiro Ishii lived a free man, until his death in 1959 from throat cancer.

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