I just was reading about how some Japanese groups are upset about the portrayal of the POW camp.
Perhaps they can tell my sister-in-law (who never knew her oldest brother) how their POW camps were actually much closer to Country Clubs than prisons and he must have only imagined being water-boarded to death at age 19 while enjoying their hospitality.
Perhaps they can tell the WWII Pacific Veteran I met during Pearl Harbor Day in 1990, that the story he told about finding his childhood friend recently liberated from a Japanese POW camp in the Philippines and not recognizing the guy because he only weighed about 80 lbs all the while trying to hold back the tears and eventually breaking down and losing it was likely lying. (I will never forget that encounter and story, he told just my brother, my SIL and myself about those events when he found out about her brother. It was something he said he had wrestled with every day, which he compared to the soldiers in Europe dealing with concentration camps because the prisoners were basically in an identical condition to the camp survivors.)
I have nothing against the Japanese people, but it seems like they've always had a huge blind spot about how atrocious their actions were in WII: from the Rape of Nanking to the Bataan death march to their treatment of native civilians (labor camps and kidnapping women to force into prostitution) to their treatment of all who came under their control in general.
F those deniers, F them all and may they get *** CANCER!