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Why were there so few Japanese prisoners in the war?
Anyone who knows the history of the Anti-Japanese War will know that in the battle between China and the Japanese army, even if the Japanese army was defeated, there were almost no Japanese prisoners. Why?

Among the Japanese officers captured in China, only Shaozuo can be found in the records. There are no prisoners in Japan. In fact, this is not because China's army is too strong to kill all the Japanese, but because the Japanese did not choose to surrender after their defeat, so they committed suicide directly.

The Japanese received military education from childhood. In their education, soldiers are loyal to the emperor all their lives until the moment they die.

In the Japanese concept, surrender and abandonment are disloyal to the emperor and violate their bushido spirit. As long as they have breath, they will fight to the last minute.

The Japanese know that they have lost, and they will choose to commit suicide in order not to be captured by others. In the Japanese army, when a prisoner comes back, he will be looked down upon by the whole country, which is worse than death.