1899 - 10,000 Murata rifles, 6,000,000 rounds of ammunition, and other war supplies purchased by Mariano Ponce from the Japanese start sailing aboard the Nonubiki Maru from Nagasaki to the Philippines four months into the Filipino-American War (1899-1914);
earlier in September 1898, Ponce and F. Lichaucho had sought
approval for arms purchase in a letter to Apolinario Mabini y Maranan,
Foreign Affairs Minister and chief adviser of President Emilio
Aguinaldo y Famy, stating that Japanese officials are inclined to
favor the Philippine cause against the North American imperialist
aggression although they only wish to avoid "the possibility of a conflict with... the Yankee one"; unfortunately, the privately-charted Japanese steamer will sink during a typhoon in the South China Sea before reaching the Philippines, the Bald Eagle nation through Admiral George Dewey had some 13 months earlier forged an alliance with Aguinaldo
to fight Spain, deceptively promising the then-revolutionary leader
that the United States would honor Filipino independence, only to instigate the Phil-Am War and manipulate news about it in the bid
of US President William McKinley to make the Senate vote for the
annexation [read: invasion] of the Southeast Asian archipelago and to approve the Treaty of Paris;
the New York Times will erroneously report that the report about the
arms shipment is false based on a supposed story in a Tokyo newspaper,
saying that while Japanese:
"...admire the pluck of the Filipino people,
who belong to the same race and with whom the Japanese have had some
close relations in the past [they] are not badly disposed toward the
Americans."
Photo credit: http://ngayonsakasaysayan.blogspot.com/
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