1:21:00
We cannot afford armaments.
1:21:03
We cannot afford
the trapping of power.
1:21:09
And never, never again
can we suffer...
1:21:12
Nagasaki and Hiroshima.
1:21:17
Let us renounce war, sir.
1:21:21
Please.
1:21:22
Let us renounce war
in the new constitution...
1:21:27
and forever.
1:21:31
Mr. Shidehara...
1:21:35
no man detests war...
1:21:40
more than this soldier.
1:21:42
My abhorrence for it
reached its height...
1:21:45
with the development
of the atom bomb.
1:21:50
No man, sir, could be
more moved by your offer...
1:21:54
or more determined
to accept it.
1:21:57
It's damned embarrassing.
1:22:00
I've been telling Congress for
months we need 400,000 men in Japan.
1:22:03
MacArthur holds a press conference, says
he can make do with half that number.
1:22:06
General, did he clear
this with you? No, sir.
1:22:08
There's been some misunderstanding.
Not by me there isn't.
1:22:11
I invited MacArthur to come home. I wanted
to discuss occupation policy with him,
1:22:14
and I expected him to back up our position
before the congressional committees.
1:22:18
So I held out
the big carrot to him.
1:22:20
I told him we'd set up a series of welcome-home
demonstrations and a joint session of congress.
1:22:23
You know what he replied?
1:22:25
He said he thought the situation was just too
dangerous there for him to come home right now.
1:22:28
He was just too busy. That's what he said to
the president of the United States, damn it!
1:22:34
General Derevyanko,
I must say...
1:22:36
I've missed you.
1:22:39
Only short visit to Moscow,
a meeting with my superiors,
1:22:43
a holiday on Caspian Sea
with family.
1:22:45
Good. I was afraid that
Stalin had had you shot.
1:22:49
No, no.
Why do you say that?
1:22:51
Would Truman
have you shot?
1:22:54
Sometimes I wonder.
1:22:58
General, it's come to my attention
that several hundreds of thousands...