Second Philippine Republic
Full Name: Republic of the Philippines
Alias: Second Philippine Republic
Japanese-sponsored Philippine Republic
Origin: The Philippines
Foundation: October 14, 1943
headquarters
Manila (1942 - 1945)
Baguio (1945)
Commanders: Tomoyuki Yamashita (de facto)
Jose P. Laurel (de jure)
Goals: Remain the officially-recognized Filipino state (failed)
Crimes: Authoritarianism
Mass starvation
Mass repression
War crimes
Mass Murder
Censorship
Propaganda
Anti-Semitism
Xenophobia
Cruelty to animals
Persecution of Christians
Fascism
Homophobia
Islamophobia
Misogyny
Cruelty to animals
Type of Villain: Puppet State

The Second Philippine Republic was a puppet state of Imperial Japan that existed during the Axis Powers' occupation of Philippines during World War II.  It was formed in 1943 and remained in existence until August 17th, 1945 after Japanese forces loses it territories

History edit

The Japanese attack of the Philippines on December 8, 1941, came at a time when the U.S. military buildup had hardly begun. Their advance was rapid; before Christmas, Manila was declared an “open city,” while Quezon and Osmeña were evacuated to MacArthur’s headquarters on Corregidor Island. Despite a desire, at one point, to return to Manila in order to surrender, Quezon was persuaded to leave the Philippines in March 1942 on a U.S. submarine; he was never to return. Osmeña also went. Filipino and American forces, under Gen. Jonathan M. Wainwright, surrendered in May. An Executive Commission made up of more than 30 members of the old Filipino political elite had been cooperating with Japanese military authorities in Manila since January.

The Executive Commission lasted until September 1943, when it was superseded by an “independent Philippine Republic.” The president, chosen by the Japanese, was José Laurel, former associate justice of the commonwealth Supreme Court and the only Filipino to hold an honorary degree from Tokyo Imperial University. More than half of the commonwealth Senate and more than one-third of the House served at one time in the Japanese-sponsored regime. Yet collaboration with Japan was neither as willing nor as widespread as elsewhere in Southeast Asia.

Even before the fall of the Bataan Peninsula to the Japanese in April 1942, guerrilla units were forming throughout the Philippines. Most were led by middle-class officers and were enthusiastically pro-United States; in central Luzon, however, a major force was the Hukbalahap, which, under communist leadership, capitalized on earlier agrarian unrest. Though in a number of instances collaborators secretly assisted guerrillas, many guerrillas in the hills were bitter against those who appeared to benefit from the occupation. The differences between the two groups became an important factor in early postwar politics.

Soon after the U.S. landings on Leyte in October 1944, commanded by MacArthur, civil government was returned to the commonwealth, at least in the name. Sergio Osmeña, who had become president in exile on the death of Quezon in August, had few resources to deal with the problems at hand, however. Osmeña’s role was complicated by the fact that MacArthur chose to lionize Manuel A. Roxas, a leading collaborator who had also been in contact with U.S. military intelligence. As president of the Senate, Roxas became, in effect, MacArthur’s candidate for president. Roxas was nominated in January 1946 in a separate convention of the “liberal wing” of the Nacionalista Party, as it was first called. Thus was born the Philippines’ second major political party, the Liberals.