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They were told capture meant torture… starvation… humiliation. Instead, they were handed hamburgers and Coca Cola. In December 1944, Japanese prisoners of war arrived at Camp McCoy, Wisconsin expecting brutality. What they encountered inside American POW camps challenged everything they had been taught about the enemy. Warm meals. Medical care. Red Cross oversight. Even bottles of Coca Cola lined across mess hall tables. More than 50,000 Japanese POWs were held in camps across the United States during World War 2. Many had survived months of malnutrition in the Pacific before surrendering. At American camps, they encountered something they were unprepared for… abundance. Archival records from the U.S. Army and Red Cross detail strict adherence to the Geneva Convention, including fair work assignments, medical treatment, educational classes, and the ability to send letters home. For men raised on propaganda that portrayed Americans as monsters, the experience created a profound psychological rupture. This documentary explores the little discussed reality of Japanese prisoners of war in America, the industrial scale of the U.S. wartime economy, and the deeply human moments that unfolded behind barbed wire. Hamburgers served in mess halls. Chocolate purchased with camp coupons. Guards sharing photographs of their families. Small gestures that destabilized years of indoctrination. How does kindness function in the middle of total war? What happens when an enemy treats you better than your own command? Through historical research, wartime documentation, and firsthand accounts, this film examines the moral paradox of World War 2 POW camps in the United States… and the lasting impact those experiences carried back to Japan after 1945. History is not always what we expect. Sometimes the most powerful battlefield is the human conscience. 🔔 SUBSCRIBE for more untold tales of WWII 👍 LIKE if you enjoyed this World War 2 Deep Dive 💬 COMMENT below and tell us if you learned anything new from this video! #worldwar2 #worldwar2documentary #ww2history #ww2 #historydocumentary Note: This story is based on documented historical events and archival sources. Certain details have been dramatized for narrative clarity. For academic research, consult primary historical records.