As usual no historical data to back up his opinion. Heres a quick read on the glorious tank operations of the Japanese
http://www3.plala.or.jp/takihome/history.htm Do scroll to the bottom to read the accounts of the glory reaped by Jap tankers against the Yanks and Brits.
Visions of a Pacific Kursk comes to mind. 
I actually have a lot of sources to back up my opinion and nothing that link you provided contradicts anything I posted previously. Please show me where there wasn't at least one tank engagement in any of the major island campaign or at disprove anything else I posted. You can't and there is a reason for that...
You can't disprove anything that I posted so you try and change the argument and argue a point that was never made. No one denied or tried to claim that the Japanese tanks were a match for Allied armor, that was only in your little mind. I would suggest try reading some books on the Pacific campaigns but I'm not sure if you know how.
For anyone else interested in the Pacific campaigns, I suggest starting off with "Strong Men Armed - The United States Marines Against Japan". It's the battle history of the USMC in the Pacific and covers all of their campaigns and is an excellent resource and read. It's written by historian/journalist/author/WW2 Marine, Robert Leckie (A helmet for my pillow). Below are some further books that are excellent starter material.
A couple of other books on the Pacific.
"Goodbye, Darkness - A memoir of the Pacific War" by William Manchester
"Brotherhood of Heroes - The Marines at Peleliu, 1944" by Bill Sloan
"The Ghost Mountain Boys" (history of the 32nd Division during the Battle for New Guinea) by James Cambell
"One Square Mile of Hell: The Battle for Tarawa" by John Wukovits
And for those interested in tank combat in the Pacific...
"Cutthroats: The Adventures of a Sherman Tank Driver in the Pacific" by Robert Dick.
ack-ack