Tōjō Hideki

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Tōjō Hideki (1884-1948) was Japan's top leader during World War II. He was prime minister from 1941 to 1944. He was executed for war crimes in 1948.

Commissioned into the army in 1905, he rose steadily in rank and acquired the nickname Kamisori (razor) for his sharp mind. The army put down an attempted coup by ultranationalist junior officers in 1936. The coup left the high command fearful of ultranationalist assassins and plotters. To appease this faction, Japan embarked on a massive military buildup and an aggressive foreign policy.

Tōjō Hideki
Japanese name
Kanji 東條 英機

Appointed head of the Kwantung Army in Manchuria, Tōjō participated in the 1937 invasion of China. He was recalled to Tokyo in May 1938 to serve as vice minister for the army. Tōjō agitated for war with Russia and an offensive was launched in Mongolia in July. Tōjō first made headlines in the autumn of 1938 when he delivered a fiery speech that stressed the need to prepare for war against both the Russians in the north and the Anglo-Americans in south, not to mention continued war against China.[1]

This ambitious plan of all-out aggression was dashed in the summer of 1939. The Russian army defeated the Japanese at Nomonhan, and the offensive in Mongolia had to be called off. Details concerning this incident, which cost Japan 30,000 to 50,000 casualties, were not shared with the Japanese public, which retained an unrealistic view of the country’s military potential.

In July 1940, Hata resigned unexpectedly without preparing a successor. His protest brought down the civilian government. Although the army had several generals who were more senior than Tōjō, they were unavailable at this time. The high command turned to Tōjō, who was appointment army minister.

Although Prime Minister Konoe was Tōjō's nominal superior, the civilians in the new government were cowed by the recent humiliation inflicted by Hata. Tōjō had played a key role in suppressing the revolt of 1936. But once in charge, he proceeded to implement the ultranationalist agenda. In September 1940, he merged the political parties into an “Imperial Rule Assistance Association.”

In early September, while the government was negotiating with the French, the army in China attacked the French in Indochina without authorization. Tōjō responded by court martialling those responsible. This allowed Tōjō to get a handle on the problem of troublesome junior officers, or chuken shoko, who had frustrated the helpless Japanese governments of the 1930s.[2]

In the course of a few weeks, Tōjō had gone from obscure bureaucrat to military dictator of Japan -- a position for which no precedent existed. Compared to a Hitler or a Stalin, his powers were curtailed. He never gained control of the industrial combines, or zaibatsu, the navy, or the imperial court. Even within the army, his powers were limited by the fact that chief of staff was an independent position. He saw himself as the army's representative and advocate and rarely acted without the backing of the high command.

The records the for the imperial conference of September 1940 reveal that Tōjō had revised his views concerning the "strike north"/"strike south" issue. He now opposed an attack on Russia, but supported expansion into Southeast Asia. At this point, "strike south" was more of a dreamy ambition than a strategy. Tōjō had no idea what to do about the U.S. Navy, which was likely to oppose action of this kind. In November, the British destroyed an Italian fleet in Taranto using an airstrike. To Yamamoto and other Japanese naval officers, this suggested a solution to Japan's dilemma. As an army man, Tōjō saw the United States as the Navy's problem.

Matters came to a head when Hitler attacked Russia in June 1941. The Russians pulled their military forces out of the Far East to focus on Europe, and an imperial conference was held in Tokyo in early July to fashion a response. Officers serving in the Kwantung Army argued that the time was ripe to attack Russia from the East. However, Tōjō and other senior commanders were anxious to avoid a repeat of Nomonhan. By this time, Yamamoto's plan for an airstrike on the U.S. fleet had advanced significantly. This allowed naval officers to listen more sympathetically to the army's pleas for adventurism.

The July conference resolved upon a "strike south" policy and Japanese reserves were secretly mobilized. If America or Britain stood in the way of southward expansion, it was resolved that Japan would "not decline" (jisezu) a war with either or both these nations. The conference set a deadline of October for a diplomatic resolution of the crisis. The strike south policy, which led to Pearl Harbor, was thus conceived as a device to avoid war with Russia.

Plans called for a brief offensive to conquer Southeast Asia, after which the army would return to Manchuria to guard the border with Russia. Unlike the chuken shoko, Tōjō had access to detailed intelligence and was under no illusions. Privately, he estimated the chances of success at fifty-fifty. But he had apparently gone too far down the ultranationalist road at this point to consider alternatives.[1]

On October 14, a meeting of retired prime ministers chose Tōjō to replace Konoe as prime minister. A military leader was the logical choice in light of the decisions reached earlier at the conference. As prime minister, Tōjō bore responsibility for the attack on Pearl Harbor and the outbreak of the Pacific War. He resigned his positions and went into retirement in July 1944. Following the end of the war, as American troops moved in to arrest Tōjō, he made a failed attempt at suicide.

At the Tokyo War Crimes Trials, Tōjō was found guilty of waging unprovoked or aggressive war against China, the United States, United Kingdom, Netherlands and France and for permitting the inhumane treatment of Prisoners of War and others. He was sentenced to death and executed by hanging on 23 December 1948.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 The Cambridge History of Japan, Volume 6, "Ascent of Tōjō," pp. 323-325.
  2. Hoyt, Edwin Palmer, Warlord: Tojo Against the World, p. 38.