Jump to content

Hideki Tojo: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Fang2415 (talk | contribs)
Article lead looks good, but the rest needs a cleanup (esp. for language & fact details)
MOS:SUICIDDE, also tautology.
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|Prime Minister of Japan from 1941 to 1944}}
{{Cleanup}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2020}}
{{Eastern name order|Tōjō Hideki}}
{{Infobox officeholder
| honorific_prefix = [[Junior Second Rank]]
| name = Hideki Tojo
| native_name = {{No bold|東條 英機}}
| native_name_lang = ja
| image = Hideki Tojo 2 (cropped).jpg
| caption = Tojo {{circa}} 1945
| order = 27th
| office = Prime Minister of Japan
| monarch = [[Hirohito]]
| term_start = 18 October 1941
| term_end = 22 July 1944
| predecessor = [[Fumimaro Konoe]]
| successor = [[Kuniaki Koiso]]
| order2 = [[Army Ministry|Minister of the Army]]
| primeminister2 = {{nowrap|Fumimaro Konoe (1940–1941)}} <br/> Himself (1941–1944)
| term_start2 = 22 July 1940
| term_end2 = 22 July 1944
| predecessor2 = [[Shunroku Hata]]
| successor2 = [[Hajime Sugiyama]]
| order3 = [[Imperial Japanese Army General Staff Office|Chief of the Imperial Japanese Army <br/> General Staff]]
| primeminister3 = Hideki Tojo (Himself)
| term_start3 = 21 February 1944
| term_end3 = 18 July 1944
| predecessor3 = Hajime Sugiyama
| successor3 = [[Yoshijirō Umezu]]
| birth_date = {{birth date|df=yes|1884|12|30}}
| birth_place = [[Kōjimachi|Kōjimachi Ward]], [[Tokyo City|Tokyo]], [[Empire of Japan]]
| death_date = {{death date and age|df=yes|1948|12|23|1884|12|30}}
| death_cause = [[Execution by hanging]]{{sfn|Yenne|p=337}}
| death_place = [[Sugamo Prison]], [[Tokyo]], [[Occupied Japan]]
| party = [[Imperial Rule Assistance Association]] (1940–1945)
| otherparty = [[Independent (politician)|Independent]] (before 1940)
| father = Hidenori Tojo
| mother = Chitose Tojo
| spouse = {{marriage|Katsuko Ito|1909}}
| children = 3 sons, 4 daughters
| alma_mater = {{Plainlist|
* [[Imperial Japanese Army Academy]]
* [[Army War College (Japan)|Army War College]]}}
| signature = Hideki Tojo signature.svg
| allegiance = Empire of Japan
| branch = [[Imperial Japanese Army]]
| serviceyears = 1905–1945
| rank = [[General]]
| commands = [[Kwantung Army]] (1932–1934)
| battles = {{tree list}}
* [[Russo-Japanese War]]
* [[World War I]]
* [[Russian Civil War]]
* [[Chinese Civil War]]
** [[Japanese invasion of Manchuria]]
* [[February 26 Incident]]
* [[World War II]]
** [[Second Sino-Japanese War]]
*** [[Operation Chahar]]
{{tree list/end}}
| awards = {{Plainlist|
* [[Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun]]
* [[Order of the Golden Kite|Order of the Golden Kite, 2nd Class]]
* [[Order of the Sacred Treasure]]}}
| module = '''Criminal conviction'''{{Infobox criminal
| child = yes
| conviction = [[Crimes against peace]]<br>[[Japanese war crimes|War crimes]]
| trial = International Military Tribunal for the Far East
| conviction_penalty = [[Capital punishment|Death]]
| conviction_status = [[Executed]]
| victims = Millions
| targets = Chinese, Korean, Indochinese, Indonesian, Malaysian, Filipino, Australian, and other civilians<br /> Allied prisoners of war
| country = Multiple countries across Asia
| beginyear = 1937
| endyear = 1945
}}
| module2 = {{Infobox Chinese |child =yes
| shinjitai = 東条 英機
| kyujitai = 東條 英機
| kana = とうじょう ひでき
| romaji = Tōjō Hideki
}}
}}
{{Shōwa Statism|People}}


{{nihongo|'''Hideki Tojo'''|東條 英機|Tōjō Hideki|{{IPA|ja|toːʑoː çideki|pron|ja-tojo hideki.ogg}}; 30 December 1884{{Snd}}23 December 1948}} was a Japanese politician and general who served as [[prime minister of Japan]] from 1941 to 1944, during [[World War II]]. His leadership was marked by widespread [[state violence]] perpetrated in the name of [[Japanese nationalism]] and [[imperialism]]; after the war, he was convicted as a [[war criminal]] and executed. Tojo's legacy remains firmly intertwined with the [[Empire of Japan]]'s wars of aggression and numerous atrocities.
{{Infobox_President | name = Hideki Tojo
| nationality = [[Japanese people|Japanese]]
| image = Tojo2.jpg
| order = 40th<br/>[[Prime Minister of Japan]]
| term_start = [[October 18]], [[1941]]
| term_end = [[July 22]], [[1944]]
| vicepresident =
| predecessor = [[Fumimaro Konoe]]
| successor =
| birth_date = [[December 30]], [[1884]]
| birth_place = [[Kanagawa Prefecture]], [[Japan]]
| death_date = [[December 23]], [[1948]]
| death_place = [[Tokyo]], [[Japan]]
| party =
| spouse =
| religion =
|}}


Born in Tokyo to a military family, Tojo was educated at the [[Imperial Japanese Army Academy|Japanese Military Academy]] and began his career in the [[Imperial Japanese Army]] (IJA) in 1905. He served as a [[military attaché]] in Germany from 1919 to 1922, and rose through the ranks to become a [[general officer|general]] in 1934. In 1935, he assumed top command of the [[Kempeitai]] attached to the [[Kwantung Army]] in [[Manchuria]], and was promoted to the Kwantung Army's chief of staff in 1937, leading military operations against the Chinese in the border regions. In 1938, Tojo was recalled to Tokyo following the outbreak of the [[Second Sino-Japanese War]] to serve as vice minister of the army, and in 1940 he was appointed minister of the army in the cabinet of [[Fumimaro Konoe]]. Tojo emerged as an outspoken advocate for a [[Preemptive war|pre-emptive attack]] on the United States and its Western allies.
'''Hideki Tojo''' ([[Wiktionary:Kyūjitai|Kyūjitai]]: 東條 英機; [[Wiktionary:Shinjitai|Shinjitai]]: 東条 英機; ''{{Audio|ja-tojo_hideki.ogg|Tōjō Hideki}}'') ([[December 30]] [[1884]] &ndash; [[December 23]] [[1948]]) was a [[General]] in the [[Imperial Japanese Army]], an ultranationalist thinker, and the 40th [[Prime Minister of Japan]]; he served as prime minister during much of [[World War II]], from [[October 18]] [[1941]] to [[July 22]] [[1944]]. He was [[executed]] on December 23, 1948 after being sentenced to death for war crimes.


On Konoe's resignation, Tojo was appointed prime minister in October 1941. He oversaw Japan's decision to go to war with the Allies, its pre-emptive [[attack on Pearl Harbor]] and other U.S. and British possessions, and its ensuing conquest of much of [[Southeast Asia]] and the Pacific. During his tenure, Tojo presided over numerous [[Japanese war crimes|war crimes]], including the massacre and starvation of thousands of [[Prisoner of war|prisoners of war]] and millions of Asian civilians. From February 1944, Tojo concurrently served as the army's chief of staff. As the tide of war turned against Japan and after it was defeated at the [[Battle of Saipan]], Tojo resigned as prime minister and chief of staff in July 1944. After [[Surrender of Japan|Japan's surrender]], he was arrested in September 1945 (during which he made a suicide attempt), convicted at the [[Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal]], and hanged in 1948.
==Military and political life==


== Early life and education ==
Tojo was born in [[Tokyo]], Japan in [[1884]]. He was the third son of Hidenori Tojo, a [[Lieutenant General]] in the Japanese Army. Tojo's two older brothers died before his birth. In [[1909]] he married Katsuko Ito, with whom he had three sons and four daughters.
Hideki Tojo was born in the [[Kōjimachi]] district of [[Tokyo]] on December 30, 1884,{{sfn|Gorman|p=43}} as the third son of Hidenori Tojo, a lieutenant general in the Imperial Japanese Army.{{sfn|Butow|p=4}} Under the ''[[bakufu]]'', Japanese society was divided rigidly into four castes; the merchants, artisans, peasants, and the [[samurai]]. After the [[Meiji Restoration]], the caste system was abolished in 1871, but the former caste distinctions in many ways persisted afterwards, which ensured that those from the former samurai caste continued to enjoy their traditional prestige.{{sfn|Browne|p=19}} The Tojo family came from the samurai caste though the Tojos were relatively lowly warrior retainers for the great ''[[daimyō]]'' (lords) that they had served for generations.{{sfn|Browne|p=11}} Tojo's father was a samurai turned Army officer and his mother was the daughter of a [[Buddhism in Japan|Buddhist]] priest, making his family very respectable but poor.{{sfn|Browne|p=19}}<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |last=Morris |first=Roy Jr. |date=2020-04-19 |title=Putting Tojo On the Stand: The Tokyo War Crimes Trials |url=https://nationalinterest.org/blog/buzz/putting-tojo-stand-tokyo-war-crimes-trials-145367 |access-date=2021-08-26 |website=The National Interest |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Tojo: Japan's Razor of Fear {{!}} Evolution of Evil |url=https://www.ahctv.com/tv-shows/evolution-of-evil/full-episodes/tojo-japans-razor-of-fear |access-date=2021-08-26 |website=AHC |language=en-US}}</ref>


Tojo had an education typical of Japanese youth in the [[Meiji era]].{{sfn|Browne|pp=14–15, 19–20}} As a boy, Tojo was known for his stubbornness, lack of a sense of humor, and tenacious way of pursuing what he wanted.{{sfn|Browne|p=20}} He was an opinionated and combative youth who was fond of getting into fights with other boys. Japanese schools in the Meiji era were very competitive, and there was no tradition of sympathy for those who failed, and were often bullied by the teachers.{{sfn|Browne|p=20}} Those who knew him during his formative years deemed him to be of only average intelligence. However, he was known to compensate for his observed lack of intellect with a willingness to work extremely hard.{{sfn|Browne|p=20}} Tojo's boyhood hero was the 17th-century shogun [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] who issued the injunction: "Avoid the things you like, turn your attention to unpleasant duties."{{sfn|Browne|p=20}} Tojo liked to say, "I am just an ordinary man possessing no shining talents. Anything I have achieved I owe to my capacity for hard work and never giving up."{{sfn|Browne|p=20}} In 1899, Tojo enrolled in the Army Cadet School.
In [[1905]] he graduated from the Imperial Military Academy and entered service as a [[Second Lieutenant]] in the [[infantry]]. He rose through the ranks of the Army, graduating with top grades from the Army college <!-- need a better translation for rikugun-daigakkou...staff college? Army War College? -->in 1915. After graduation, he taught at the war college and served as an infantry officer.


In 1905, Tojo shared in the general outrage in Japan at the [[Treaty of Portsmouth]], which ended the [[Russo-Japanese War|war with Russia]] and was seen by the Japanese people as a betrayal, as the war did not end with Japan annexing [[Siberia]], which popular opinion had demanded.{{sfn|Browne|pp=23–24}} The Treaty of Portsmouth was so unpopular that it set off anti-American riots known as the [[Hibiya incendiary incident]], as many Japanese were enraged at the way the Americans had apparently cheated Japan as the Japanese gains in the treaty were far less than what public opinion had expected. Very few Japanese people at the time had understood that the war against Russia had pushed their nation to the verge of bankruptcy, and most people in Japan believed that the American president [[Theodore Roosevelt]] who had mediated the Treaty of Portsmouth had cheated Japan out of its rightful gains.{{sfn|Browne|p=24}} Tojo's anger at the Treaty of Portsmouth left him with an abiding dislike of Americans.{{sfn|Browne|p=24}} In 1909, he married Katsuko Ito, with whom he had three sons (Hidetake, Teruo, and Toshio) and four daughters (Mitsue, Makie, Sachie, and Kimie).{{sfn|Baudot|p=455}}<ref>Courtney Browne, ''Tojo: The Last Banzai'', Angus & Robertson, 1967, pp. 170–171</ref>
During the 1920s, Tojo was also member of the [[Tosei-Ha]] (Control Group) along with [[Kazushige Ugaki]], [[Gen Sugiyama]], [[Koiso Kuniaki]], [[Yoshijiro Umezu]], and [[Tetsuzan Nagata]]. They attempted to represent the more conservative [[moderates]] in opposition to the [[Extremism|extremist]] group [[Koda-Ha]] (Imperial Benevolent Rule or Action Group) led by [[Sadao Araki]]. Both factions derived from the [[Double Leaf Society]], a 1920s militaristic group with fanatical [[ultranationalism|ultranationalistic]] beliefs.


== Military career ==
<!-- In these period was participied in undercover conferences of [[Three Ravens]] and [[Eleven Reliable Men]]s,as secret military-strategical Army thougth groups,why planeed the basis of reorganization of imperial armed forces,and traced the future conquest lines.(Three Ravens and Eleven Reliable Men, Some problems are pointed out with these articles. Please describe it here after having solved those problems.) -->
[[File:Young Tojo.JPG|thumb|upright|Young Hideki Tojo|left]]


===Early service as officer===
By [[1935]], he was a [[major general]] commanding the [[Kempeitai]] of the [[Kantogun]] (also known as Kwantung Army) in the Japanese [[puppet state]] of [[Manchukuo]], and by 1937 he was chief of staff of that army. In 1938, Tojo served as Vice-Minister of War. From December of 1938 to 1940, Tojo was Inspector-General of Army Aviation. He was also the real commander-in-chief in charge of the [[Japanese Secret Services]] before and during the Pacific War period, and was in direct contact with [[Koki Hirota]] and leading the secret services in the [[Black Dragon Society]] and other Japanese [[secret societies]].
Upon graduating from the Japanese Military Academy (ranked 10th of 363 cadets)<ref>{{cite web|url=https://historycollection.com/japanese-hitler-hideki-tojo-prime-minister-executed-handsa-us/|title=Japanese Hitler: Hideki Tojo – A Prime Minister Executed By The Hands Of The US!|date=11 August 2016|publisher=HistoryCollection|access-date=22 May 2024}}</ref> in March 1905, he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the infantry of the IJA. In 1918–19, he briefly served in Siberia as part of the Japanese expeditionary force sent to intervene in the [[Russian Civil War]].{{sfn|Browne|p=27}} He served as a Japanese military attache to Germany between 1919 and 1922.{{sfn|Browne|p=28}} As the Imperial Japanese Army had been trained by a German military mission in the 19th century, the Japanese Army was always very strongly influenced by intellectual developments in the German Army, and Tojo was no exception.{{sfn|Browne|pp=28–29}} In the 1920s, the German military favored preparing for the next war by creating a totalitarian ''Wehrstaat'' (Defense State), an idea that was taken up by the Japanese military as the "national defense state." In 1922, on his way home to Japan, he took a train ride across the United States, his first and only visit to North America, which left him with the impression that the Americans were a materialistic soft people devoted only to making money and to hedonistic pursuits like sex, partying, and (despite [[Prohibition in the United States|Prohibition]]) drinking.{{sfn|Browne|p=29}}


Tojo boasted that his only hobby was his work, and he customarily brought home his paperwork to work late into the night and refused to have any part in raising his children, which he viewed both as a distraction from his work and a woman's duty. He had his wife do all the work of taking care of his children.{{sfn|Browne|pp=29–30}} A stern, humorless man, he was known for his brusque manner, his obsession with etiquette, and his coldness.{{sfn|Browne|p=30}} Like almost all Japanese officers at the time, he routinely slapped the faces of the men under his command when giving orders. He said that face-slapping was a "means of training" men who came from families that were not part of the samurai caste and for whom [[bushido]] was not second nature.{{sfn|Browne|p=40}}
During the [[2-26 Incident]], Tojo and [[Shigeru Honjo]], a noted supporter of [[Sadao Araki]], surprisingly acted against the rebels. [[Hirohito|Emperor Hirohito]] acted with unusual force against the coup, and after a brief political crisis and stalling from the military, the rebels were forced to surrender. In the aftermath, many radical officers were retired and the coup leaders were tried and executed.


In 1924, Tojo was greatly offended by the [[Immigration Act of 1924|Immigration Control Act]], which was passed by the US Congress. It banned all Asian immigration into the United States, with many representatives and senators openly saying the act was necessary because Asians worked harder than whites.{{sfn|Browne|p=30}} He wrote with bitterness at the time that American whites would never accept Asians as equals: "It [the Immigration Control Act] shows how the strong will always put their own interests first. Japan, too, has to be strong to survive in the world."{{sfn|Browne|pp=33–34}}
During his period at the [[Home Ministry (Japan)|Home Ministry]], he led the [[Keishicho (to 1945)|Keishicho]] (Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department).


By 1928, he was bureau chief of the Japanese Army and was shortly thereafter promoted to colonel. He began to take an interest in militarist politics during his command of the 8th Infantry Regiment. Reflecting the imagery often used in Japan to describe people in power, he told his officers that they were to be both a "father" and a "mother" to the men under their command.{{sfn|Browne|p=40}} Tojo often visited the homes of the men under his command, assisted his men with personal problems, and made loans to officers short of money.{{sfn|Browne|pp=40–41}} Like many other Japanese officers, he disliked Western cultural influence in Japan, which was often disparaged as resulting in the [[ero guro nansensu]] ("eroticism, grotesquerie and nonsense") movement as he complained about such forms of "Western decadence" like young couples holding hands and kissing in public, which were undermining traditional values necessary to uphold the ''[[kokutai]]''.{{sfn|Browne|pp=47–48}}
In the late [[1930s]], Tojo became a member of the military clique, the [[Kodoha]], that pushed [[Japan]] into the Second World War. Appointed [[Ministry of War|War Minister]] in [[1940]], he was instrumental in leading Japan into the [[Axis Alliance]] with [[Germany]] and [[Italy]]. In July 1940, he was appointed [[War Minister]] in the second [[Fumimaro Konoe]] Cabinet, and remained in that post in the third Konoe Cabinet. When [[Prime Minister]] Konoe was unable to secure an agreement with the [[United States of America|United States]], Tojo's faction drove him into retirement. In [[1941]], Tojo was appointed [[prime minister]] by [[Emperor of Japan|Emperor]] [[Hirohito]] and took command of the entire Japanese military. He also took leadership in [[Imperial Way Faction]] at that time. At varying times during his premiership, Tojo held the [[portfolios]] of [[Minister for Foreign Affairs (Japan)|Foreign Affairs]], Education, [[interior ministry|Home Affairs]], Commerce and Industry, and Munitions. As education minister, he continued [[militaristic]] and [[nationalist]] indoctrination in the national education system, and reaffirmed illiberal policies in government, in accordance with outlines traced by [[Sadao Araki]], his ideological and political precursor.


=== Promotion to army high command ===
In February 1944, Tojo assumed the post of Chief of the Army General Staff. However, following a series of military disasters, culminating in the [[fall of Saipan]], he was abandoned by his backers and forced to resign on [[July 18]], [[1944]]. He retired to the first reserve list and went into seclusion.
In 1934, Hideki was promoted to [[major general]] and served as chief of the personnel department within the [[Army Ministry]].{{sfn|Fredrikson|p=507}} Tojo wrote a chapter in the book ''Hijōji kokumin zenshū'' (''Essays in time of national emergency''), a book published in March 1934 by the Army Ministry calling for Japan to become a totalitarian "national defense state".{{sfn|Bix|p=277}} This book of fifteen essays by senior generals argued that Japan had defeated Russia in the war of 1904–05 because ''bushidō'' had given the Japanese superior willpower as the Japanese did not fear death unlike the Russians who wanted to live, and what was needed to win the inevitable next war (against precisely whom the book did not say) was to repeat the example of the Russian-Japanese war on a much greater scale by creating the "national defense state" to mobilize the entire nation for war.{{sfn|Bix|p=277}} In his essay, Tojo wrote "The modern war of national defense extends over a great many areas" requiring "a state that can monolithically control" all aspects of the nation in the political, social and economic spheres.{{sfn|Bix|pp=277–278}} Tojo attacked Britain, France and the United States for waging "ideological war" against Japan since 1919.{{sfn|Bix|p=278}} Tojo ended his essay by stating that Japan must stand tall "and spread its own moral principles to the world" as the "cultural and ideological war of the 'imperial way' is about to begin".{{sfn|Bix|p=277}}


[[File:Hideki Tojo posing.jpg|thumb|right|upright|Tōjō as Lieutenant General]]
Tojo's nickname was "the razor [kamisori]".
Tojo was appointed commander of the IJA 24th Infantry Brigade in August 1934.{{sfn|Lamont-Brown|p=65}} In September 1935, Tojo assumed top command of the [[Kempeitai]] of the [[Kwantung Army]] in [[Manchukuo|Manchuria]]. Politically, he was nationalist, and militarist, and was nicknamed {{nihongo|"Razor"|カミソリ|Kamisori}}, for his reputation of having a sharp and legalistic mind capable of quick decision-making. Tojo was a member of the ''[[Tōseiha]]'' ("Control Faction") in the Army that was opposed by the more radical ''[[Imperial Way Faction|Kōdōha]]'' ("Imperial Way") faction.{{sfn|Bix|p=244}} Both the ''Tōseiha'' and the ''Kōdōha'' factions were militaristic groups that favored a policy of expansionism abroad and dictatorship under the Emperor at home, but differed over the best way of achieving these goals.{{sfn|Bix|p=244}} The Imperial Way faction wanted a [[coup d'état]] to achieve a [[Shōwa Restoration]]; emphasized "spirit" as the principal war-winning factor; and despite advocating socialist policies at home wanted to invade the Soviet Union.{{sfn|Bix|p=244}} The Control faction, while being willing to use assassination to achieve its goals, was more willing to work within the system to achieve reforms; wanted to create the "national defense state" to mobilize the entire nation before going to war and, while not rejecting the idea of "spirit" as a war-winning factor, also saw military modernization as a war-winning factor and the United States as a future enemy just as much as the Soviet Union.{{sfn|Bix|p=244}}


During the [[February 26 Incident|February 26 coup attempt]] of 1936, Tojo and [[Shigeru Honjō]], a noted supporter of [[Sadao Araki]], both opposed the rebels who were associated with the rival "Imperial Way" faction.{{sfn|Takemae & Ricketts|p=221}} Emperor [[Hirohito]] himself was outraged at the attacks on his close advisors, and after a brief political crisis and stalling on the part of a sympathetic military, the rebels were forced to surrender. As the commander of the ''Kempeitai'', Tojo ordered the arrest of all officers in the Kwantung Army suspected of supporting the coup attempt in Tokyo.{{sfn|Browne|p=59}} In the aftermath, the Tōseiha faction purged the Army of radical officers, and the coup leaders were tried and executed. After the purge, Tōseiha and Kōdōha elements were unified in their nationalist but highly anti-political stance under the banner of the Tōseiha military clique, which included Tojo as one of its leaders.
==Military service==


Tojo was promoted to [[chief of staff (military)|chief of staff]] of the Kwantung Army in 1937.{{sfn|Dear & Foot|p=872}}<ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-06-21 |title=Tojo Hideki {{!}} Biography, Early Years, World War II, Facts, & Death {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Tojo-Hideki |access-date=2023-07-21 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref> As the "Empire of Manchukuo" was, in reality, a Japanese colony in all but name, the Kwangtung Army's duties were just as much political as they were military.{{sfn|Browne|p=60}} During this period, Tojo became close to [[Yōsuke Matsuoka]], the fiery ultra-nationalist CEO of the [[South Manchuria Railway]], one of Asia's largest corporations at the time, and [[Nobusuke Kishi]], the Deputy Minister of Industry in Manchukuo, who was the man ''de facto'' in charge of Manchukuo's economy.{{sfn|Browne|p=60}} Though Tojo regarded preparing for a war against the Soviet Union as his first duty, Tojo also supported the forward policy in Northern China, as the Japanese sought to extend their influence into China.{{sfn|Browne|p=60}} As chief of staff, Tojo was responsible for the military operations designed to increase Japanese penetration into the [[Inner Mongolia]] border regions with Manchukuo. In July 1937, he personally led the units of the 1st Independent Mixed Brigade in [[Operation Chahar]], his only real combat experience.{{sfn|Cowley & Parker|p=473}}
2dLt (Infantry), April 1905; was graduated from [[War College]], December 1915; official duty, [[Switzerland]], August 1919; Major, August 1920; official duty, [[Germany]], July 1921; LtCol, August 1924; Colonel, August 1918; Regimental Commander, 1st Infantry, August 1929; MajGen, March 1933; Commandant,"Rikugun Shikan Gakko" ([[Military Academy]]), March 1934;


After the [[Marco Polo Bridge Incident]] marking the start of the [[Second Sino-Japanese War]], Tojo ordered his forces to attack [[Hebei Province]] and other targets in northern China. Tojo received [[Jewish]] refugees in accordance with Japanese national policy and rejected the resulting Nazi German protests.{{sfn|Goodman & Miyazawa|p=113}} Tojo was recalled to Japan in May 1938 to serve as vice-minister of the army under Army Minister [[Seishirō Itagaki]].{{sfn|Kato|p=127}} From December 1938 to 1940, Tojo was Inspector-General of Army Aviation.{{sfn|''The New International Year Book''|p=320}}
He became the Commander of the 24th Infantry Brigade in August [[1934]]; the [[Commanding General]] of the [[Military Police]] in the Kantogun in September [[1935]]; [[Lieutenant General]] in December [[1936]]; Chief of Staff of the Kantogun in March [[1937]]; the Vice-Minister of War in May [[1938]] (during the first [[Konoe]] Cabinet); and the [[Inspector General]] of [[Army Aviation]] in December 1938.


== Rise to prime minister ==
In July 1937, he personally led the units of the 1st Independent Mixed Brigade in [[Operation Chahar]]. When the [[China Incident]] occurred, the section stationed in [[Manchukuo]] moved to [[Hopei]] and fought near [[Peking]] against Chinese forces. Then the Brigade was ordered to participate in the offensive in [[Chahar]] Province. The Brigade marched via [[Chengde]] and [[Dolonnor]] and reached [[Zhangbei]] in five days. The distance of this march was 700km. Units were assigned to certain infantry divisions. Seeing this use of armor, [[Sakai Kouji]], the tank commader, opposed Tojo, who was the commander of the [[Chahar Expeditionary Force]]; another officer in same operation was [[Kitsuju Ayabe]] who later became the highest commander of all Japanese forces.
=== Advocacy for preventive war ===
On June 1, 1940, Emperor Hirohito appointed [[Kōichi Kido]], a leading "[[reform bureaucrats|reform bureaucrat]]" as the Lord Keeper of the Privy Seal, making him into the Emperor's leading political advisor and fixer.{{sfn|Bix|p=370}} Kido had aided in the creation in the 1930s of an alliance between the "reform bureaucrats" and the Army's "Control" faction centered on Tojo and General [[Mutō Akira]]. {{sfn|Bix|p=370}} Kido's appointment also favored the rise of his allies in the Control faction.{{sfn|Bix|pp=370–371}} On July 30, 1940, Tojo was appointed army minister in the second [[Fumimaro Konoe]] regime and remained in that post in the third Konoe cabinet. Prince Konoe had chosen Tojo, a man representative of both the Army's hardline views and the Control faction with whom he was considered reasonable to deal, to secure the Army's backing for his foreign policy.{{sfn|Bix|p=373}} Tojo was a militant ultra-nationalist who was well respected for his work ethic and his ability to handle paperwork. Tojo upheld the wartime Japanese doctrine of the emperor as a living god, aligning his actions with imperial directives as part of his loyalty to the kokutai.{{sfn|Bix|p=373}} Konoe favored having Germany mediate an end to the Sino-Japanese War, pressured Britain to end its economic and military support of China even at the risk of war, sought better relations with both Germany and the United States, and took advantage of the changes in the international order caused by Germany's victories in the spring of 1940 to make Japan a stronger power in Asia.{{sfn|Bix|pp=373–374}} Konoe wanted to make Japan the dominant power in East Asia, but he also believed it was possible to negotiate a ''modus vivendi'' with the United States under which the Americans would agree to recognize the "[[Greater East Asia Co-prosperity Sphere]]".{{sfn|Bix|pp=373–374}}


By 1940, Konoe, who had started the war with China in 1937, no longer believed that a military solution to the "China Affair" was possible and instead favored having Germany mediate an end to the war that would presumably result in a pro-Japanese peace settlement, but would be less than he himself had outlined in the "Konoe programme" of January 1938.{{sfn|Bix|p=373}} For this reason, Konoe wanted Tojo, a tough general whose ultra-nationalism was beyond question, to provide "cover" for his attempt to seek a diplomatic solution to the war with China.{{sfn|Bix|p=373}} Tojo was a strong supporter of the [[Tripartite Pact]] between Imperial Japan, [[Nazi Germany]], and [[Fascist Italy (1922–1943)|Fascist Italy]]. As the army minister, he continued to expand the war against China.{{citation needed|date=December 2012}} After negotiations with [[Vichy France]], Japan was given permission to place its troops in the southern part of [[French Indochina]] in July 1941. In spite of its formal recognition of the Vichy government, the United States retaliated against Japan by imposing [[economic sanctions]] in August, including a total embargo on oil and gasoline exports.{{sfn|Toland|p={{page needed|date=November 2011}}}} On September 6, a deadline of early October was fixed in the [[Gozen Kaigi|Imperial Conference]] for resolving the situation diplomatically. On October 14, the deadline had passed with no progress. Prime Minister Konoe then held his last cabinet meeting in which Tojo did most of the talking:
===Rise to office of Prime Minister===
[[Image:Tojo3.jpg|right|250px|thumb|Tojo in military uniform]]
In those days, the Japanese army was strongly pushing to begin the war because Germany was winning. Tojo was one of these advocates of war. However, Hirohito did not want to start the war and preferred to keep negotiating with the U.S. in order to find a way out of the conflict. However, the prevailing opinion within the Japanese Army at that time was that continued negotiations could be dangerous. In addition, the US cut off Japan's oil supply. Hirohito thought that he might be able to control extreme opinions in the army by using Tojo since he was charismatic and had many connections within the military. Actually, at that time, Tojo was said to be the only person who could control the army. Also, Tojo was a loyal retainer of the emperor as Hirohito said later. Therefore, Hirohito called Tojo to come to the Imperial Palace one day before Tojo took office. Tojo wrote in his diary, "I thought I was called because the emperor was really angry at my opinion."


{{blockquote
The signal for war in the Pacific was given on [[August 26]] [[1941]], at a session of the [[Black Dragon Society]] in Tokyo. At this meeting, War Minister Hideki Tojo ordered that preparation be made to wage a total war against the armed forces of the United States, and that Japanese guns be mounted and supplies and munitions concentrated in the Marshalls and Caroline groups of the mandated islands by November, 1941. Approving Tojo's war orders, former Foreign Minister Koki Hirota, head of the Black Dragons secret services, discussed the advantages and consequences of a conflict with the United States. Many of those at the meeting considered December, 1941, or February, 1942, the most suitable time for Japan to attack.
|For the past six months, ever since April, the foreign minister has made painstaking efforts to adjust relations. Although I respect him for that, we remain deadlocked&nbsp;... The heart of the matter is the imposition on us of withdrawal from Indochina and China&nbsp;... If we yield to America's demands, it will destroy the fruits of the China incident. Manchukuo will be endangered and our control of Korea undermined.{{sfn|Bix|p=417}}
}}
The prevailing opinion within the Japanese Army at that time was that continued negotiations could be dangerous. However, Hirohito thought that he might be able to control extreme opinions in the army by using the charismatic and well-connected Tojo, who had expressed reservations regarding war with the West, but the emperor himself was sceptical that Tojo would be able to avoid conflict. On October 13, he declared to Kōichi Kido: "There seems little hope in the present situation for the Japan-U.S. negotiations. This time, if hostilities erupt, I have to issue a declaration of war."{{sfn|Kido|p=914}} During the last cabinet meetings of the Konoe government, Tojo emerged as a hawkish voice, saying he did not want a war with the United States but portrayed the Americans as arrogant, bullying, and white supremacists. He said that any compromise solution would only encourage them to make more extreme demands on Japan, in which case Japan might be better off choosing war to uphold national honor.{{sfn|Bix|pp=417–418}} Despite saying he favored peace, Tojo had often declared at cabinet meetings that any withdrawal from French Indochina and/or China would be damaging to military morale and might threaten the ''kokutai''; the "China Incident" could not be resolved via diplomacy and required a military solution; and attempting to compromise with the Americans would be seen as weakness by them.{{sfn|Bix|p=416}}


On October 16, Konoe, politically isolated and convinced that the emperor no longer trusted him, resigned. Later, he justified himself to his chief cabinet secretary, Kenji Tomita:
During September 1941 the situation worsened with continued sanctions imposed against Japanese trade and became irreversibly worse in October when Lieutenant-General Hideki Tojo became Japanese Prime Minister with the support of the Nippon nations powerful military establishment.


{{blockquote
After arrival, Tojo was given one order from the emperor: that was to keep negotiating no matter what. The emperor of Showa said from Japanese record, "keep negotiating even if the U.S requires Japan to retreat its soldiers from China to Manchuria." Tojo accepted this order, and pledged to obey it because he was respecting the emperor. With that, Tojo then became the Prime Minister.
|Of course His Majesty is a pacifist, and there is no doubt he wished to avoid war. When I told him that to initiate war is a mistake, he agreed. But the next day, he would tell me: "You were worried about it yesterday, but you do not have to worry so much." Thus, gradually, he began to lean toward war. And the next time I met him, he leaned even more toward war. In short, I felt the Emperor was telling me: "My prime minister does not understand military matters, I know much more." In short, the Emperor had absorbed the views of the army and navy high commands.{{sfn|Fujiwara|p=126}}}}


=== Appointment as prime minister ===
Tojo did his best to keep negotiating. However, the results were not good for the Japanese side. Japan then made the final decision to begin the war after seeing the [[Hull Note]]. The night of [[December 7]] (The U.S was 6th), Tojo was said to have sat on a futon (Japanese bed) with his back straight and his knees together, sobbing. He might have regretted his act, or might have been apologizing to the emperor.
[[File:Hideki Tōjō Cabinet 19411018.jpg|thumb|Cabinet ministers of the first Tojo Cabinet, October 1941]]
At the time, [[Prince Naruhiko Higashikuni]] was said to be the only person who could control the Army and the Navy and was recommended by Konoe and Tojo as Konoe's replacement. Hirohito rejected this option, arguing that a member of the imperial family should not have to eventually carry the responsibility for a war against the West as a defeat would ruin the prestige of the House of Yamato.{{sfn|Bix|p=418}} Following the advice of Kōichi Kido, he chose instead Tojo, who was known for his devotion to the imperial institution.{{sfn|Bix|p=418}}{{sfn|Terasaki|p=118}} By tradition, the Emperor needed a consensus among the elder statesmen or "''jushin''" before appointing a prime minister, and as long as former prime minister Admiral [[Keisuke Okada]] was opposed to Tojo, it would be impolitic for the Emperor to appoint him.{{sfn|Bix|pp=418–419}} During the meetings of the ''jushin'' regarding Prince Konoe's succession, Okada argued against Tojo's appointment while the powerful Lord Privy Seal [[Kōichi Kido]] pushed for Tojo. The result was a compromise where Tojo would become prime minister while "re-examining" the options for dealing with the crisis with the United States, though no promise was made Tojo would attempt to avoid a war.{{sfn|Bix|pp=418–419}}


After being informed of Tojo's appointment, Prince Takamatsu wrote in his diary: "We have finally committed to war and now must do all we can to launch it powerfully. But we have clumsily telegraphed our intentions. We needn't have signaled what we're going to do; having [the entire Konoe cabinet] resign was too much. As matters stand now we can merely keep silent and without the least effort war will begin."{{sfn|Bix|p=419}} Tojo's first speech on the radio made a call for "world peace", but also stated his determination to settle the "China Affair" on Japanese terms and to achieve the "Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere" that would unite all of the Asian nations together.{{sfn|Browne|p=107}}
On [[5 November]] Prime Minister Tojo revealed to his inner circle of the offensive plans for a defensive war that he felt was increasingly certain to happen. The eventual plan drawn up by Army and Navy Chiefs of Staff envisaged such a mauling of the western powers that defense perimeter line established based on the abilities of Japanese tenaciousness, operating on interior lines for communications and western casualty counts, could not be breached.


=== Decision for war ===
In addition, the Japanese fleet which attacked the Pearl Harbor was ordered by admiral [[Isoroku Yamamoto]] that if the negotiation did not succeed immediately before the attack, the fleet must return to Japan without the air raid on Pearl Harbor.
The Emperor summoned Tojo to the Imperial Palace one day before Tojo took office.{{sfn|Bix|p=418}} After being informed of his appointment, Tojo was given one order from the Emperor: to make a policy review of what had been sanctioned by the Imperial Conferences.{{sfn|Bix|pp=418–419}} Despite being vocally on the side of war, Tojo nevertheless accepted the order and pledged to obey. According to Colonel Akiho Ishii, a member of the Army General Staff, the newly appointed prime minister showed a true sense of loyalty to the emperor performing the duty. For example, when Ishii received from Hirohito a communication saying the Army should drop the idea of stationing troops in China to counter the military operations of the Western powers, he wrote a reply for Tojo for his audience with the Emperor. Tojo then replied to Ishii: "If the Emperor said it should be so, then that's it for me. One cannot recite arguments to the Emperor. You may keep your finely phrased memorandum."{{sfn|Wetzler|pp=51–52}}


On November 2, Tojo and Chiefs of Staff [[Hajime Sugiyama]] and [[Osami Nagano]] reported to Hirohito that the review had been in vain. The Emperor then gave his consent to war.{{sfn|Wetzler|pp=47–50}}{{sfn|Bix|p=421}} The next day, Fleet Admiral Osami Nagano explained in detail the Pearl Harbor attack plan to Hirohito.{{sfn|Wetzler|pp=29, 35}} The eventual plan drawn up by Army and Navy Chiefs of Staff envisaged such a mauling of the Western powers that Japanese defense perimeter lines, operating on interior lines of communications and inflicting heavy Western casualties, could not be breached. In addition, the Japanese fleet which attacked Pearl Harbor was under orders from Admiral [[Isoroku Yamamoto]] to be prepared to return to Japan on a moment's notice, should negotiations succeed.{{citation needed|date=December 2012}} Two days later, on November 5, Hirohito approved the operations plan for a war against the West and continued to hold meetings with the military and Tojo until the end of the month.
Numerous theories about political forces at work during this process include conspiracy theories about a concerted effort within the military-industrial complex of Japan and the right wing to derail negotiations and forge ahead with plans for colonialism and war.


On November 26, 1941, US Secretary of State [[Cordell Hull]] handed Ambassador Nomura and Kurusu Saburo in Washington a "draft mutual declaration of policy" and "Outline of Proposed Basis for Agreement between the United States and Japan."{{sfn|Bix|p=428}} Hull proposed that Japan "withdraw all military, naval, air and police forces" from China and French Indochina in exchange for lifting the oil embargo, but left the term China undefined.{{sfn|Bix|p=428}} The "[[Hull note]]," as it is known in Japan, made it clear the United States would not recognise the puppet government of Wang Jingwei as the government of China but strongly implied that the United States might recognise the "Empire of Manchukuo"{{Opinion|date=April 2019}} and did not impose a deadline for the Japanese withdrawal from China.{{sfn|Bix|p=428}} On November 27, 1941, Tojo chose to misrepresent the "Hull note" to the Cabinet as an "ultimatum to Japan," which was incorrect as it did not have a timeline for its acceptance and was marked "tentative" in the opening sentence, which is inconsistent with an ultimatum.{{sfn|Bix|p=428}} The claim that the Americans had demanded in the "Hull note" Japanese withdrawal from all of China, instead of just the parts that they had occupied since 1937, as well as the claim the note was an ultimatum, was used as one of the principal excuses for choosing war with the United States.{{sfn|Bix|pp=428–431}} On December 1, another conference finally sanctioned the "war against the United States, England, and the Netherlands."{{sfn|Wetzler|pp=28–30, 39}}
===General Tojo, diplomatic actions and politics===
This fallacy became apparent as the course of the war against Japan unfolded. Japan had come to believe that the wars in Europe had so weakened the imperialists that the Mikado could pick up an extended East Asian empire at will. The Japanese military hierarchy planned a line of defence based on islands stretching from Rabaul in the Bismarck Archipelago to the Kuriles north of Japan, intending to swallow and digest the insular possessions of France, Britain, Netherlands, Australia, the Portuguese, and of the United States, while finishing off the Chinese - concluding the decades-long conflict that began with the notorious "[[Twenty-One Demands]]".


== World War II ==
The "Indies" was the Crown Jewel to the Japanese. Without it, the embargoes placed against Japan would bankrupt her. Japan had 2 years supply of oil reserve for non-military use, one year if she went to war.
[[File:Shashin Shuho No 249.jpg|thumb|Tojo covers Japanese magazine published by the [[Cabinet Intelligence Bureau]] on 2 December 1942, first anniversary of the [[Greater East Asia War]]]]
[[File:Hideki Tojo lands in Manila.jpg|thumb|Tojo lands in [[Nichols Field]], an airfield south of Manila, for a state visit to the Philippines.]]
On December 8, 1941 (December 7 in the Americas), Tojo went on Japanese radio to announce that Japan was now at [[Pacific War|war with the United States, the British Empire, and the Netherlands]] and read out an [[Japanese declaration of war on the United States and the British Empire|imperial rescript]] that ended with the playing of the martial song ''[[Umi Yukaba]]'' (''Across the Sea''), which set a war poem from the classic collection ''[[Manyōshū]]'' to music, featuring the lyrics "Across the sea, corpses soaking in the water, Across the mountains corpses heaped up in the grass, We shall die by the side of our lord, We shall never look back".{{sfn|Dower|p=25}} Tojo continued to hold the position of army minister during his term as prime minister from October 17, 1941, to July 22, 1944. He also served concurrently as [[Home Ministry (Japan)|home minister]] from 1941 to 1942, [[Minister for Foreign Affairs (Japan)|foreign minister]] in September 1942, [[Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (Japan)|education minister]] in 1943, and [[Ministry of Commerce and Industry (Japan)|minister of Commerce and Industry]] in 1943. As education minister, he continued [[militarism|militaristic]] and [[nationalism|nationalist]] indoctrination in the national education system and reaffirmed [[totalitarianism|totalitarian]] policies in government.


In the early years of the war, Tojo had popular support as Japanese forces moved from one victory to another. In March 1942, in his capacity as army minister, he gave permission for the Japanese Army in Taiwan to ship 50 "[[comfort women]]" from Taiwan to Borneo without identification papers (his approval was necessary as Army rules forbade people without identification traveling to the new conquests).{{sfn|Yoshimi|pp=81–83}} The Japanese historian Yoshiaki Yoshimi noted the document proves that Tojo knew and approved of the "comfort women" corps.{{sfn|Yoshimi|pp=81–83}} On April 18, 1942, the Americans staged the [[Doolittle Raid]], bombing Tokyo.{{sfn|Bix|p=448}} Some of the American planes were shot down and their pilots were taken prisoner.{{sfn|Bix|p=448}} The Army General Staff led by Field Marshal [[Hajime Sugiyama]] insisted on executing the eight American fliers but was opposed by Tojo, who feared that the Americans would retaliate against Japanese prisoners-of-war if the Doolittle fliers were executed.{{sfn|Bix|p=448}} The dispute was resolved by the emperor, who commuted the death sentences of five fliers but allowed the other three to die for reasons that remain unclear, as the documents relating to the emperor's intervention were burned in 1945.{{sfn|Bix|p=448}}
===The growth of Japanese military dominance of East Asia===


During Japan's initial successes in the war, Tojo and other Japanese leaders reportedly exhibited overconfidence, a phenomenon sometimes described as "[[victory disease]]," as the entire elite was caught up in a state of hubris, believing Japan was invincible and the war was as good as won.{{sfn|Weinberg|p=329}} By May 1942, Tojo approved a set of "non-negotiable" demands to be presented once the Allies sued for peace that allowed Japan to keep everything it already conquered while assuming possession of considerably more. {{sfn|Weinberg|p=329}} Under such demands, Japan would assume control of the following territories:
The aggressive Japan's major problem lay in that with great modern industrial expansion had turned into a major manufacturing nation and required sufficient raw materials that could be obtained over eastern Asia. Hence Japan's swift advance in securing these areas which brought on an immediate conflict with the western powers, who also had considerable political and economic interests in the Far East region. The Japanese move into French Indo-China and diplomatic discourse with Siam (Thailand) constituted a threat to the security of British Malay, the American Philippines, Dutch East Indies and the southern lands of Australia and New Zealand.
* the British Crown colonies of India and Honduras as well as the British dominions of Australia, Australian New Guinea, Ceylon, New Zealand, British Columbia and the Yukon Territory
* the American state of Washington and the American territories of Alaska and Hawaii
* most of Latin America including Ecuador, Colombia, Panama, El Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Cuba, Jamaica, Haiti and the rest of the West Indies.{{sfn|Weinberg|p=329}}


Additionally, Tojo wanted all of China to be under the rule of the puppet [[Wang Jingwei]] and planned to buy Macau and East Timor from Portugal and create new puppet kingdoms in Burma, Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos, Thailand, Indonesia, and Malaya.{{sfn|Weinberg|pp=329–330}} As the Burmese had proved to be enthusiastic collaborators in the "New Order in Asia," the new Burmese kingdom would be allowed to annex much of north-east India as a reward.{{sfn|Weinberg|p=330}} The Navy, for its part, demanded that Japan take New Caledonia, Fiji, and Samoa.{{sfn|Weinberg|p=330}}
On Sunday [[7 December]] the Imperial Japanese Navy hit the American military base at [[Pearl Harbor]] with an aerial onslaught. The elements of total war were clearly revealed by the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor. Itself in line with the practices of total warfare, was also in the Japanese military tradition, for they had begun other wars previously the same way.


While Tojo was prime minister, the main forum for military decision-making was the Imperial General Headquarters presided over by the Emperor. It consisted of the Army and Navy ministers; the Army and Navy chiefs of staff; and chiefs of the military affairs bureaus in both services.{{sfn|Falk|p=511}} The Imperial GHQ was not a joint chiefs of staff as existed in the United States and United Kingdom, but rather two separate services command operating under the same roof who would meet about twice a week to attempt to agree on a common strategy.{{sfn|Falk|pp=511–512}} The Operations Bureaus of the Army and Navy would develop their own plans and then attempt to "sell them" to the other, which was often not possible.{{sfn|Falk|p=512}} Tojo was one voice out of many speaking at the Imperial GHQ, and was not able to impose his will on the Navy with which he had to negotiate as if he were dealing with an ally.{{sfn|Falk|p=512}} The American historian Stanley Falk described the Japanese system as characterized by "bitter inter-service antagonisms" as the Army and Navy worked "at cross-purposes", observing the Japanese system of command was "uncoordinated, ill-defined and inefficient."{{sfn|Falk|p=518}}
On [[16 February]] [[1942]], the [[United Kingdom|British]] diplomats secretly proposed a peace deal with Japan.{{citation needed}} A possible agreement was that if Great Britain formally recognised the authority of [[imperial Japan]] over Northern [[China]] and [[Manchuria]], the Japanese would give Britain sovereignty over the [[Malay Peninsula]] and Singapore.


[[File:汪精卫见东条英机.jpg|thumb|[[Wang Jingwei]] of the Japanese-sponsored [[Wang Jingwei Government|puppet government in Nanjing]] meeting with Tojo in 1942]]
At the same time as this diplomatic movement, a political confrontation was in progress between the Toho kai party and the [[Toseiha]] party. This was possibly the last internal political power struggle in the government before the [[Battle of Midway|Midway]] and [[Battle of the Coral Sea|Coral Sea]] defeats in 1942, which sent the Japanese [[military]] reeling.


However, after the [[Battle of Midway]], with the tide of war turning against Japan, Tojo faced increasing opposition within the government and military. In August–September 1942, a major crisis gripped the Tojo cabinet when Foreign Minister [[Shigenori Tōgō]] objected quite violently on August 29, 1942, to the Prime Minister's plan to establish a Greater East Asia Ministry to handle relations with the puppet regimes in Asia as an insult to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (the ''Gaimusho'') and threatened to resign in protest.{{sfn|Bix|p=457}} Tojo went to see the Emperor, who backed the Prime Minister's plans for the Greater East Asia Ministry, and on September 1, 1942, Tojo told the cabinet he was establishing the Greater East Asia Ministry and could not care less about how the ''Gaimusho'' felt about the issue, which led Tōgō to resign in protest.{{sfn|Bix|p=457}}
The [[ultranationalist]] Toho kai party was led by [[Nakano Seigo]] who appeared to have some political influence at the time and expressed his outright support and confidence for [[Japanese Navy]]. He anxiously awaited the approval of the peace talks, so as to stabilize the recent conquests in [[Southeast Asia]]. Seigo also wanted to prevent any further sacrifices by the Japanese people towards the war effort, and pressured the government to halt the ambitious conquest of Asia.


The American historian [[Herbert Bix]] wrote that Tojo was a "dictator" only in the narrow sense that from September 1942 on, he was generally able to impose his will on the Cabinet without seeking a consensus, but at the same time noted that Tojo's authority was based upon the support of the Emperor, who held ultimate power.{{sfn|Bix|p=457}} In November 1942, Tojo, as Army Minister, was involved in drafting the regulations for taking "comfort women" from China, Japan (which included Taiwan and Korea at this time) and Manchukuo to the "South", as the Japanese called their conquests in South-East Asia, to ensure that the "comfort women" had the proper papers before departing. Until then the War Ministry required special permission to take "comfort women" without papers, and Tojo was tired of dealing with these requests.{{sfn|Yoshimi|p=83}} At the same time, Tojo, as the Army Minister, became involved in a clash with the Army chief of staff over whether to continue the battle of Guadalcanal or not. Tojo sacked the Operations office and his deputy at the general staff, who were opposed to withdrawing, and ordered the abandonment of the island.{{sfn|Falk|p=510}}
On the other side was the largely pro-[[Imperialist]] faction, which represented the [[military]] interests of Japan, was led by Tojo. He displayed a completely different perspective over the issue. He reasoned that the successes in recent campaigns in [[Southeast Asia]] were extremely rapid, and continuation of the conquests could lead to gaining most of Asia and Australia before the United States and the Allies could react to further develop the so-called [[Greater East Asian Co-Prosperity Sphere]].


[[File:Greater East Asia Conference.JPG|thumb|The [[Greater East Asia Conference]] in November 1943, participants left to right: [[Ba Maw]], [[Zhang Jinghui]], [[Wang Jingwei]], Hideki Tojo, [[Wan Waithayakon]], [[José P. Laurel]], [[Subhas Chandra Bose]].]]
General Tojo rejected any form of peace processes in the conquered lands and gave authorization for more conquests. This angered and frustrated the Toho Kai until Seigo finally committed suicide on [[October 27]] [[1943]]. When Japan rejected such peace agreements, the imperial empire lost the opportunity to mantain their new territories in [[Southeast Asia]]. In the long term Japan was unable to reinforce the defensive infantries, which allowed the [[United States]] to launch counter-offensives by 1943.
In September 1943, the Emperor and Tojo agreed that Japan would pull back to an "absolute defense line" in the southwest Pacific to stem the American advance, and considered abandoning Rabaul base, but changed their minds in the face of objections from the Navy.{{sfn|Bix|pp=467–468}} In November 1943, the American public's reaction to the [[Battle of Tarawa]] led Tojo to view Tarawa as a sort of Japanese victory, believing that more battles like Tarawa would break American morale, and force the U.S. to sue for peace.{{sfn|Murray & Millet|p=348}} Moreover, Tojo believed that the Americans would become bogged down in the Marshalls, giving more time to strengthen the defenses in the Marianas.{{sfn|Murray & Millet|p=348}} In late 1943, with the support of the Emperor, Tojo made a major effort to make peace with China to free up the 2 million Japanese soldiers in China for operations elsewhere, but the unwillingness of the Japanese to give up any of their "rights and interests" in China doomed the effort.{{sfn|Bix|p=473}} China was by far the largest theater of operations for Japan, and with the Americans steadily advancing in the Pacific, Tojo was anxious to end the quagmire of the "China affair" to redeploy Japanese forces.{{sfn|Bix|p=473}} In an attempt to enlist support from all of Asia, especially China, Tojo opened the [[Greater East Asia Conference]] in November 1943, which issued a set of Pan-Asian war aims, which made little impression on most Asians.{{sfn|Weinberg|p=498}} On January 9, 1944, Japan signed a treaty with the puppet Wang regime under which Japan gave up its extraterritorial rights in China as part of a bid to win Chinese public opinion over to a pro-Japanese viewpoint, but as the treaty changed nothing in practice, the gambit failed.{{sfn|Bix|pp=473–474}}


At the same time as he sought a diplomatic effort to end the war with China, Tojo also approved of the planning for [[Operation Ichi-Go]], a huge offensive against China intended to take the American air bases in China and finally knock China out of the war once and for all.{{sfn|Bix|p=474}} In January 1944, Tojo approved orders issued by Imperial General Headquarters for an invasion of India, where the Burma Area Army in Burma under General [[Masakazu Kawabe]] was to seize the Manipour and Assam provinces with the aim of cutting off American aid to China (the railroad that supplied the American air bases in north-east India that allowed for supplies to be flown over "[[the Hump]]" of the Himalayas to China passed through these provinces).{{sfn|Weinberg|pp=640–641}} Cutting off American aid to China in turn might have had the effect of forcing [[Chiang Kai-shek]] to sue for peace. Following the 15th Army into India in the U-Go offensive were the Indian nationalist [[Subhas Chandra Bose]] and his [[Indian National Army]], as the political purpose of the operation was to provoke a general uprising against British rule in India that might allow the Japanese to take all of India.{{sfn|Weinberg|p=641}} The roads necessary to properly supply the 150,000 Japanese soldiers committed to invading India would turn into mud when the monsoons arrived, giving the Japanese a very short period of time to break through. The Japanese were counting on capturing food from the British to feed their army, assuming that all of India would rise up when the Japanese arrived and thereby cause the collapse of the Raj.{{sfn|Weinberg|pp=641–642}}{{sfn|Willmott|pp=155–156}} The Japanese brought along with them enough food to last for only 20 days; after that, they would have to capture food from the British to avoid starving.{{sfn|Willmott|pp=156–157}} Bose had impressed Tojo at their meetings as the best man to inspire an anti-British revolution in India.{{sfn|Weinberg|p=641}}
Elated by these early successes Admiral Yamamoto, the Chief of the Combined Fleet, convinced his superiors to expand further including the objectives of Midway, the Aleutians, and the Solomons, expanding the thin line of sea communications dangerously thinner. Individual Japanese commanders of the new Rising Sun Empire of Asia would go off on wild hunts to enhance their name after easy conquests unrelated to any overall strategic plan and was categorised as "[[victory disease]]" by the Japanese people.


[[File:Hideki Tōjō and Nobusuke Kishi in 1943.jpg|thumb|Tōjō meets with Vice Minister of Munitions [[Nobusuke Kishi]], who later became a prime minister in postwar Japan.]]
===Prime Minister Tojo and the Navy plan to invade Australia===
[[File:Hideki Tojo bows in front of a portrait of late Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto.jpg|thumb|Tojo bows to the funeral portrait of Admiral [[Isoroku Yamamoto]] in May 1943, following his assassination by American aircraft in [[Operation Vengeance]].]]
In the central Pacific, the Americans destroyed the main Japanese naval base at [[Chuuk Lagoon|Truk]] in an [[Operation Hailstone|air raid]] on February 18, 1944, forcing the Imperial Navy back to the Marianas (the oil to fuel ships and planes operating in the Marshalls, Caroline and Gilbert islands went up in smoke at Truk).{{sfn|Bix|p=472}} This breach of the "absolute defense line", five months after its creation, led Tojo to fire Admiral [[Osami Nagano]] as the Navy Chief of Staff, for incompetence.{{sfn|Weinberg|p=649}} The Americans had penetrated 2,100&nbsp;km (1,300 miles) beyond the "absolute defense line" at Truk, and Tojo, senior generals and admirals all blamed each other for the situation.{{sfn|Murray & Millet|p=348}} To strengthen his position in the face of criticism of the way the war was going, on February 21, 1944, Tojo assumed the post of Chief of the [[Imperial Japanese Army General Staff]], arguing he needed to take personal charge of the Army.{{sfn|Bix|p=472}} When Field Marshal Sugiyama complained to the Emperor about being fired and having the Prime Minister run the General Staff, the Emperor told him he supported Tojo.{{sfn|Bix|p=472}} Tojo's major concern as Army Chief of Staff was planning the operations in China and India, with less time given over to the coming battles in the Marianas.{{sfn|Weinberg|p=651}} Tojo decided to take the strategic offensive for 1944 with his plans to win the war in 1944 being as follows:
* Operation Ichigo would end the war with China, freeing up some 2 million Japanese soldiers.{{sfn|Murray & Millet|p=349}}
* [[Operation U-Go]] would take India.{{sfn|Murray & Millet|p=349}}
* When the Americans made the expected offensive into the Marianas, the Imperial Navy's Combined Fleet would fight a decisive battle of annihilation against the [[U.S. 5th Fleet]], and halt the American drive in the central Pacific.{{sfn|Murray & Millet|p=349}}
* In the Southwest Pacific, the Japanese forces in New Guinea and the Solomon Islands would stay on the defensive and try to slow down the American, Australian, and New Zealand forces for as long as possible.{{sfn|Murray & Millet|p=349}} Knowing of [[General MacArthur]]'s personal obsession with returning to the Philippines, Tojo expected MacArthur to head for the Philippines rather than the [[Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies|Japanese-occupied]] [[Dutch East Indies]] (modern Indonesia), which was a relief from the Japanese viewpoint; the Dutch East Indies were rich in oil while the Philippines were not.{{sfn|Murray & Millet|p=349}}
Tojo expected that a major American defeat in the Marianas combined with the conquest of China and India would so stun the Americans that they would sue for peace.{{sfn|Murray & Millet|p=348}} By this point, Tojo no longer believed the war aims of 1942 could be achieved, but he believed that his plans for victory in 1944 would lead to a compromise peace that he could present as a victory to the Japanese people.{{sfn|Murray & Millet|p=348}} By serving as prime minister, Army Minister and Army Chief of Staff, Tojo took on nearly all of the responsibility; if plans for victory in 1944 failed, he would have no scapegoat.{{sfn|Weinberg|p=651}}
[[File:Aankomst van eerste minister Tojo op Java.webm|thumb|Arrival of Prime Minister Tōjō on Japanese-occupied Java in a propaganda film, January 1943]]
[[File:Hideki Tōjō inspecting Kuching airfield, 1943.jpg|thumb|Tōjō inspecting an airfield in Kuching in [[Japanese occupation of British Borneo|occupied British Borneo]], July 1943]]
On March 12, 1944, the Japanese launched the U-Go offensive and invaded India.{{sfn|Weinberg|pp=641–642}} Tojo had some doubts about Operation U-Go, but it was ordered by the Emperor himself, and Tojo was unwilling to oppose any decision of the Emperor.{{sfn|Bix|p=475}} Despite the Japanese Pan-Asian rhetoric and claim to be liberating India, the Indian people did not revolt and the Indian soldiers of the [[Fourteenth Army (United Kingdom)|14th Army]] stayed loyal to their British officers, and the invasion of India ended in complete disaster.{{sfn|Weinberg|pp=641–642}} The Japanese were defeated by the Anglo-Indian 14th Army at the [[Battle of Imphal|Battles of Imphal]] and [[Battle of Kohima|Kohima]]. On July 5, 1944, the Emperor accepted Tojo's advice to end the invasion of India as 72,000 Japanese soldiers had been killed in battle. A similar number had starved to death or died of diseases as the logistics to support an invasion of India were lacking, once the monsoons turned the roads of Burma into impassable mud.{{sfn|Bix|p=475}} Of the 150,000 Japanese soldiers who had participated in the March invasion of India, most were dead by July 1944.{{sfn|Weinberg|p=642}}


In parallel with the invasion of India, in April 1944 Tojo began Operation Ichigo, the largest Japanese offensive of the entire war, with the aim of taking southern China.{{sfn|Bix|p=474}}
Prime Minister Tojo believed that there were no contingency plans considered for [[Yamamoto Isoroku|Yamamoto]]'s invasion plan to [[Australia]]. Tojo was concerned that the Japanese merchant and transport fleets were extended to its limit and the [[United States|Americans]] could readily divert their [[B-17]] Flying Fortresses to [[Sydney]] to destroy the invading forces.


In the [[Battle of Saipan]], about 70,000 Japanese soldiers, sailors, and civilians were killed in June–July 1944 and in the [[Battle of the Philippine Sea]] the Imperial Navy suffered a crushing defeat.{{sfn|Willmott|p=216}} The first day of the Battle of the Philippine Sea, June 19, 1944, was dubbed by the Americans "the Great Marianas Turkey Shoot", as over the course of the dogfights in the air, the US Navy lost 30 planes while shooting down about 350 Imperial Japanese planes, in one of the Imperial Navy's most humiliating defeats.{{sfn|Willmott|p=208}} The Japanese believed that indoctrination in ''[[bushido]]'' ("the way of the warrior") would give them the edge as the Japanese longed to die for the Emperor, while the Americans were afraid to die, but superior American pilot training and airplanes meant the Japanese were hopelessly outclassed by the Americans.{{sfn|Willmott|p=208}} With Saipan in American hands, the Americans could take other islands in the Marianas to build airbases.{{sfn|Willmott|p=213}} The establishment of American bases in the Marianas meant the cities of Japan were within the range of B-29 Superfortress bombers and the British historian H. P. Willmott noted that "even the most hard-headed of the Japanese militarists could dimly perceive that Japan would be at the end of her tether in that case".{{sfn|Willmott|p=213}} As the news of the disastrous defeat suffered at Saipan reached Japan, it turned elite opinion against the Tojo government.{{sfn|Willmott|p=216}} The Emperor himself was furious about the defeat at Saipan; had called a meeting of the Board of Field Marshals and Fleet Admirals to consider whether it might be possible to recapture Saipan; and [[Prince Takamatsu]] wrote in his diary "he flares up frequently".{{sfn|Bix|p=477}} Tojo was the prime minister, minister of the army and chief of the army general staff, and was seen both in Japan and in the US as, in the words of Willmott, "the embodiment of national determination, hardline nationalism and militarism".{{sfn|Willmott|p=216}} [[Prince Konoe]] and [[Admiral Okada]] had been plotting to bring down the Tojo government since the spring of 1943, and their principal problem had been the support of the Emperor, who did not wish to lose his favorite prime minister.{{sfn|Bix|p=478}}
Emperor [[Hirohito]] decided to postpone the invasion plan until Japanese forces had taken [[Myanmar|Burma]] and joined forces with the rebel [[Indian Nationalists]]. The outcomes of the battles of the [[battle of the Coral Sea|Coral Sea]] and [[battle of Midway|Midway]] ensured the invasion plan for [[Australia]] never took place.


After the Battle of Saipan, it was clear to at least some of the Japanese elite that the war was lost, and Japan needed to make peace before the ''[[kokutai]]'' and perhaps even the [[Chrysanthemum Throne]] itself was destroyed.{{sfn|Willmott|p=216}} Tojo had been so demonized in the United States during the war that, for the American people, Tojo was the face of Japanese militarism, and it was inconceivable that the United States would make peace with a government headed by Tojo.{{sfn|Willmott|p=216}} Willmott noted that an additional problem for the "peace faction" was that: "Tojo was an embodiment of 'mainstream opinion' within the nation, the armed services and particularly the Army. Tojo had powerful support, and by Japanese standards, he was not extreme."{{sfn|Willmott|pp=216–217}} Tojo was more of a follower than a leader, and he represented mainstream opinion in the Army, and so his removal from office would not mean the end of the political ambitions of an Army still fanatically committed to victory or death.{{sfn|Willmott|p=216}} The ''jushin'' (elder statesmen) had advised the Emperor that Tojo needed to go after Saipan and further advised the Emperor against partial changes in the cabinet, demanding that the entire Tojo cabinet resign.{{sfn|Willmott|p=217}} Tojo, aware of the intrigues to bring him down, had sought the public approval of the Emperor, which was denied; the Emperor sent him a message to the effect that the man responsible for the disaster of Saipan was not worthy of his approval.{{sfn|Willmott|p=217}} Tojo suggested reorganizing his cabinet to regain Imperial approval, but was rebuffed again; the Emperor said the entire cabinet had to go.{{sfn|Willmott|p=217}} Once it was clear that Tojo no longer had the support of the Chrysanthemum Throne, Tojo's enemies had little trouble bringing down his government.{{sfn|Bix|p=478}} The politically powerful Lord Privy Seal, Marquis [[Kōichi Kido]] spread the word that the Emperor no longer supported Tojo.{{sfn|Bix|p=478}} After the fall of Saipan, he was forced to resign on July 18, 1944.{{sfn|Willmott|p=217}}
General Tojo was an ardent supporter of the [[North Strike Group]] and declared his intention to realize operations from [[Manchukuo]] and nearby areas against the Russians in the [[Soviet Far East]], [[Outer Mongolia]] and [[Siberian]] lands, as well as against the [[Kwantung Army]]. He was a fanatical [[anticommunist]] since his time leading [[Kempeitai]] forces in [[Manchukuo]].


As Tojo's replacement, the ''jushin'' advised the Emperor to appoint a former prime minister, Admiral [[Mitsumasa Yonai]], as he was popular among the Navy, the diplomatic corps, the bureaucracy and the "peace faction". However, Yonai refused to serve, fearing that a prime minister who attempted to make peace with the Americans might be assassinated, as many Army officers were still committed to victory or death and regarded any talk of peace as treason.{{sfn|Willmott|p=217}} He stated that only another general could serve as prime minister, and recommended General [[Kuniaki Koiso]] in his place.{{sfn|Willmott|p=217}} At a conference with the Emperor, Koiso and Yonai were told to co-operate in forming a new government, but not told which of them was to become prime minister.{{sfn|Willmott|p=217}} As the Emperor was worshiped as a living god, neither man felt able to directly ask him who was to take the position.{{sfn|Willmott|p=217}} Lord Privy Seal Kido resolved the confusion by declaring that Koiso was the prime minister.{{sfn|Willmott|p=217}} Two days after Tojo resigned, the Emperor gave him an imperial rescript offering him unusually lavish praise for his "meritorious services and hard work" and declaring "Hereafter we expect you to live up to our trust and make even greater contributions to military affairs".{{sfn|Bix|p=478}}
==Postwar legacy==
<!-- Unsourced image removed: [[Image:Tojo-in-custody.jpg|frame|right|Tojo in custody]] -->


== Arrest, trial, and execution ==
After Japan surrendered in [[1945]] Tojo shot himself in the chest in a [[suicide]] attempt. He survived and was arrested. He recovered from his injuries at a hospital. After recovering, Tojo was held at the [[Sugamo]] prison.
[[File:Hideki Tojo lies limp on a chair after his botched suicide.jpg|thumb|upright|left|Tojo lies limp in a chair with a gaping bullet wound under his heart after his attempted suicide.]]
[[File:Tojo suicide.jpg|thumb|Tojo being resuscitated by American soldiers]]
After [[surrender of Japan|Japan's unconditional surrender]] in 1945, U.S. general [[Douglas MacArthur]] ordered the arrest of forty individuals suspected of war crimes, including Tojo. Five American GIs were sent to serve the arrest warrant.<ref>{{cite web|title=The Man Who Captured Tojo|last1=Carola|first1=Chris|website=[[YouTube]]|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qdh_aqh7TTU}}</ref> As American soldiers surrounded Tojo's house on September 11, he shot himself in the chest with a pistol, but missed his heart. As a result of this experience, the Army had medical personnel present during the later arrests of other accused Japanese war criminals, such as [[Shigetarō Shimada]].


As he bled, Tojo began to talk, and two Japanese reporters recorded his words: "I am very sorry it is taking me so long to die. The Greater East Asia War was justified and righteous. I am very sorry for the nation and all the races of the Greater Asiatic powers. I wait for the righteous judgment of history. I wished to commit suicide but sometimes that fails."{{sfn|Toland|pp=871–872}}
He then was tried by the [[International Military Tribunal for the Far East]] for [[war crimes]]. He was found guilty of the following crimes:


[[File:Tojo wearing tie.jpg|thumb|upright|Tojo held in US custody, 1947]]
*count 1 (waging wars of aggression, and war or wars in violation of international law)
*count 27 (waging unprovoked war against [[China]])
*count 29 (waging aggressive war against the [[United States]])
*count 31 (waging aggressive war against the [[Commonwealth of Nations|British Commonwealth]])
*count 32 (waging aggressive war against the [[Netherlands]] ([[Indonesia]]))
*count 33 (waging aggressive war against [[France]] ([[Indochina]]))
*count 54 (ordering, authorizing, and permitting inhumane treatment of Prisoners of War ([[Prisoner of war|POW]]s) and others)


After recovering from his injuries, Tojo was moved to [[Sugamo Prison]]. During his imprisonment, Tojo received a new set of dentures, reportedly engraved with 'Remember Pearl Harbor' in [[Morse code]] by an American dentist, a claim that has since been a subject of historical curiosity.{{sfn|Countis}} The dentist ground away the message three months later.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.csmonitor.com/1995/0817/17051.html|title=Dentist Played Prank on Tojo's Teeth |work=[[The Christian Science Monitor]] |date=August 17, 1995 |access-date=November 16, 2018 |agency=Associated Press}}</ref>
He was sentenced to death on [[November 12]], [[1948]] and executed by [[hanging]].


Tojo was tried by the [[International Military Tribunal for the Far East]] for [[war crimes]] and found guilty of, among other actions,<ref>{{cite book|author1=[[International Military Tribunal for the Far East]]|editor1-last=Pritchard|editor1-first=John|editor2-last=Zaide|editor2-first=Sonia M.|title=The Tokyo War Crimes Trial|pages=49843–49848|chapter-url=http://werle.rewi.hu-berlin.de/tokio.pdf|chapter=Judgment of 4 November 1948}}</ref> waging wars of aggression; war in violation of international law; unprovoked or aggressive war against various nations; and ordering, authorizing, and permitting inhumane treatment of prisoners of war.<ref name=":0" /><ref>{{Cite news |title=How the Army and the media broke up a Japanese war criminal's suicide attempt |language=en-US |newspaper=The Washington Post |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2020/09/10/tojo-suicide-japan-surrender/ |access-date=2021-08-26 |issn=0190-8286}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Montefiore |first1=Simon Sebag |title=History's Monsters: 101 Villains from Vlad the Impaler to Adolf Hitler |publisher=Metro Books |year=2008 |isbn=978-1435109377 |location=New York}}</ref>
Because of the crimes committed under his authority, Tojo is often considered responsible for the murder of more than 8 million civilians in China, Korea, Philippines, Indochina, and in the other Pacific island nations, as well as the murder of tens of thousands of Allied POWs and for the approval of government-sanctioned biological [[human experimentation|experiments]] on POWs and Chinese civilians (see [[Unit 731]]). There is some controversy over the extent of his responsibility, as he often claimed to be working on the orders of Emperor Hirohito, who was granted immunity from war crimes prosecution. As a result, some believe that Tojo and many other convicted war criminals ultimately became martyrs for the Emperor.


Crimes committed by Imperial Japan were responsible for the deaths of millions (some estimate between 3 million<ref name=rummel>{{cite web|url=http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/SOD.CHAP3.HTM |title=Rummell, ''Statistics'' |publisher=Hawaii.edu |access-date=July 21, 2013}}</ref> and 14 million<ref name=sterling>{{Cite web|url=https://educationforum.ipbhost.com/topic/9196-sterling-and-peggy-seagrave-gold-warriors/|title=Sterling and Peggy Seagrave: Gold Warriors|website=The Education Forum|date=January 25, 2007 }}</ref>) of civilians and prisoners of war through [[Manila massacre|massacre]], [[Unit 731|human experimentation]], [[Vietnamese Famine of 1945|starvation]], and [[Slavery in Japan#World War II|forced labor]] that was either directly perpetrated or condoned by the Japanese military and government with a significant portion of them occurring during Tojo's rule of the military.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://yourarchives.nationalarchives.gov.uk/index.php?title=Japanese_War_Criminals_World_War_Two|title=Japanese War Criminals World War Two|publisher=The National Archives (U.K.)}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.archives.gov/iwg/japanese-war-crimes/|title=Japanese War Crimes|date=August 15, 2016|publisher=The National Archives (U.S.)}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://socrates.berkeley.edu/~warcrime/PT.htm |title=Pacific Theater Document Archive |publisher=War Crimes Studies Center, University of California, Berkeley |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090718103739/http://socrates.berkeley.edu/~warcrime/PT.htm |archive-date=July 18, 2009 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/1420133.stm|author=Kafala, Tarik|title=What is a war crime?|work=BBC News|date=October 21, 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.gwu.edu/~memory/research/bibliography/warcrimes.html|title=Bibliography: War Crimes|publisher=Sigur Center for Asian Studies, George Washington University|access-date=May 29, 2017|archive-date=August 16, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190816032304/https://www2.gwu.edu/~memory/research/bibliography/warcrimes.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> One source{{Who|date=November 2023}} attributes 5 million civilian deaths to Tojo's rule of the military.
Tojo's commemorating tomb is located in a shrine in [[Hazu, Aichi]]. He was survived by a number of his descendants, including his granddaughter, [[Yuko Tojo]], a right-wing activist, and his second son, [[Teruo Tojo]], who designed fighter and passenger aircraft during and after the war and eventually served as an executive at [[Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd.|Mitsubishi Heavy Industries]].


[[File:Japanese War Crimes Trials. Manila - NARA - 292612.jpg|thumb|upright|Tojo before the International Military Tribunal for the Far East]]
==Will==
Tojo accepted full responsibility for his actions during the war and made this speech:
"Japanese gentlemen, Now, the Imperial edict of the end of the war is only merely carefully caught, whatever there may be. However, the allies provoke Greater East Asia War and I am only who fought unavoidably because of national survival and national self-defense. Although our country was unluckily defeated by that countries, reason's being in our country firmly is being unable to deny. Japan is the divine land. I wish you gentlemen are sure of the fate of the Empire and wait for the time of conquering this difficulty by making a devotion effort. I wish the sun being rejuvenated."


{{blockquote|It is natural that I should bear entire responsibility for the war in general, and, needless to say, I am prepared to do so. Consequently, now that the war has been lost, it is presumably necessary that I be judged so that the circumstances of the time can be clarified and the future peace of the world be assured. Therefore, with respect to my trial, it is my intention to speak frankly, according to my recollection, even though when the vanquished stands before the victor, who has over him the power of life and death, he may be apt to toady and flatter. I mean to pay considerable attention to this in my actions, and say to the end that what is true is true and what is false is false. To shade one's words in flattery to the point of untruthfulness would falsify the trial and do incalculable harm to the nation, and great care must be taken to avoid this.{{sfn|Crowe|p=217}}{{sfn|Yenne|p=337}}}}
==External links==
* {{Japanese prime ministers-NDL|142}}


Tojo was sentenced to death on November 12, 1948, and executed by [[hanging]] 41 days later on December 23, 1948, a week before his 64th birthday.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://greensboro.com/veterans-cant-forget-hangings-three-north-carolina-men-remember-vividly-the-day-seven-japanese-war/article_0b6101ae-84e1-5bf7-b351-d7b438289760.html|title=Veterans Can't Forget Hangings – Three North Carolina Men Remember Vividly the Day Seven Japanese War Criminals Were Executed |date=August 28, 1998 |accessdate=May 8, 2021}}</ref>{{sfn|Yenne|p=337}} Before his execution, he gave his military ribbons to one of his guards; they are on display at the [[National Naval Aviation Museum]] in [[Pensacola, Florida]].<ref>{{cite news|url=http://jacksonville.com/apnews/stories/111103/D7UOK6RO0.shtml|journal=The Florida Times-Union|title=Tojo's ribbons go on display at Pensacola naval museum|date=November 11, 2003|access-date=June 24, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170815102512/http://jacksonville.com/apnews/stories/111103/D7UOK6RO0.shtml|archive-date=August 15, 2017|url-status=dead}}</ref> In his final statement, he apologized for the atrocities committed by the Japanese military and urged the American military to show compassion toward the Japanese people, who had suffered devastating air attacks and the two [[Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki|atomic bombings]].{{sfn|Toland|p=873}}
{{start box}}
{{wikiquote}}
{{succession box | before=[[Shigenori Togo]] | title=[[Minister for Foreign Affairs (Japan)|Minister for Foreign Affairs]] of [[Japan]] | years=1942 | after=[[Masayuki Tani]]}}
{{end box}}
{{Japanese prime ministers}}


For years, there was mystery surrounding the fate of Tojo's remains. In 2021, the fate of his remains were declassified and published by the US Army: after his execution, Tojo's body was cremated and his ashes were scattered over the Pacific Ocean approximately {{convert|30|miles}} east of [[Yokohama]] from a US Army aircraft on the afternoon of 23 December 1948, along with the ashes of six other Class-A war criminals.<ref>{{cite news |title=Scholar learns remains of Tojo, other war criminals scattered in Pacific |url=https://japantoday.com/category/national/scholar-learns-remains-of-japan-war-criminals-scattered-in-pacific |access-date=14 June 2021 |work=Japan Today |date=8 June 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-57474104|title=World War Two: Hideki Tojo's ashes scattered by US, documents reveal|website=BBC|date=15 June 2021}}</ref>
[[Category:1884 births|Tojo, Hideki]]
[[Category:1948 deaths|Tojo, Hideki]]
[[Category:Executed politicians|Tojo, Hideki]]
[[Category:Japanese generals|Tojo, Hideki]]
[[Category:Prime Ministers of Japan|Tojo, Hideki]]
[[Category:World War II political leaders|Tojo, Hideki]]
[[Category:Imperial Japanese Army]]
[[Category:People convicted of war crimes|Tojo, Hideki]]
[[Category:Anti-communists|Tojo, Hideki]]
[[Category:People executed by hanging|Tojo, Hideki]]


Historians [[Herbert P. Bix]] and [[John W. Dower]] criticize the work done by General MacArthur and his staff to exonerate Emperor Hirohito and all members of the imperial family from criminal prosecutions. According to them, MacArthur and Brigadier General [[Bonner Fellers]] worked to protect the Emperor and shift ultimate responsibility to Tojo.{{sfn|Bix|pp=583–585}}{{sfn|Dower|pp=324–326}}{{sfn|Yenne|pp=337–338}}
[[de:Hideki Tōjō]]

[[es:Hideki Tojo]]
According to the written report of Shūichi Mizota, interpreter for Admiral Mitsumasa Yonai, Fellers met the two men at his office on March 6, 1946, and told Yonai: "It would be most convenient if the Japanese side could prove to us that the Emperor is completely blameless. I think the forthcoming trials offer the best opportunity to do that. Tojo, in particular, should be made to bear all responsibility at this trial."{{sfn|Toyoda|pp=170–172}}{{sfn|Bix|p=584}}
[[fr:Hideki Tōjō]]

[[gl:Hideki Tojo - 東条 英機]]
The sustained intensity of this campaign to protect the Emperor was revealed when, in testifying before the tribunal on December 31, 1947, Tojo momentarily strayed from the agreed-upon line concerning imperial innocence and referred to the Emperor's ultimate authority. The American-led prosecution immediately arranged that he be secretly coached to recant this testimony. [[Ryūkichi Tanaka]], a former general who testified at the trial and had close connections with chief prosecutor [[Joseph B. Keenan]], was used as an intermediary to persuade Tojo to revise his testimony.{{sfn|Dower|pp=325, 604–605}}
[[ko:도조 히데키]]

[[id:Hideki Tojo]]
== Legacy ==
[[it:Hideki Tojo]]
[[File:Tojo family 1941.jpg|thumb|upright|Tōjō with wife Katsuko and granddaughter [[Yuko Tojo|Yūko Tojo]]]]
[[he:הידקי טוג'ו]]

[[ka:ტოძიო ჰიდეკი]]
Tojo's grave is now in the Grave of the Seven Martyrs in [[Hazu, Aichi]]. The grave is said{{by whom|date=September 2024}} to have been created by stealing{{clarify|grammatically meaningless. who is supposed to have done this?|date=September 2024}} parts of Tojo's body that supporters were supposed to cremate and scatter in the Pacific Ocean.<ref>[https://www.cit.nihon-u.ac.jp/laboratorydata/kenkyu/publication/journal_b/b55.1.pdf Materials on Disposal of the War Criminals’ Bodies Executed as a Result of the International Military Tribunal for the Far East in Possession of the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration]</ref><ref>[https://www.nhk.or.jp/politics/articles/lastweek/61813.html 東條元首相らA級戦犯7人 の遺骨太平洋に”米軍公文書-NHK]</ref> Seven other Class A war criminals are also buried in the same grave, including [[Kenji Doihara]], [[Seishirō Itagaki]], [[Heitarō Kimura]], [[Iwane Matsui]], [[Akira Mutō]], [[Kōki Hirota]], all of whom are enshrined in the [[Yasukuni Shrine]]. For this reason, it was the site of a bombing attack by the [[East Asia Anti-Japan Armed Front]] in October 1971.
[[nl:Hideki Tojo]]

[[ja:東條英機]]
A number of his descendants survived, including his granddaughter, [[Yuko Tojo|Yūko Tojo]], who was a political hopeful who claimed Japan's war was one of self-defense and that it was unfair that her grandfather was judged a [[Class-A war criminal]]. Tojo's second son, Teruo Tojo, who designed fighter and passenger aircraft during and after the war, eventually served as an executive at [[Mitsubishi Heavy Industries]].
[[no:Hideki Tojo]]

[[pl:Hideki Tojo]]
A 1997 survey of university students in China asked, "When somebody talks about Japanese people, what person do you think of?" The answer that most gave was Tojo,{{sfn|Kristof|p=43}} reflecting [[anti-Japanese sentiment in China]].
[[pt:Hideki Tojo]]

[[ru:Хидэки Тодзё]]
In the 1998 Japanese film ''[[Pride (1998 film)|Pride]]'', Tojo was portrayed as a national hero forced into war by the West and then executed after a rigged trial.{{sfn|Kristof|p=40}}
[[fi:Hideki Tōjō]]

[[sv:Hideki Tojo]]
== In popular culture ==
[[zh:东条英机]]
* During World War II, the [[IJAAS]] fighter plane known as the [[Nakajima Ki-44]] received the [[World War II Allied names for Japanese aircraft|Allied reporting name]] of "Tojo".<ref>{{cite book |last1=Mikesh |first1=Robert C. |title=Japanese Aircraft Code Names & Designations |year=1993 |publisher=Schiffer Publishing, Ltd. |location=Atglen, PA |isbn=978-0887404474}}</ref>
* In the 1945 film ''[[Blood on the Sun]]'', Tojo is portrayed by [[Robert Armstrong (actor)|Robert Armstrong]].<ref>{{TCMDb title|69140|Blood on the Sun}}</ref>
* In the 1970 film ''[[Tora! Tora! Tora!]]'', directed by [[Toshio Masuda (director)|Toshio Masuda]], Tojo is portrayed by Asao Uchida at various events leading up to the Pearl Harbor attack.<ref>{{TCMDb title|93648|Tora! Tora! Tora!}}</ref>
* In 1970's ''[[The Militarists]]'', directed by Hiromichi Horikawa, he is portrayed by [[Keiju Kobayashi]] as a tyrant, and in an alternate history angle, stays prime minister until the end of the war.<ref>{{cite book |last=Galbraith IV |first=Stuart |title=The Toho Studios Story: A History and Complete Filmography |year=2008 |publisher=[[Scarecrow Press]] |isbn=978-1461673743|page=269|author-link=Stuart Galbraith IV}}</ref>
* In 1981's ''The Imperial Japanese Empire'', he is portrayed by [[Tetsurō Tamba]] as a family man who single-handedly planned the war against America, and the film deals with his war crimes trial.{{cn|date=December 2024}}
* Professional wrestler Harold Watanabe adopted the [[Heel (professional wrestling)|villainous]] Japanese gimmick of [[Tojo Yamamoto]] in reference to both Tojo and [[Isoroku Yamamoto]].
* There is a 1983 song titled "[[Tojo (song)|Tojo]]" by Australian band [[Hoodoo Gurus]].<ref>{{Discogs release|600920|Tojo|type=single}}</ref>
* The [[Shunya Itō]]-directed historical drama ''[[Pride (1998 film)|Pride]]'', released in 1998, cast [[Masahiko Tsugawa]] as Tojo.{{cn|date=December 2024}}
* In the 2004 [[Shyam Benegal]] biopic, ''[[Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose: The Forgotten Hero]]'', he is portrayed by [[Kelly Dorji]].<ref>{{Cite news |url=https://scroll.in/reel/847154/there-are-more-movies-about-subhash-chandra-bose-than-ever-before |title=There are more movies about Subhash Chandra Bose than ever before |last=Ghosh |first=Devarsi |date=August 16, 2017 |work=Scroll.in |access-date=November 10, 2018 |language=en-US }}</ref>
* In 2012's ''[[Emperor (2012 film)|Emperor]]'', Tojo is played by Shōhei Hino.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20200807235057/https://www.bfi.org.uk/films-tv-people/4ce2ba5341046 Shohei Hino] at the [[British Film Institute]]{{better source needed|reason=Help request: a live link can be searched for at https://collections-search.bfi.org.uk/web/search/expert - if available, replace the archive URL with the live link. Or if none found, remove this 'better source needed' template. | date=October 2023}}</ref>
* Hiromoto Ida portrays Tojo in the 2019 film ''[[Midway (2019 film)|Midway]]''.
* In the [[Fox Broadcasting Company|Fox Television]] animated series ''[[King of the Hill]]'', [[Cotton Hill]], a WWII veteran who had his shins shot off in combat, often referred to Japanese soldiers as "Tojo".

== Honors ==
===Promotions===
{| class="wikitable"
|+ Promotions
! Collar insignia !! Date
|-
|[[File:帝國陸軍の階級―襟章―大将.svg|70px]] 大将, ''Tai-sho'' ([[General officer|General]])
|17 October 1941
|-
|[[File:帝國陸軍の階級―襟章―中将.svg|70px]] 中将, ''Chu-jo'' ([[Lieutenant General]])
|1 December 1936
|-
|[[File:帝國陸軍の階級―襟章―少将.svg|70px]] 少将, ''Sho-sho'' ([[Major General]])
|18 March 1933
|-
|[[File:ijacolonel.gif|70px]] 大佐, ''Tai-sa'' ([[Colonel]])
|10 August 1928
|-
|[[File:ijalieutcolonel.gif|70px]] 中佐, ''Chu-sa'' ([[Lieutenant Colonel]])
|20 August 1924
|-
|[[File:ijamajor.gif|70px]] 少佐, ''Sho-sa'' ([[Major (rank)|Major]])
|10 August 1920
|-
|[[File:ijacptn.gif|70px]] 大尉, ''Tai-i'' ([[Captain (land)|Captain]])
|1915
|-
|[[File:ijafirstlieut.gif|70px]] 中尉, ''Chu-i'' ([[First Lieutenant]])
|1906
|-
|[[File:ijasecondlieut.gif|70px]] Commissioned 少尉, ''Sho-i'' ([[Second Lieutenant]])
|1 March 1905
|}
===Japanese===
{{unreferenced section|date=November 2022}}
* [[File:JPN Zuiho-sho (WW2) 1Class BAR.svg|80x80px]] Grand Cordon of the [[Order of the Sacred Treasure]] (July 7, 1937; Third Class: September 29, 1928; Fourth Class: June 25, 1920; Fifth Class: May 31, 1913; Sixth Class: April 1, 1906)
* [[File:JPN Kyokujitsu-sho (WW2) 1Class BAR.svg|80x80px]] Grand Cordon of the [[Order of the Rising Sun]] (April 29, 1940; Second Class: April 29, 1934; Fourth Class: November 1, 1920)
* [[File:JPN Kinshi-kunsho 2Class BAR.svg|80x80px]] [[Order of the Golden Kite]], 2nd Class (April 29, 1940)

===Foreign===
{{more citations needed|section|date=November 2022}}
* [[File:Manchukuo Order of the Orchid Blossom ribbon.svg|80x80px]] Grand Cordon of the [[Grand Order of the Orchid Blossom]], [[Manchukuo]]
* [[File:Manchukuo Order of the Illustrious Dragon ribbon.svg|80x80px]] Grand Cordon of the [[Order of the Illustrious Dragon]], Manchukuo
* [[File:Manchukuo Order of the Auspicious Clouds ribbon.svg|80x80px]] Grand Cordon of the Order of Auspicious Clouds, Manchukuo
* [[File:Manchukuo Order of the Pillars of the State ribbon.svg|80x80px]] Grand Cordon of the Order of the Pillars of State, Manchukuo
* [[File:CN Order of the Yellow Dragon.svg|80x80px]] Knight of the Order of the Yellow Dragon, [[Qing dynasty|China]]
* [[File:Order of Chula Chom Klao - Special Class (Thailand) ribbon.svg|80x80px]] Grand Cordon of the [[Order of Chula Chom Klao]], [[Thailand]]
* [[File:Order of the White Elephant - Special Class (Thailand) ribbon.svg|80x80px]] Grand Cordon of the [[Order of the White Elephant]], Thailand
* [[File:DEU Deutsche Adlerorden 1 BAR.svg|80x80px]] Grand Cross of the [[Order of the German Eagle]], [[Nazi Germany|Germany]]
* [[File:FIN Order of the White Rose Grand Cross BAR.svg|80x80px]] Grand Cross of the [[Order of the White Rose of Finland]]<ref>{{cite book|last=Matikkala|first=Antti|title=Kunnian ruletti: korkeimmat ulkomaalaisille 1941–1944 annetut suomalaiset kunniamerkit|year=2017|publisher=Suomalaisen Kirjallisuuden Seura|location=Helsinki|language=fi|isbn=978-9522228475|page=517}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://dl.ndl.go.jp/info:ndljp/pid/10273434 |title=Personal Record: Tojo, Hideki |author=<!--Not stated--> |date=1946 |website=National Diet Library |access-date=September 5, 2020}}</ref>

== References ==
{{reflist|19em}}

== Bibliography ==
{{refbegin|30em}}
* {{cite book
| last = Baudot
| first = Marcel
| year = 1980
| title = The Historical encyclopedia of World War II
| publisher = Infobase Publishing
| isbn = 978-0871964014
| ref = {{sfnRef|Baudot}}
| url = https://archive.org/details/historicalencycl00baud}}
* {{cite book
| last = Bix
| first = Herbert P.
| author-link = Herbert P. Bix
| year= 2001
| title = Hirohito and the making of modern Japan
| publisher = HarperCollins
| isbn = 978-0060931308
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=zjmVltzm1kYC
| access-date = November 11, 2011
| ref = {{sfnRef|Bix}}
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Browne
|first=Courtney
|year=1998
|title=Tojo The Last Banzai
|publisher=Da Capo Press
|location=Boston
|isbn=0306808447
|ref = {{sfnRef|Browne}}
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Butow
| first = Robert Joseph Charles
| year = 1961
| title = Tojo and the coming of the war
| publisher = Stanford University Press
| isbn = 978-0804706902
| ref = {{sfnRef|Butow}}
}}
* {{cite news
| last = Countis
| first = Sierra
| date = September 12, 2002
| title = The message on Tojo's teeth
| newspaper = Chico News & Review
| url = http://www.newsreview.com/chico/content?oid=10876
| access-date = November 11, 2011
| ref = {{sfnRef|Countis}}
}}
* {{cite book
| last1 = Cowley
| first1 = Robert
| last2 = Parker
| first2 = Geoffrey
| year = 2001
| title = The Reader's Companion to Military History
| publisher = Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
| isbn = 978-0618127429
| ref = {{sfnRef|Cowley & Parker}}
}}
* {{cite book
| last=Crowe
| first=David M.
| year=2014
| title=War Crimes, Genocide, and Justice: A Global History
| publisher=St. Martin's Press, LLC
| location=New York
| access-date=February 24, 2015
| isbn=978-0230622241
| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aynFAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA217
| ref = {{sfnRef|Crowe}}
}}
* {{cite book
| editor1-last = Dear
| editor1-first = I.C.B.
| editor2-last = Foot
| editor2-first = M.R.D.
| year = 2001
| title = The Oxford companion to World War II
| publisher = Oxford University Press
| isbn = 978-0198604464
| ref = {{sfnRef|Dear & Foot}}
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Dower
| first = John W.
| author-link = John W. Dower
| year= 2000
| title = Embracing defeat: Japan in the wake of World War II
| publisher = W. W. Norton & Company
| isbn = 978-0393320275
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=hae0dC_NaiUC
| access-date = November 11, 2011
| ref = {{sfnRef|Dower}}
}}
* {{cite journal
| last=Falk
| first=Stanley
| title=Organization and Military Power: The Japanese High Command in World War II
| journal=Political Science Quarterly
| volume=76
| date=December 1961
| issue=4
| pages=503–518
| doi=10.2307/2146538
| jstor=2146538
| ref = {{sfnRef|Falk}}
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Fredrikson
| first = John C.
| year = 2001
| title = America's military adversaries: from colonial times to the present
| publisher = ABC-CLIO
| isbn = 978-1576076033
| ref = {{sfnRef|Fredrikson}}
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Fujiwara
| first = Akira
| year = 1991
| title = Shōwa tennō no ju-go nen sensō (The Shōwa Emperor's Fifteen Year War)
| publisher = Aoki Shoten
| ref = {{sfnRef|Fujiwara}}
}}{{ISBN?}}
* {{cite book
| last1 = Goodman
| first1 = David G.
| last2 = Miyazawa
| first2 = Masanori
| year = 2000
| title = Jews in the Japanese mind: the history and uses of a cultural stereotype
| publisher = Lexington Books
| isbn = 978-0739101674
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=R_PQLj2D1DQC
| ref = {{sfnRef|Goodman & Miyazawa}}
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Gorman
| first = Jacqueline Laks
| year = 2009
| title = Pearl Harbor: A Primary Source History
| publisher = Gareth Stevens
| isbn = 978-1433900471
| ref = {{sfnRef|Gorman}}
| url-access = registration
| url = https://archive.org/details/pearlharborprima0000gorm
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Kato
| first = Masuo
| year = 1946
| title = The Lost War: A Japanese Reporter's Inside Story
| publisher = Alfred A. Knopf
| ref = {{sfnRef|Kato}}
}}{{ISBN?}}
* {{cite book
| last = Kido
| first = Kōichi
| year = 1966
| title = Kido Kōichi nikki
| trans-title=Diary of Kido Kōichi
| location = Tokyo
| publisher = Tōkyō Daigaku Shuppankai
| ref = {{sfnRef|Kido}}
}}{{ISBN?}}
* {{cite journal
| last=Kristof
| first=Nicholas
| title=The Problem of Memory
| journal=Foreign Affairs
| volume=77
| date=November–December 1998
| issue=6
| pages=37–49
| doi=10.2307/20049129
| jstor=20049129
| ref = {{sfnRef|Kristof}}
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Lamont-Brown
| first = Raymond
| year = 1988
| title = Kempeitai: Japan's dreaded military police
| publisher = The History Press
| isbn = 978-0750915663
| ref = {{sfnRef|Lamont-Brown}}
| url = https://archive.org/details/kempeitaijapansd00lamo
}}
* {{cite book
| last1 = Murray
| first1 =Williamson
| last2 =Millet
| first2 =Alan
| year=2000
| title=A War To Be Won: Fighting the Second World War
| url = https://archive.org/details/wartobewonfighti00murr_0
| url-access = registration
| publisher=Harvard University Press
| location=Cambridge
| isbn=0674006801
| ref = {{sfnRef|Murray & Millet}}
}}
* {{cite book
| last1 = Takemae
| first1 = Eiji
| last2 = Ricketts
| first2 = Robert
| year = 2003
| title = The Allied Occupation of Japan
| publisher = Continuum International Publishing Group
| isbn = 978-0826415219
| ref = {{sfnRef|Takemae & Ricketts}}
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Terasaki
| first = Hidenari
| year = 1991
| title = Shōwa tennō dokuhakuroku
| publisher = Bungei Shunjūsha
| ref = {{sfnRef|Terasaki}}
}}{{ISBN?}}
* {{cite book
| year = 1945
| title = The New International Year Book: A Compendium of the World's Progress
| publisher = Dodd, Mead and Company
| ref = {{sfnRef|''The New International Year Book''}}}}
* {{cite book
| last = Toland
| first = John
| author-link = John Toland (author)
| year = 1970
| title = The Rising Sun: The Decline and Fall of the Japanese Empire, 1936–1945
| title-link = The Rising Sun: The Decline and Fall of the Japanese Empire, 1936–1945
| publisher = Random House
| location = New York
| lccn = 77117669
| ref = {{sfnRef|Toland}}
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Toyoda
| first = Kumao
| year = 1986
| title = Sensō saiban yoroku
| publisher = Taiseisha Kabushiki Kaisha
| pages = 170–172
| ref = {{sfnRef|Toyoda}}
}}{{ISBN?}}
* {{cite book
|last=Weinberg
|first=Gerhard
|year=2005
|title=A World In Arms A Global History of World War II
|publisher=Cambridge University Press
|location=Cambridge
|isbn=978-0521618267
|ref = {{sfnRef|Weinberg}}
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Wetzler
| first = Peter
| year = 1998
| title = Hirohito and war: imperial tradition and military decision making in prewar Japan
| publisher = University of Hawaii Press
| isbn = 978-0824819255
| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=BWqEkwH1KRMC
| access-date = November 11, 2011
| ref = {{sfnRef|Wetzler}}
}}
* {{cite book
|last=Willmott
|first=H.P.
|year=1984
|title=June 1944
|publisher=Blandford Press
|location=Poole, UK
|isbn=0713714468
|ref={{sfnRef|Willmott}}
|url=https://archive.org/details/june194400will
}}
* {{cite book
| last=Yenne
| first=Bill
| year=2014
| title=The Imperial Japanese Army: The Invincible Years 1941–42
| publisher=Osprey Publishing
| location=Oxford, UK
| access-date=February 24, 2015
| isbn=978-1782009320
| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=LTZfBAAAQBAJ&pg=PA337
| ref={{sfnRef|Yenne}}
}}{{Dead link|date=February 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
* {{cite book
|last=Yoshimi
|first=Yoshiaki
|year=2000
|title=Comfort Women: Sexual Slavery in the Japanese Military During World War II
|url=https://archive.org/details/comfortwomen00yosh
|url-access=registration
|publisher=Columbia University Press
|location=New York
|isbn=0231120338
|ref = {{sfnRef|Yoshimi}}
}}
{{refend}}

== Further reading ==
* {{cite book| title=Tojo's Head (Bald) Slapped in Court|publisher = British Movietone |author= British Movietone| year = 2015|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WoEb03tzwxs}}
* {{cite book
|last=Dower
|first=John
|year=1986
|title=War Without Mercy: Race and Power in the Pacific War
|url=https://archive.org/details/warwithoutmercyr00dowe
|url-access=registration
|publisher=Pantheon
|location=New York
|isbn=0075416522}}
* {{cite book | title= Warlord: Tojo Against the World|publisher= Scarborough House|first= Edwin Palmer|last= Hoyt |year= 1993 |pages=195–201 }}{{ISBN?}}
* {{cite book
| last = Karnow
| first = Stanley
| author-link = Stanley Karnow
| year = 1989
| title = In Our Image: America's Empire in the Philippines
| title-link = In Our Image: America's Empire in the Philippines
| chapter = Hideki Tojo/Hideko Tojo
| publisher = Random House
| isbn = 978-0394549750
| ref = {{sfnRef|Karnow}}
}}
* {{cite book | title= Politics and culture in wartime Japan |publisher= Oxford University Press |first= Ben Ami|last= Shillony |year= 1981|pages= 62–63 }}{{ISBN?}}
* {{cite book
| last = Swint
| first = Kerwin
| year = 2011
| title = The King Whisperers: Power Behind the Throne from Rasputin to Rove
| pages = 163–170
| publisher = Union Square Press
| location = New York
| isbn = 978-1402772016
}}
* {{cite journal
|last=Taylor
|first=Blaine
|date=May 2009
|title=Hirohito's Triumph
|journal=WWII History Magazine
|publisher=Sovereign Media
|url=http://www.wwiihistorymagazine.com/current-issue/May09/hirohito/hirohito.html
|access-date=November 11, 2011
|ref={{sfnRef|Taylor}}
|url-status=dead
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120305044841/http://www.wwiihistorymagazine.com/current-issue/May09/hirohito/hirohito.html
|archive-date=March 5, 2012
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Tucker
| first = Spencer
| year = 2005
| title = Who's Who in Twentieth Century Warfare
| publisher = Taylor & Francis
| isbn = 0415234972
| ref = {{sfnRef|Tucker}}
}}

== External links ==
{{Sister project links|s=no|v=no|b=no|wikt=no|n=no}}<!-- * {{Prime Ministers of Japan-NDL|142}} -->
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20080312052330/http://www.international.ucla.edu/eas/documents/19420527-tojo.htm WW2DB: Hideki Tojo]
* {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080312052330/http://www.international.ucla.edu/eas/documents/19420527-tojo.htm |date=March 12, 2008 |title=Address by Tojo Hideki, Premier of Japan }}
* [https://www.newspapers.com/newspage/17932065/ The Kokomo Tribune]. September 10, 1945.
* {{cite news|url= https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=897&dat=19450910&id=P7daAAAAIBAJ&pg=6295,4214582&hl=en|title= Terror of Asia Gives Interview on Many Topics |work= Prescott Evening Courier|date=September 10, 1945}}
* {{cite news|url= https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=950&dat=19451010&id=1mlIAAAAIBAJ&pg=3568,5866928&hl=en|title= Tojo's Death Plotted in 1944, Is Disclosure|work= The Evening Independent|date= October 10, 1945}}
* {{PM20|FID=pe/036785}}

{{s-start}}
{{s-off}}
{{s-bef | before = [[Shunroku Hata]]}}
{{s-ttl | title = [[Army Ministry|Minister of the Army]]|years=1940–1944}}
{{s-aft | after = [[Hajime Sugiyama]]}}
{{s-break}}
{{s-bef | before = [[Fumimaro Konoe]]}}
{{s-ttl | title = [[Prime Minister of Japan]]|years=1941–1944}}
{{s-aft | after = [[Kuniaki Koiso]]}}
{{s-break}}
{{s-bef | before = [[Harumichi Tanabe]]}}
{{s-ttl | title = [[Home Ministry (Japan)|Minister of Home Affairs]]|years=1941–1942}}
{{s-aft | after = [[Michio Yuzawa]]}}
{{s-break}}
{{s-bef | before = [[Shigenori Tōgō]]}}
{{s-ttl | title = {{nowrap|[[Minister for Foreign Affairs (Japan)|Minister of Foreign Affairs]]}}|years=1942}}
{{s-aft | after = [[Masayuki Tani]]}}
{{s-break}}
{{s-bef | before = [[Kunihiko Hashida]]}}
{{s-ttl | title = [[Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (Japan)|Minister of Education]]|years=1942}}
{{s-aft | after = [[Nagakage Okabe]]}}
{{s-break}}
{{s-bef | before = [[Nobusuke Kishi]]}}
{{s-ttl | title = [[Ministry of Commerce and Industry (Japan)|Minister of Commerce and Industry]]|years=1943}}
{{s-non | reason = Office abolished}}
{{s-break}}
{{s-new|creation}}
{{s-ttl | title = [[Ministry of Munitions (Japan)|Minister of Munitions]]|years=1943–1944}}
{{s-aft | after = [[Ginjirō Fujiwara]]}}
{{s-break}}
{{s-mil}}
{{s-bef | before = [[Hajime Sugiyama]]}}
{{s-ttl | title = [[Imperial Japanese Army General Staff Office|Chief of Army General Staff]]|years=1944}}
{{s-aft | after = [[Yoshijirō Umezu]]}}
{{s-end}}

{{Prime Ministers of Japan}}
{{Japanese foreign ministers}}
{{Shōwa nationalism}}
{{Anti-Chinese sentiment}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Tojo, Hideki}}
[[Category:1884 births]]
[[Category:1948 deaths]]
[[Category:20th-century prime ministers of Japan]]
[[Category:20th-century Japanese criminals]]
[[Category:Shōwa Statism]]
[[Category:Imperial Japanese Army generals of World War II|Tōjō]]
[[Category:World War II political leaders]]
[[Category:Heads of government who were later imprisoned]]
[[Category:Executed prime ministers]]
[[Category:Executed military leaders]]
[[Category:Heads of government convicted of war crimes]]
[[Category:Japanese people convicted of the international crime of aggression]]
[[Category:Japanese politicians convicted of crimes]]
[[Category:People executed by the International Military Tribunal for the Far East]]
[[Category:Education ministers of Japan]]
[[Category:Ministers for foreign affairs of Japan]]
[[Category:Imperial Rule Assistance Association politicians]]
[[Category:Imperial Rule Assistance Association prime ministers of Japan]]
[[Category:International response to the Holocaust]]
[[Category:Japanese nationalists]]
[[Category:Members of the Kwantung Army]]
[[Category:Ministers of home affairs of Japan]]
[[Category:Ministers of the Imperial Japanese Army]]
[[Category:Politicians from Tokyo]]
[[Category:Imperial Japanese Army officers]]
[[Category:Genocide perpetrators]]
[[Category:Burials at sea]]
[[Category:People from Chiyoda, Tokyo]]
[[Category:Government of the Empire of Japan]]

Latest revision as of 04:18, 1 January 2025

Hideki Tojo
東條 英機
Tojo c. 1945
27th Prime Minister of Japan
In office
18 October 1941 – 22 July 1944
MonarchHirohito
Preceded byFumimaro Konoe
Succeeded byKuniaki Koiso
Minister of the Army
In office
22 July 1940 – 22 July 1944
Prime MinisterFumimaro Konoe (1940–1941)
Himself (1941–1944)
Preceded byShunroku Hata
Succeeded byHajime Sugiyama
Chief of the Imperial Japanese Army
General Staff
In office
21 February 1944 – 18 July 1944
Prime MinisterHideki Tojo (Himself)
Preceded byHajime Sugiyama
Succeeded byYoshijirō Umezu
Personal details
Born(1884-12-30)30 December 1884
Kōjimachi Ward, Tokyo, Empire of Japan
Died23 December 1948(1948-12-23) (aged 63)
Sugamo Prison, Tokyo, Occupied Japan
Cause of deathExecution by hanging[1]
Political partyImperial Rule Assistance Association (1940–1945)
Other political
affiliations
Independent (before 1940)
Spouse
Katsuko Ito
(m. 1909)
Children3 sons, 4 daughters
Parents
  • Hidenori Tojo (father)
  • Chitose Tojo (mother)
Alma mater
Awards
Signature
Military service
AllegianceEmpire of Japan
Branch/serviceImperial Japanese Army
Years of service1905–1945
RankGeneral
CommandsKwantung Army (1932–1934)
Battles/wars
Criminal conviction
Criminal statusExecuted
Conviction(s)Crimes against peace
War crimes
TrialInternational Military Tribunal for the Far East
Criminal penaltyDeath
Details
VictimsMillions
Span of crimes
1937–1945
CountryMultiple countries across Asia
Target(s)Chinese, Korean, Indochinese, Indonesian, Malaysian, Filipino, Australian, and other civilians
Allied prisoners of war
Japanese name
Kanaとうじょう ひでき
Kyūjitai東條 英機
Shinjitai東条 英機
Transcriptions
RomanizationTōjō Hideki

Hideki Tojo (東條 英機, Tōjō Hideki, pronounced [toːʑoː çideki] ; 30 December 1884 – 23 December 1948) was a Japanese politician and general who served as prime minister of Japan from 1941 to 1944, during World War II. His leadership was marked by widespread state violence perpetrated in the name of Japanese nationalism and imperialism; after the war, he was convicted as a war criminal and executed. Tojo's legacy remains firmly intertwined with the Empire of Japan's wars of aggression and numerous atrocities.

Born in Tokyo to a military family, Tojo was educated at the Japanese Military Academy and began his career in the Imperial Japanese Army (IJA) in 1905. He served as a military attaché in Germany from 1919 to 1922, and rose through the ranks to become a general in 1934. In 1935, he assumed top command of the Kempeitai attached to the Kwantung Army in Manchuria, and was promoted to the Kwantung Army's chief of staff in 1937, leading military operations against the Chinese in the border regions. In 1938, Tojo was recalled to Tokyo following the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War to serve as vice minister of the army, and in 1940 he was appointed minister of the army in the cabinet of Fumimaro Konoe. Tojo emerged as an outspoken advocate for a pre-emptive attack on the United States and its Western allies.

On Konoe's resignation, Tojo was appointed prime minister in October 1941. He oversaw Japan's decision to go to war with the Allies, its pre-emptive attack on Pearl Harbor and other U.S. and British possessions, and its ensuing conquest of much of Southeast Asia and the Pacific. During his tenure, Tojo presided over numerous war crimes, including the massacre and starvation of thousands of prisoners of war and millions of Asian civilians. From February 1944, Tojo concurrently served as the army's chief of staff. As the tide of war turned against Japan and after it was defeated at the Battle of Saipan, Tojo resigned as prime minister and chief of staff in July 1944. After Japan's surrender, he was arrested in September 1945 (during which he made a suicide attempt), convicted at the Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal, and hanged in 1948.

Early life and education

[edit]

Hideki Tojo was born in the Kōjimachi district of Tokyo on December 30, 1884,[2] as the third son of Hidenori Tojo, a lieutenant general in the Imperial Japanese Army.[3] Under the bakufu, Japanese society was divided rigidly into four castes; the merchants, artisans, peasants, and the samurai. After the Meiji Restoration, the caste system was abolished in 1871, but the former caste distinctions in many ways persisted afterwards, which ensured that those from the former samurai caste continued to enjoy their traditional prestige.[4] The Tojo family came from the samurai caste though the Tojos were relatively lowly warrior retainers for the great daimyō (lords) that they had served for generations.[5] Tojo's father was a samurai turned Army officer and his mother was the daughter of a Buddhist priest, making his family very respectable but poor.[4][6][7]

Tojo had an education typical of Japanese youth in the Meiji era.[8] As a boy, Tojo was known for his stubbornness, lack of a sense of humor, and tenacious way of pursuing what he wanted.[9] He was an opinionated and combative youth who was fond of getting into fights with other boys. Japanese schools in the Meiji era were very competitive, and there was no tradition of sympathy for those who failed, and were often bullied by the teachers.[9] Those who knew him during his formative years deemed him to be of only average intelligence. However, he was known to compensate for his observed lack of intellect with a willingness to work extremely hard.[9] Tojo's boyhood hero was the 17th-century shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu who issued the injunction: "Avoid the things you like, turn your attention to unpleasant duties."[9] Tojo liked to say, "I am just an ordinary man possessing no shining talents. Anything I have achieved I owe to my capacity for hard work and never giving up."[9] In 1899, Tojo enrolled in the Army Cadet School.

In 1905, Tojo shared in the general outrage in Japan at the Treaty of Portsmouth, which ended the war with Russia and was seen by the Japanese people as a betrayal, as the war did not end with Japan annexing Siberia, which popular opinion had demanded.[10] The Treaty of Portsmouth was so unpopular that it set off anti-American riots known as the Hibiya incendiary incident, as many Japanese were enraged at the way the Americans had apparently cheated Japan as the Japanese gains in the treaty were far less than what public opinion had expected. Very few Japanese people at the time had understood that the war against Russia had pushed their nation to the verge of bankruptcy, and most people in Japan believed that the American president Theodore Roosevelt who had mediated the Treaty of Portsmouth had cheated Japan out of its rightful gains.[11] Tojo's anger at the Treaty of Portsmouth left him with an abiding dislike of Americans.[11] In 1909, he married Katsuko Ito, with whom he had three sons (Hidetake, Teruo, and Toshio) and four daughters (Mitsue, Makie, Sachie, and Kimie).[12][13]

Military career

[edit]
Young Hideki Tojo

Early service as officer

[edit]

Upon graduating from the Japanese Military Academy (ranked 10th of 363 cadets)[14] in March 1905, he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the infantry of the IJA. In 1918–19, he briefly served in Siberia as part of the Japanese expeditionary force sent to intervene in the Russian Civil War.[15] He served as a Japanese military attache to Germany between 1919 and 1922.[16] As the Imperial Japanese Army had been trained by a German military mission in the 19th century, the Japanese Army was always very strongly influenced by intellectual developments in the German Army, and Tojo was no exception.[17] In the 1920s, the German military favored preparing for the next war by creating a totalitarian Wehrstaat (Defense State), an idea that was taken up by the Japanese military as the "national defense state." In 1922, on his way home to Japan, he took a train ride across the United States, his first and only visit to North America, which left him with the impression that the Americans were a materialistic soft people devoted only to making money and to hedonistic pursuits like sex, partying, and (despite Prohibition) drinking.[18]

Tojo boasted that his only hobby was his work, and he customarily brought home his paperwork to work late into the night and refused to have any part in raising his children, which he viewed both as a distraction from his work and a woman's duty. He had his wife do all the work of taking care of his children.[19] A stern, humorless man, he was known for his brusque manner, his obsession with etiquette, and his coldness.[20] Like almost all Japanese officers at the time, he routinely slapped the faces of the men under his command when giving orders. He said that face-slapping was a "means of training" men who came from families that were not part of the samurai caste and for whom bushido was not second nature.[21]

In 1924, Tojo was greatly offended by the Immigration Control Act, which was passed by the US Congress. It banned all Asian immigration into the United States, with many representatives and senators openly saying the act was necessary because Asians worked harder than whites.[20] He wrote with bitterness at the time that American whites would never accept Asians as equals: "It [the Immigration Control Act] shows how the strong will always put their own interests first. Japan, too, has to be strong to survive in the world."[22]

By 1928, he was bureau chief of the Japanese Army and was shortly thereafter promoted to colonel. He began to take an interest in militarist politics during his command of the 8th Infantry Regiment. Reflecting the imagery often used in Japan to describe people in power, he told his officers that they were to be both a "father" and a "mother" to the men under their command.[21] Tojo often visited the homes of the men under his command, assisted his men with personal problems, and made loans to officers short of money.[23] Like many other Japanese officers, he disliked Western cultural influence in Japan, which was often disparaged as resulting in the ero guro nansensu ("eroticism, grotesquerie and nonsense") movement as he complained about such forms of "Western decadence" like young couples holding hands and kissing in public, which were undermining traditional values necessary to uphold the kokutai.[24]

Promotion to army high command

[edit]

In 1934, Hideki was promoted to major general and served as chief of the personnel department within the Army Ministry.[25] Tojo wrote a chapter in the book Hijōji kokumin zenshū (Essays in time of national emergency), a book published in March 1934 by the Army Ministry calling for Japan to become a totalitarian "national defense state".[26] This book of fifteen essays by senior generals argued that Japan had defeated Russia in the war of 1904–05 because bushidō had given the Japanese superior willpower as the Japanese did not fear death unlike the Russians who wanted to live, and what was needed to win the inevitable next war (against precisely whom the book did not say) was to repeat the example of the Russian-Japanese war on a much greater scale by creating the "national defense state" to mobilize the entire nation for war.[26] In his essay, Tojo wrote "The modern war of national defense extends over a great many areas" requiring "a state that can monolithically control" all aspects of the nation in the political, social and economic spheres.[27] Tojo attacked Britain, France and the United States for waging "ideological war" against Japan since 1919.[28] Tojo ended his essay by stating that Japan must stand tall "and spread its own moral principles to the world" as the "cultural and ideological war of the 'imperial way' is about to begin".[26]

Tōjō as Lieutenant General

Tojo was appointed commander of the IJA 24th Infantry Brigade in August 1934.[29] In September 1935, Tojo assumed top command of the Kempeitai of the Kwantung Army in Manchuria. Politically, he was nationalist, and militarist, and was nicknamed "Razor" (カミソリ, Kamisori), for his reputation of having a sharp and legalistic mind capable of quick decision-making. Tojo was a member of the Tōseiha ("Control Faction") in the Army that was opposed by the more radical Kōdōha ("Imperial Way") faction.[30] Both the Tōseiha and the Kōdōha factions were militaristic groups that favored a policy of expansionism abroad and dictatorship under the Emperor at home, but differed over the best way of achieving these goals.[30] The Imperial Way faction wanted a coup d'état to achieve a Shōwa Restoration; emphasized "spirit" as the principal war-winning factor; and despite advocating socialist policies at home wanted to invade the Soviet Union.[30] The Control faction, while being willing to use assassination to achieve its goals, was more willing to work within the system to achieve reforms; wanted to create the "national defense state" to mobilize the entire nation before going to war and, while not rejecting the idea of "spirit" as a war-winning factor, also saw military modernization as a war-winning factor and the United States as a future enemy just as much as the Soviet Union.[30]

During the February 26 coup attempt of 1936, Tojo and Shigeru Honjō, a noted supporter of Sadao Araki, both opposed the rebels who were associated with the rival "Imperial Way" faction.[31] Emperor Hirohito himself was outraged at the attacks on his close advisors, and after a brief political crisis and stalling on the part of a sympathetic military, the rebels were forced to surrender. As the commander of the Kempeitai, Tojo ordered the arrest of all officers in the Kwantung Army suspected of supporting the coup attempt in Tokyo.[32] In the aftermath, the Tōseiha faction purged the Army of radical officers, and the coup leaders were tried and executed. After the purge, Tōseiha and Kōdōha elements were unified in their nationalist but highly anti-political stance under the banner of the Tōseiha military clique, which included Tojo as one of its leaders.

Tojo was promoted to chief of staff of the Kwantung Army in 1937.[33][34] As the "Empire of Manchukuo" was, in reality, a Japanese colony in all but name, the Kwangtung Army's duties were just as much political as they were military.[35] During this period, Tojo became close to Yōsuke Matsuoka, the fiery ultra-nationalist CEO of the South Manchuria Railway, one of Asia's largest corporations at the time, and Nobusuke Kishi, the Deputy Minister of Industry in Manchukuo, who was the man de facto in charge of Manchukuo's economy.[35] Though Tojo regarded preparing for a war against the Soviet Union as his first duty, Tojo also supported the forward policy in Northern China, as the Japanese sought to extend their influence into China.[35] As chief of staff, Tojo was responsible for the military operations designed to increase Japanese penetration into the Inner Mongolia border regions with Manchukuo. In July 1937, he personally led the units of the 1st Independent Mixed Brigade in Operation Chahar, his only real combat experience.[36]

After the Marco Polo Bridge Incident marking the start of the Second Sino-Japanese War, Tojo ordered his forces to attack Hebei Province and other targets in northern China. Tojo received Jewish refugees in accordance with Japanese national policy and rejected the resulting Nazi German protests.[37] Tojo was recalled to Japan in May 1938 to serve as vice-minister of the army under Army Minister Seishirō Itagaki.[38] From December 1938 to 1940, Tojo was Inspector-General of Army Aviation.[39]

Rise to prime minister

[edit]

Advocacy for preventive war

[edit]

On June 1, 1940, Emperor Hirohito appointed Kōichi Kido, a leading "reform bureaucrat" as the Lord Keeper of the Privy Seal, making him into the Emperor's leading political advisor and fixer.[40] Kido had aided in the creation in the 1930s of an alliance between the "reform bureaucrats" and the Army's "Control" faction centered on Tojo and General Mutō Akira. [40] Kido's appointment also favored the rise of his allies in the Control faction.[41] On July 30, 1940, Tojo was appointed army minister in the second Fumimaro Konoe regime and remained in that post in the third Konoe cabinet. Prince Konoe had chosen Tojo, a man representative of both the Army's hardline views and the Control faction with whom he was considered reasonable to deal, to secure the Army's backing for his foreign policy.[42] Tojo was a militant ultra-nationalist who was well respected for his work ethic and his ability to handle paperwork. Tojo upheld the wartime Japanese doctrine of the emperor as a living god, aligning his actions with imperial directives as part of his loyalty to the kokutai.[42] Konoe favored having Germany mediate an end to the Sino-Japanese War, pressured Britain to end its economic and military support of China even at the risk of war, sought better relations with both Germany and the United States, and took advantage of the changes in the international order caused by Germany's victories in the spring of 1940 to make Japan a stronger power in Asia.[43] Konoe wanted to make Japan the dominant power in East Asia, but he also believed it was possible to negotiate a modus vivendi with the United States under which the Americans would agree to recognize the "Greater East Asia Co-prosperity Sphere".[43]

By 1940, Konoe, who had started the war with China in 1937, no longer believed that a military solution to the "China Affair" was possible and instead favored having Germany mediate an end to the war that would presumably result in a pro-Japanese peace settlement, but would be less than he himself had outlined in the "Konoe programme" of January 1938.[42] For this reason, Konoe wanted Tojo, a tough general whose ultra-nationalism was beyond question, to provide "cover" for his attempt to seek a diplomatic solution to the war with China.[42] Tojo was a strong supporter of the Tripartite Pact between Imperial Japan, Nazi Germany, and Fascist Italy. As the army minister, he continued to expand the war against China.[citation needed] After negotiations with Vichy France, Japan was given permission to place its troops in the southern part of French Indochina in July 1941. In spite of its formal recognition of the Vichy government, the United States retaliated against Japan by imposing economic sanctions in August, including a total embargo on oil and gasoline exports.[44] On September 6, a deadline of early October was fixed in the Imperial Conference for resolving the situation diplomatically. On October 14, the deadline had passed with no progress. Prime Minister Konoe then held his last cabinet meeting in which Tojo did most of the talking:

For the past six months, ever since April, the foreign minister has made painstaking efforts to adjust relations. Although I respect him for that, we remain deadlocked ... The heart of the matter is the imposition on us of withdrawal from Indochina and China ... If we yield to America's demands, it will destroy the fruits of the China incident. Manchukuo will be endangered and our control of Korea undermined.[45]

The prevailing opinion within the Japanese Army at that time was that continued negotiations could be dangerous. However, Hirohito thought that he might be able to control extreme opinions in the army by using the charismatic and well-connected Tojo, who had expressed reservations regarding war with the West, but the emperor himself was sceptical that Tojo would be able to avoid conflict. On October 13, he declared to Kōichi Kido: "There seems little hope in the present situation for the Japan-U.S. negotiations. This time, if hostilities erupt, I have to issue a declaration of war."[46] During the last cabinet meetings of the Konoe government, Tojo emerged as a hawkish voice, saying he did not want a war with the United States but portrayed the Americans as arrogant, bullying, and white supremacists. He said that any compromise solution would only encourage them to make more extreme demands on Japan, in which case Japan might be better off choosing war to uphold national honor.[47] Despite saying he favored peace, Tojo had often declared at cabinet meetings that any withdrawal from French Indochina and/or China would be damaging to military morale and might threaten the kokutai; the "China Incident" could not be resolved via diplomacy and required a military solution; and attempting to compromise with the Americans would be seen as weakness by them.[48]

On October 16, Konoe, politically isolated and convinced that the emperor no longer trusted him, resigned. Later, he justified himself to his chief cabinet secretary, Kenji Tomita:

Of course His Majesty is a pacifist, and there is no doubt he wished to avoid war. When I told him that to initiate war is a mistake, he agreed. But the next day, he would tell me: "You were worried about it yesterday, but you do not have to worry so much." Thus, gradually, he began to lean toward war. And the next time I met him, he leaned even more toward war. In short, I felt the Emperor was telling me: "My prime minister does not understand military matters, I know much more." In short, the Emperor had absorbed the views of the army and navy high commands.[49]

Appointment as prime minister

[edit]
Cabinet ministers of the first Tojo Cabinet, October 1941

At the time, Prince Naruhiko Higashikuni was said to be the only person who could control the Army and the Navy and was recommended by Konoe and Tojo as Konoe's replacement. Hirohito rejected this option, arguing that a member of the imperial family should not have to eventually carry the responsibility for a war against the West as a defeat would ruin the prestige of the House of Yamato.[50] Following the advice of Kōichi Kido, he chose instead Tojo, who was known for his devotion to the imperial institution.[50][51] By tradition, the Emperor needed a consensus among the elder statesmen or "jushin" before appointing a prime minister, and as long as former prime minister Admiral Keisuke Okada was opposed to Tojo, it would be impolitic for the Emperor to appoint him.[52] During the meetings of the jushin regarding Prince Konoe's succession, Okada argued against Tojo's appointment while the powerful Lord Privy Seal Kōichi Kido pushed for Tojo. The result was a compromise where Tojo would become prime minister while "re-examining" the options for dealing with the crisis with the United States, though no promise was made Tojo would attempt to avoid a war.[52]

After being informed of Tojo's appointment, Prince Takamatsu wrote in his diary: "We have finally committed to war and now must do all we can to launch it powerfully. But we have clumsily telegraphed our intentions. We needn't have signaled what we're going to do; having [the entire Konoe cabinet] resign was too much. As matters stand now we can merely keep silent and without the least effort war will begin."[53] Tojo's first speech on the radio made a call for "world peace", but also stated his determination to settle the "China Affair" on Japanese terms and to achieve the "Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere" that would unite all of the Asian nations together.[54]

Decision for war

[edit]

The Emperor summoned Tojo to the Imperial Palace one day before Tojo took office.[50] After being informed of his appointment, Tojo was given one order from the Emperor: to make a policy review of what had been sanctioned by the Imperial Conferences.[52] Despite being vocally on the side of war, Tojo nevertheless accepted the order and pledged to obey. According to Colonel Akiho Ishii, a member of the Army General Staff, the newly appointed prime minister showed a true sense of loyalty to the emperor performing the duty. For example, when Ishii received from Hirohito a communication saying the Army should drop the idea of stationing troops in China to counter the military operations of the Western powers, he wrote a reply for Tojo for his audience with the Emperor. Tojo then replied to Ishii: "If the Emperor said it should be so, then that's it for me. One cannot recite arguments to the Emperor. You may keep your finely phrased memorandum."[55]

On November 2, Tojo and Chiefs of Staff Hajime Sugiyama and Osami Nagano reported to Hirohito that the review had been in vain. The Emperor then gave his consent to war.[56][57] The next day, Fleet Admiral Osami Nagano explained in detail the Pearl Harbor attack plan to Hirohito.[58] The eventual plan drawn up by Army and Navy Chiefs of Staff envisaged such a mauling of the Western powers that Japanese defense perimeter lines, operating on interior lines of communications and inflicting heavy Western casualties, could not be breached. In addition, the Japanese fleet which attacked Pearl Harbor was under orders from Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto to be prepared to return to Japan on a moment's notice, should negotiations succeed.[citation needed] Two days later, on November 5, Hirohito approved the operations plan for a war against the West and continued to hold meetings with the military and Tojo until the end of the month.

On November 26, 1941, US Secretary of State Cordell Hull handed Ambassador Nomura and Kurusu Saburo in Washington a "draft mutual declaration of policy" and "Outline of Proposed Basis for Agreement between the United States and Japan."[59] Hull proposed that Japan "withdraw all military, naval, air and police forces" from China and French Indochina in exchange for lifting the oil embargo, but left the term China undefined.[59] The "Hull note," as it is known in Japan, made it clear the United States would not recognise the puppet government of Wang Jingwei as the government of China but strongly implied that the United States might recognise the "Empire of Manchukuo"[opinion] and did not impose a deadline for the Japanese withdrawal from China.[59] On November 27, 1941, Tojo chose to misrepresent the "Hull note" to the Cabinet as an "ultimatum to Japan," which was incorrect as it did not have a timeline for its acceptance and was marked "tentative" in the opening sentence, which is inconsistent with an ultimatum.[59] The claim that the Americans had demanded in the "Hull note" Japanese withdrawal from all of China, instead of just the parts that they had occupied since 1937, as well as the claim the note was an ultimatum, was used as one of the principal excuses for choosing war with the United States.[60] On December 1, another conference finally sanctioned the "war against the United States, England, and the Netherlands."[61]

World War II

[edit]
Tojo covers Japanese magazine published by the Cabinet Intelligence Bureau on 2 December 1942, first anniversary of the Greater East Asia War
Tojo lands in Nichols Field, an airfield south of Manila, for a state visit to the Philippines.

On December 8, 1941 (December 7 in the Americas), Tojo went on Japanese radio to announce that Japan was now at war with the United States, the British Empire, and the Netherlands and read out an imperial rescript that ended with the playing of the martial song Umi Yukaba (Across the Sea), which set a war poem from the classic collection Manyōshū to music, featuring the lyrics "Across the sea, corpses soaking in the water, Across the mountains corpses heaped up in the grass, We shall die by the side of our lord, We shall never look back".[62] Tojo continued to hold the position of army minister during his term as prime minister from October 17, 1941, to July 22, 1944. He also served concurrently as home minister from 1941 to 1942, foreign minister in September 1942, education minister in 1943, and minister of Commerce and Industry in 1943. As education minister, he continued militaristic and nationalist indoctrination in the national education system and reaffirmed totalitarian policies in government.

In the early years of the war, Tojo had popular support as Japanese forces moved from one victory to another. In March 1942, in his capacity as army minister, he gave permission for the Japanese Army in Taiwan to ship 50 "comfort women" from Taiwan to Borneo without identification papers (his approval was necessary as Army rules forbade people without identification traveling to the new conquests).[63] The Japanese historian Yoshiaki Yoshimi noted the document proves that Tojo knew and approved of the "comfort women" corps.[63] On April 18, 1942, the Americans staged the Doolittle Raid, bombing Tokyo.[64] Some of the American planes were shot down and their pilots were taken prisoner.[64] The Army General Staff led by Field Marshal Hajime Sugiyama insisted on executing the eight American fliers but was opposed by Tojo, who feared that the Americans would retaliate against Japanese prisoners-of-war if the Doolittle fliers were executed.[64] The dispute was resolved by the emperor, who commuted the death sentences of five fliers but allowed the other three to die for reasons that remain unclear, as the documents relating to the emperor's intervention were burned in 1945.[64]

During Japan's initial successes in the war, Tojo and other Japanese leaders reportedly exhibited overconfidence, a phenomenon sometimes described as "victory disease," as the entire elite was caught up in a state of hubris, believing Japan was invincible and the war was as good as won.[65] By May 1942, Tojo approved a set of "non-negotiable" demands to be presented once the Allies sued for peace that allowed Japan to keep everything it already conquered while assuming possession of considerably more. [65] Under such demands, Japan would assume control of the following territories:

  • the British Crown colonies of India and Honduras as well as the British dominions of Australia, Australian New Guinea, Ceylon, New Zealand, British Columbia and the Yukon Territory
  • the American state of Washington and the American territories of Alaska and Hawaii
  • most of Latin America including Ecuador, Colombia, Panama, El Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Cuba, Jamaica, Haiti and the rest of the West Indies.[65]

Additionally, Tojo wanted all of China to be under the rule of the puppet Wang Jingwei and planned to buy Macau and East Timor from Portugal and create new puppet kingdoms in Burma, Cambodia, Vietnam, Laos, Thailand, Indonesia, and Malaya.[66] As the Burmese had proved to be enthusiastic collaborators in the "New Order in Asia," the new Burmese kingdom would be allowed to annex much of north-east India as a reward.[67] The Navy, for its part, demanded that Japan take New Caledonia, Fiji, and Samoa.[67]

While Tojo was prime minister, the main forum for military decision-making was the Imperial General Headquarters presided over by the Emperor. It consisted of the Army and Navy ministers; the Army and Navy chiefs of staff; and chiefs of the military affairs bureaus in both services.[68] The Imperial GHQ was not a joint chiefs of staff as existed in the United States and United Kingdom, but rather two separate services command operating under the same roof who would meet about twice a week to attempt to agree on a common strategy.[69] The Operations Bureaus of the Army and Navy would develop their own plans and then attempt to "sell them" to the other, which was often not possible.[70] Tojo was one voice out of many speaking at the Imperial GHQ, and was not able to impose his will on the Navy with which he had to negotiate as if he were dealing with an ally.[70] The American historian Stanley Falk described the Japanese system as characterized by "bitter inter-service antagonisms" as the Army and Navy worked "at cross-purposes", observing the Japanese system of command was "uncoordinated, ill-defined and inefficient."[71]

Wang Jingwei of the Japanese-sponsored puppet government in Nanjing meeting with Tojo in 1942

However, after the Battle of Midway, with the tide of war turning against Japan, Tojo faced increasing opposition within the government and military. In August–September 1942, a major crisis gripped the Tojo cabinet when Foreign Minister Shigenori Tōgō objected quite violently on August 29, 1942, to the Prime Minister's plan to establish a Greater East Asia Ministry to handle relations with the puppet regimes in Asia as an insult to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (the Gaimusho) and threatened to resign in protest.[72] Tojo went to see the Emperor, who backed the Prime Minister's plans for the Greater East Asia Ministry, and on September 1, 1942, Tojo told the cabinet he was establishing the Greater East Asia Ministry and could not care less about how the Gaimusho felt about the issue, which led Tōgō to resign in protest.[72]

The American historian Herbert Bix wrote that Tojo was a "dictator" only in the narrow sense that from September 1942 on, he was generally able to impose his will on the Cabinet without seeking a consensus, but at the same time noted that Tojo's authority was based upon the support of the Emperor, who held ultimate power.[72] In November 1942, Tojo, as Army Minister, was involved in drafting the regulations for taking "comfort women" from China, Japan (which included Taiwan and Korea at this time) and Manchukuo to the "South", as the Japanese called their conquests in South-East Asia, to ensure that the "comfort women" had the proper papers before departing. Until then the War Ministry required special permission to take "comfort women" without papers, and Tojo was tired of dealing with these requests.[73] At the same time, Tojo, as the Army Minister, became involved in a clash with the Army chief of staff over whether to continue the battle of Guadalcanal or not. Tojo sacked the Operations office and his deputy at the general staff, who were opposed to withdrawing, and ordered the abandonment of the island.[74]

The Greater East Asia Conference in November 1943, participants left to right: Ba Maw, Zhang Jinghui, Wang Jingwei, Hideki Tojo, Wan Waithayakon, José P. Laurel, Subhas Chandra Bose.

In September 1943, the Emperor and Tojo agreed that Japan would pull back to an "absolute defense line" in the southwest Pacific to stem the American advance, and considered abandoning Rabaul base, but changed their minds in the face of objections from the Navy.[75] In November 1943, the American public's reaction to the Battle of Tarawa led Tojo to view Tarawa as a sort of Japanese victory, believing that more battles like Tarawa would break American morale, and force the U.S. to sue for peace.[76] Moreover, Tojo believed that the Americans would become bogged down in the Marshalls, giving more time to strengthen the defenses in the Marianas.[76] In late 1943, with the support of the Emperor, Tojo made a major effort to make peace with China to free up the 2 million Japanese soldiers in China for operations elsewhere, but the unwillingness of the Japanese to give up any of their "rights and interests" in China doomed the effort.[77] China was by far the largest theater of operations for Japan, and with the Americans steadily advancing in the Pacific, Tojo was anxious to end the quagmire of the "China affair" to redeploy Japanese forces.[77] In an attempt to enlist support from all of Asia, especially China, Tojo opened the Greater East Asia Conference in November 1943, which issued a set of Pan-Asian war aims, which made little impression on most Asians.[78] On January 9, 1944, Japan signed a treaty with the puppet Wang regime under which Japan gave up its extraterritorial rights in China as part of a bid to win Chinese public opinion over to a pro-Japanese viewpoint, but as the treaty changed nothing in practice, the gambit failed.[79]

At the same time as he sought a diplomatic effort to end the war with China, Tojo also approved of the planning for Operation Ichi-Go, a huge offensive against China intended to take the American air bases in China and finally knock China out of the war once and for all.[80] In January 1944, Tojo approved orders issued by Imperial General Headquarters for an invasion of India, where the Burma Area Army in Burma under General Masakazu Kawabe was to seize the Manipour and Assam provinces with the aim of cutting off American aid to China (the railroad that supplied the American air bases in north-east India that allowed for supplies to be flown over "the Hump" of the Himalayas to China passed through these provinces).[81] Cutting off American aid to China in turn might have had the effect of forcing Chiang Kai-shek to sue for peace. Following the 15th Army into India in the U-Go offensive were the Indian nationalist Subhas Chandra Bose and his Indian National Army, as the political purpose of the operation was to provoke a general uprising against British rule in India that might allow the Japanese to take all of India.[82] The roads necessary to properly supply the 150,000 Japanese soldiers committed to invading India would turn into mud when the monsoons arrived, giving the Japanese a very short period of time to break through. The Japanese were counting on capturing food from the British to feed their army, assuming that all of India would rise up when the Japanese arrived and thereby cause the collapse of the Raj.[83][84] The Japanese brought along with them enough food to last for only 20 days; after that, they would have to capture food from the British to avoid starving.[85] Bose had impressed Tojo at their meetings as the best man to inspire an anti-British revolution in India.[82]

Tōjō meets with Vice Minister of Munitions Nobusuke Kishi, who later became a prime minister in postwar Japan.
Tojo bows to the funeral portrait of Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto in May 1943, following his assassination by American aircraft in Operation Vengeance.

In the central Pacific, the Americans destroyed the main Japanese naval base at Truk in an air raid on February 18, 1944, forcing the Imperial Navy back to the Marianas (the oil to fuel ships and planes operating in the Marshalls, Caroline and Gilbert islands went up in smoke at Truk).[86] This breach of the "absolute defense line", five months after its creation, led Tojo to fire Admiral Osami Nagano as the Navy Chief of Staff, for incompetence.[87] The Americans had penetrated 2,100 km (1,300 miles) beyond the "absolute defense line" at Truk, and Tojo, senior generals and admirals all blamed each other for the situation.[76] To strengthen his position in the face of criticism of the way the war was going, on February 21, 1944, Tojo assumed the post of Chief of the Imperial Japanese Army General Staff, arguing he needed to take personal charge of the Army.[86] When Field Marshal Sugiyama complained to the Emperor about being fired and having the Prime Minister run the General Staff, the Emperor told him he supported Tojo.[86] Tojo's major concern as Army Chief of Staff was planning the operations in China and India, with less time given over to the coming battles in the Marianas.[88] Tojo decided to take the strategic offensive for 1944 with his plans to win the war in 1944 being as follows:

  • Operation Ichigo would end the war with China, freeing up some 2 million Japanese soldiers.[89]
  • Operation U-Go would take India.[89]
  • When the Americans made the expected offensive into the Marianas, the Imperial Navy's Combined Fleet would fight a decisive battle of annihilation against the U.S. 5th Fleet, and halt the American drive in the central Pacific.[89]
  • In the Southwest Pacific, the Japanese forces in New Guinea and the Solomon Islands would stay on the defensive and try to slow down the American, Australian, and New Zealand forces for as long as possible.[89] Knowing of General MacArthur's personal obsession with returning to the Philippines, Tojo expected MacArthur to head for the Philippines rather than the Japanese-occupied Dutch East Indies (modern Indonesia), which was a relief from the Japanese viewpoint; the Dutch East Indies were rich in oil while the Philippines were not.[89]

Tojo expected that a major American defeat in the Marianas combined with the conquest of China and India would so stun the Americans that they would sue for peace.[76] By this point, Tojo no longer believed the war aims of 1942 could be achieved, but he believed that his plans for victory in 1944 would lead to a compromise peace that he could present as a victory to the Japanese people.[76] By serving as prime minister, Army Minister and Army Chief of Staff, Tojo took on nearly all of the responsibility; if plans for victory in 1944 failed, he would have no scapegoat.[88]

Arrival of Prime Minister Tōjō on Japanese-occupied Java in a propaganda film, January 1943
Tōjō inspecting an airfield in Kuching in occupied British Borneo, July 1943

On March 12, 1944, the Japanese launched the U-Go offensive and invaded India.[83] Tojo had some doubts about Operation U-Go, but it was ordered by the Emperor himself, and Tojo was unwilling to oppose any decision of the Emperor.[90] Despite the Japanese Pan-Asian rhetoric and claim to be liberating India, the Indian people did not revolt and the Indian soldiers of the 14th Army stayed loyal to their British officers, and the invasion of India ended in complete disaster.[83] The Japanese were defeated by the Anglo-Indian 14th Army at the Battles of Imphal and Kohima. On July 5, 1944, the Emperor accepted Tojo's advice to end the invasion of India as 72,000 Japanese soldiers had been killed in battle. A similar number had starved to death or died of diseases as the logistics to support an invasion of India were lacking, once the monsoons turned the roads of Burma into impassable mud.[90] Of the 150,000 Japanese soldiers who had participated in the March invasion of India, most were dead by July 1944.[91]

In parallel with the invasion of India, in April 1944 Tojo began Operation Ichigo, the largest Japanese offensive of the entire war, with the aim of taking southern China.[80]

In the Battle of Saipan, about 70,000 Japanese soldiers, sailors, and civilians were killed in June–July 1944 and in the Battle of the Philippine Sea the Imperial Navy suffered a crushing defeat.[92] The first day of the Battle of the Philippine Sea, June 19, 1944, was dubbed by the Americans "the Great Marianas Turkey Shoot", as over the course of the dogfights in the air, the US Navy lost 30 planes while shooting down about 350 Imperial Japanese planes, in one of the Imperial Navy's most humiliating defeats.[93] The Japanese believed that indoctrination in bushido ("the way of the warrior") would give them the edge as the Japanese longed to die for the Emperor, while the Americans were afraid to die, but superior American pilot training and airplanes meant the Japanese were hopelessly outclassed by the Americans.[93] With Saipan in American hands, the Americans could take other islands in the Marianas to build airbases.[94] The establishment of American bases in the Marianas meant the cities of Japan were within the range of B-29 Superfortress bombers and the British historian H. P. Willmott noted that "even the most hard-headed of the Japanese militarists could dimly perceive that Japan would be at the end of her tether in that case".[94] As the news of the disastrous defeat suffered at Saipan reached Japan, it turned elite opinion against the Tojo government.[92] The Emperor himself was furious about the defeat at Saipan; had called a meeting of the Board of Field Marshals and Fleet Admirals to consider whether it might be possible to recapture Saipan; and Prince Takamatsu wrote in his diary "he flares up frequently".[95] Tojo was the prime minister, minister of the army and chief of the army general staff, and was seen both in Japan and in the US as, in the words of Willmott, "the embodiment of national determination, hardline nationalism and militarism".[92] Prince Konoe and Admiral Okada had been plotting to bring down the Tojo government since the spring of 1943, and their principal problem had been the support of the Emperor, who did not wish to lose his favorite prime minister.[96]

After the Battle of Saipan, it was clear to at least some of the Japanese elite that the war was lost, and Japan needed to make peace before the kokutai and perhaps even the Chrysanthemum Throne itself was destroyed.[92] Tojo had been so demonized in the United States during the war that, for the American people, Tojo was the face of Japanese militarism, and it was inconceivable that the United States would make peace with a government headed by Tojo.[92] Willmott noted that an additional problem for the "peace faction" was that: "Tojo was an embodiment of 'mainstream opinion' within the nation, the armed services and particularly the Army. Tojo had powerful support, and by Japanese standards, he was not extreme."[97] Tojo was more of a follower than a leader, and he represented mainstream opinion in the Army, and so his removal from office would not mean the end of the political ambitions of an Army still fanatically committed to victory or death.[92] The jushin (elder statesmen) had advised the Emperor that Tojo needed to go after Saipan and further advised the Emperor against partial changes in the cabinet, demanding that the entire Tojo cabinet resign.[98] Tojo, aware of the intrigues to bring him down, had sought the public approval of the Emperor, which was denied; the Emperor sent him a message to the effect that the man responsible for the disaster of Saipan was not worthy of his approval.[98] Tojo suggested reorganizing his cabinet to regain Imperial approval, but was rebuffed again; the Emperor said the entire cabinet had to go.[98] Once it was clear that Tojo no longer had the support of the Chrysanthemum Throne, Tojo's enemies had little trouble bringing down his government.[96] The politically powerful Lord Privy Seal, Marquis Kōichi Kido spread the word that the Emperor no longer supported Tojo.[96] After the fall of Saipan, he was forced to resign on July 18, 1944.[98]

As Tojo's replacement, the jushin advised the Emperor to appoint a former prime minister, Admiral Mitsumasa Yonai, as he was popular among the Navy, the diplomatic corps, the bureaucracy and the "peace faction". However, Yonai refused to serve, fearing that a prime minister who attempted to make peace with the Americans might be assassinated, as many Army officers were still committed to victory or death and regarded any talk of peace as treason.[98] He stated that only another general could serve as prime minister, and recommended General Kuniaki Koiso in his place.[98] At a conference with the Emperor, Koiso and Yonai were told to co-operate in forming a new government, but not told which of them was to become prime minister.[98] As the Emperor was worshiped as a living god, neither man felt able to directly ask him who was to take the position.[98] Lord Privy Seal Kido resolved the confusion by declaring that Koiso was the prime minister.[98] Two days after Tojo resigned, the Emperor gave him an imperial rescript offering him unusually lavish praise for his "meritorious services and hard work" and declaring "Hereafter we expect you to live up to our trust and make even greater contributions to military affairs".[96]

Arrest, trial, and execution

[edit]
Tojo lies limp in a chair with a gaping bullet wound under his heart after his attempted suicide.
Tojo being resuscitated by American soldiers

After Japan's unconditional surrender in 1945, U.S. general Douglas MacArthur ordered the arrest of forty individuals suspected of war crimes, including Tojo. Five American GIs were sent to serve the arrest warrant.[99] As American soldiers surrounded Tojo's house on September 11, he shot himself in the chest with a pistol, but missed his heart. As a result of this experience, the Army had medical personnel present during the later arrests of other accused Japanese war criminals, such as Shigetarō Shimada.

As he bled, Tojo began to talk, and two Japanese reporters recorded his words: "I am very sorry it is taking me so long to die. The Greater East Asia War was justified and righteous. I am very sorry for the nation and all the races of the Greater Asiatic powers. I wait for the righteous judgment of history. I wished to commit suicide but sometimes that fails."[100]

Tojo held in US custody, 1947

After recovering from his injuries, Tojo was moved to Sugamo Prison. During his imprisonment, Tojo received a new set of dentures, reportedly engraved with 'Remember Pearl Harbor' in Morse code by an American dentist, a claim that has since been a subject of historical curiosity.[101] The dentist ground away the message three months later.[102]

Tojo was tried by the International Military Tribunal for the Far East for war crimes and found guilty of, among other actions,[103] waging wars of aggression; war in violation of international law; unprovoked or aggressive war against various nations; and ordering, authorizing, and permitting inhumane treatment of prisoners of war.[6][104][105]

Crimes committed by Imperial Japan were responsible for the deaths of millions (some estimate between 3 million[106] and 14 million[107]) of civilians and prisoners of war through massacre, human experimentation, starvation, and forced labor that was either directly perpetrated or condoned by the Japanese military and government with a significant portion of them occurring during Tojo's rule of the military.[108][109][110][111][112] One source[who?] attributes 5 million civilian deaths to Tojo's rule of the military.

Tojo before the International Military Tribunal for the Far East

Tojo accepted full responsibility for his actions during the war and made this speech:

It is natural that I should bear entire responsibility for the war in general, and, needless to say, I am prepared to do so. Consequently, now that the war has been lost, it is presumably necessary that I be judged so that the circumstances of the time can be clarified and the future peace of the world be assured. Therefore, with respect to my trial, it is my intention to speak frankly, according to my recollection, even though when the vanquished stands before the victor, who has over him the power of life and death, he may be apt to toady and flatter. I mean to pay considerable attention to this in my actions, and say to the end that what is true is true and what is false is false. To shade one's words in flattery to the point of untruthfulness would falsify the trial and do incalculable harm to the nation, and great care must be taken to avoid this.[113][1]

Tojo was sentenced to death on November 12, 1948, and executed by hanging 41 days later on December 23, 1948, a week before his 64th birthday.[114][1] Before his execution, he gave his military ribbons to one of his guards; they are on display at the National Naval Aviation Museum in Pensacola, Florida.[115] In his final statement, he apologized for the atrocities committed by the Japanese military and urged the American military to show compassion toward the Japanese people, who had suffered devastating air attacks and the two atomic bombings.[116]

For years, there was mystery surrounding the fate of Tojo's remains. In 2021, the fate of his remains were declassified and published by the US Army: after his execution, Tojo's body was cremated and his ashes were scattered over the Pacific Ocean approximately 30 miles (48 km) east of Yokohama from a US Army aircraft on the afternoon of 23 December 1948, along with the ashes of six other Class-A war criminals.[117][118]

Historians Herbert P. Bix and John W. Dower criticize the work done by General MacArthur and his staff to exonerate Emperor Hirohito and all members of the imperial family from criminal prosecutions. According to them, MacArthur and Brigadier General Bonner Fellers worked to protect the Emperor and shift ultimate responsibility to Tojo.[119][120][121]

According to the written report of Shūichi Mizota, interpreter for Admiral Mitsumasa Yonai, Fellers met the two men at his office on March 6, 1946, and told Yonai: "It would be most convenient if the Japanese side could prove to us that the Emperor is completely blameless. I think the forthcoming trials offer the best opportunity to do that. Tojo, in particular, should be made to bear all responsibility at this trial."[122][123]

The sustained intensity of this campaign to protect the Emperor was revealed when, in testifying before the tribunal on December 31, 1947, Tojo momentarily strayed from the agreed-upon line concerning imperial innocence and referred to the Emperor's ultimate authority. The American-led prosecution immediately arranged that he be secretly coached to recant this testimony. Ryūkichi Tanaka, a former general who testified at the trial and had close connections with chief prosecutor Joseph B. Keenan, was used as an intermediary to persuade Tojo to revise his testimony.[124]

Legacy

[edit]
Tōjō with wife Katsuko and granddaughter Yūko Tojo

Tojo's grave is now in the Grave of the Seven Martyrs in Hazu, Aichi. The grave is said[by whom?] to have been created by stealing[clarification needed] parts of Tojo's body that supporters were supposed to cremate and scatter in the Pacific Ocean.[125][126] Seven other Class A war criminals are also buried in the same grave, including Kenji Doihara, Seishirō Itagaki, Heitarō Kimura, Iwane Matsui, Akira Mutō, Kōki Hirota, all of whom are enshrined in the Yasukuni Shrine. For this reason, it was the site of a bombing attack by the East Asia Anti-Japan Armed Front in October 1971.

A number of his descendants survived, including his granddaughter, Yūko Tojo, who was a political hopeful who claimed Japan's war was one of self-defense and that it was unfair that her grandfather was judged a Class-A war criminal. Tojo's second son, Teruo Tojo, who designed fighter and passenger aircraft during and after the war, eventually served as an executive at Mitsubishi Heavy Industries.

A 1997 survey of university students in China asked, "When somebody talks about Japanese people, what person do you think of?" The answer that most gave was Tojo,[127] reflecting anti-Japanese sentiment in China.

In the 1998 Japanese film Pride, Tojo was portrayed as a national hero forced into war by the West and then executed after a rigged trial.[128]

[edit]

Honors

[edit]

Promotions

[edit]
Promotions
Collar insignia Date
大将, Tai-sho (General) 17 October 1941
中将, Chu-jo (Lieutenant General) 1 December 1936
少将, Sho-sho (Major General) 18 March 1933
大佐, Tai-sa (Colonel) 10 August 1928
中佐, Chu-sa (Lieutenant Colonel) 20 August 1924
少佐, Sho-sa (Major) 10 August 1920
大尉, Tai-i (Captain) 1915
中尉, Chu-i (First Lieutenant) 1906
Commissioned 少尉, Sho-i (Second Lieutenant) 1 March 1905

Japanese

[edit]

Foreign

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c Yenne, p. 337.
  2. ^ Gorman, p. 43.
  3. ^ Butow, p. 4.
  4. ^ a b Browne, p. 19.
  5. ^ Browne, p. 11.
  6. ^ a b Morris, Roy Jr. (April 19, 2020). "Putting Tojo On the Stand: The Tokyo War Crimes Trials". The National Interest. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
  7. ^ "Tojo: Japan's Razor of Fear | Evolution of Evil". AHC. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
  8. ^ Browne, pp. 14–15, 19–20.
  9. ^ a b c d e Browne, p. 20.
  10. ^ Browne, pp. 23–24.
  11. ^ a b Browne, p. 24.
  12. ^ Baudot, p. 455.
  13. ^ Courtney Browne, Tojo: The Last Banzai, Angus & Robertson, 1967, pp. 170–171
  14. ^ "Japanese Hitler: Hideki Tojo – A Prime Minister Executed By The Hands Of The US!". HistoryCollection. August 11, 2016. Retrieved May 22, 2024.
  15. ^ Browne, p. 27.
  16. ^ Browne, p. 28.
  17. ^ Browne, pp. 28–29.
  18. ^ Browne, p. 29.
  19. ^ Browne, pp. 29–30.
  20. ^ a b Browne, p. 30.
  21. ^ a b Browne, p. 40.
  22. ^ Browne, pp. 33–34.
  23. ^ Browne, pp. 40–41.
  24. ^ Browne, pp. 47–48.
  25. ^ Fredrikson, p. 507.
  26. ^ a b c Bix, p. 277.
  27. ^ Bix, pp. 277–278.
  28. ^ Bix, p. 278.
  29. ^ Lamont-Brown, p. 65.
  30. ^ a b c d Bix, p. 244.
  31. ^ Takemae & Ricketts, p. 221.
  32. ^ Browne, p. 59.
  33. ^ Dear & Foot, p. 872.
  34. ^ "Tojo Hideki | Biography, Early Years, World War II, Facts, & Death | Britannica". www.britannica.com. June 21, 2023. Retrieved July 21, 2023.
  35. ^ a b c Browne, p. 60.
  36. ^ Cowley & Parker, p. 473.
  37. ^ Goodman & Miyazawa, p. 113.
  38. ^ Kato, p. 127.
  39. ^ The New International Year Book, p. 320.
  40. ^ a b Bix, p. 370.
  41. ^ Bix, pp. 370–371.
  42. ^ a b c d Bix, p. 373.
  43. ^ a b Bix, pp. 373–374.
  44. ^ Toland, p. [page needed].
  45. ^ Bix, p. 417.
  46. ^ Kido, p. 914.
  47. ^ Bix, pp. 417–418.
  48. ^ Bix, p. 416.
  49. ^ Fujiwara, p. 126.
  50. ^ a b c Bix, p. 418.
  51. ^ Terasaki, p. 118.
  52. ^ a b c Bix, pp. 418–419.
  53. ^ Bix, p. 419.
  54. ^ Browne, p. 107.
  55. ^ Wetzler, pp. 51–52.
  56. ^ Wetzler, pp. 47–50.
  57. ^ Bix, p. 421.
  58. ^ Wetzler, pp. 29, 35.
  59. ^ a b c d Bix, p. 428.
  60. ^ Bix, pp. 428–431.
  61. ^ Wetzler, pp. 28–30, 39.
  62. ^ Dower, p. 25.
  63. ^ a b Yoshimi, pp. 81–83.
  64. ^ a b c d Bix, p. 448.
  65. ^ a b c Weinberg, p. 329.
  66. ^ Weinberg, pp. 329–330.
  67. ^ a b Weinberg, p. 330.
  68. ^ Falk, p. 511.
  69. ^ Falk, pp. 511–512.
  70. ^ a b Falk, p. 512.
  71. ^ Falk, p. 518.
  72. ^ a b c Bix, p. 457.
  73. ^ Yoshimi, p. 83.
  74. ^ Falk, p. 510.
  75. ^ Bix, pp. 467–468.
  76. ^ a b c d e Murray & Millet, p. 348.
  77. ^ a b Bix, p. 473.
  78. ^ Weinberg, p. 498.
  79. ^ Bix, pp. 473–474.
  80. ^ a b Bix, p. 474.
  81. ^ Weinberg, pp. 640–641.
  82. ^ a b Weinberg, p. 641.
  83. ^ a b c Weinberg, pp. 641–642.
  84. ^ Willmott, pp. 155–156.
  85. ^ Willmott, pp. 156–157.
  86. ^ a b c Bix, p. 472.
  87. ^ Weinberg, p. 649.
  88. ^ a b Weinberg, p. 651.
  89. ^ a b c d e Murray & Millet, p. 349.
  90. ^ a b Bix, p. 475.
  91. ^ Weinberg, p. 642.
  92. ^ a b c d e f Willmott, p. 216.
  93. ^ a b Willmott, p. 208.
  94. ^ a b Willmott, p. 213.
  95. ^ Bix, p. 477.
  96. ^ a b c d Bix, p. 478.
  97. ^ Willmott, pp. 216–217.
  98. ^ a b c d e f g h i Willmott, p. 217.
  99. ^ Carola, Chris. "The Man Who Captured Tojo". YouTube.
  100. ^ Toland, pp. 871–872.
  101. ^ Countis.
  102. ^ "Dentist Played Prank on Tojo's Teeth". The Christian Science Monitor. Associated Press. August 17, 1995. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  103. ^ International Military Tribunal for the Far East. "Judgment of 4 November 1948" (PDF). In Pritchard, John; Zaide, Sonia M. (eds.). The Tokyo War Crimes Trial. pp. 49843–49848.
  104. ^ "How the Army and the media broke up a Japanese war criminal's suicide attempt". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved August 26, 2021.
  105. ^ Montefiore, Simon Sebag (2008). History's Monsters: 101 Villains from Vlad the Impaler to Adolf Hitler. New York: Metro Books. ISBN 978-1435109377.
  106. ^ "Rummell, Statistics". Hawaii.edu. Retrieved July 21, 2013.
  107. ^ "Sterling and Peggy Seagrave: Gold Warriors". The Education Forum. January 25, 2007.
  108. ^ "Japanese War Criminals World War Two". The National Archives (U.K.).
  109. ^ "Japanese War Crimes". The National Archives (U.S.). August 15, 2016.
  110. ^ "Pacific Theater Document Archive". War Crimes Studies Center, University of California, Berkeley. Archived from the original on July 18, 2009.
  111. ^ Kafala, Tarik (October 21, 2009). "What is a war crime?". BBC News.
  112. ^ "Bibliography: War Crimes". Sigur Center for Asian Studies, George Washington University. Archived from the original on August 16, 2019. Retrieved May 29, 2017.
  113. ^ Crowe, p. 217.
  114. ^ "Veterans Can't Forget Hangings – Three North Carolina Men Remember Vividly the Day Seven Japanese War Criminals Were Executed". August 28, 1998. Retrieved May 8, 2021.
  115. ^ "Tojo's ribbons go on display at Pensacola naval museum". The Florida Times-Union. November 11, 2003. Archived from the original on August 15, 2017. Retrieved June 24, 2014.
  116. ^ Toland, p. 873.
  117. ^ "Scholar learns remains of Tojo, other war criminals scattered in Pacific". Japan Today. June 8, 2021. Retrieved June 14, 2021.
  118. ^ "World War Two: Hideki Tojo's ashes scattered by US, documents reveal". BBC. June 15, 2021.
  119. ^ Bix, pp. 583–585.
  120. ^ Dower, pp. 324–326.
  121. ^ Yenne, pp. 337–338.
  122. ^ Toyoda, pp. 170–172.
  123. ^ Bix, p. 584.
  124. ^ Dower, pp. 325, 604–605.
  125. ^ Materials on Disposal of the War Criminals’ Bodies Executed as a Result of the International Military Tribunal for the Far East in Possession of the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration
  126. ^ 東條元首相らA級戦犯7人 の遺骨太平洋に”米軍公文書-NHK
  127. ^ Kristof, p. 43.
  128. ^ Kristof, p. 40.
  129. ^ Mikesh, Robert C. (1993). Japanese Aircraft Code Names & Designations. Atglen, PA: Schiffer Publishing, Ltd. ISBN 978-0887404474.
  130. ^ Blood on the Sun at the TCM Movie Database
  131. ^ Tora! Tora! Tora! at the TCM Movie Database
  132. ^ Galbraith IV, Stuart (2008). The Toho Studios Story: A History and Complete Filmography. Scarecrow Press. p. 269. ISBN 978-1461673743.
  133. ^ "Tojo" at Discogs
  134. ^ Ghosh, Devarsi (August 16, 2017). "There are more movies about Subhash Chandra Bose than ever before". Scroll.in. Retrieved November 10, 2018.
  135. ^ Shohei Hino at the British Film Institute[better source needed]
  136. ^ Matikkala, Antti (2017). Kunnian ruletti: korkeimmat ulkomaalaisille 1941–1944 annetut suomalaiset kunniamerkit (in Finnish). Helsinki: Suomalaisen Kirjallisuuden Seura. p. 517. ISBN 978-9522228475.
  137. ^ "Personal Record: Tojo, Hideki". National Diet Library. 1946. Retrieved September 5, 2020.

Bibliography

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]
Political offices
Preceded by Minister of the Army
1940–1944
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Japan
1941–1944
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Home Affairs
1941–1942
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Foreign Affairs
1942
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Education
1942
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Commerce and Industry
1943
Office abolished
New creation Minister of Munitions
1943–1944
Succeeded by
Military offices
Preceded by Chief of Army General Staff
1944
Succeeded by