Hideki Tojo
Hideki Tojo
Prologue
A politician and a general of the Imperial Japanese Army, Hideki
Tojo also served as Prime Minister of Japan and President of the
Imperial Rule Assistance Association. Tojo’s voice was among the
loudest concerning the preventive war against the United States
during deliberations leading up to Pearl Harbor. Upon becoming
Prime Minister, he presided much over the conquest of the West’s
territories in Asia and the Pacific until the defeat of Japanese forces
at Midway and Guadalcanal.
His years in power gave him the tools for perpetuating numerous
war crimes including the systematic massacre and starvation of
civilians and prisoners of war. But the war’s tide increasingly turned
against Japan leading to Tojo’s late resignation as Prime Minister.
Japan’s surrender was inevitable, soon after Tojo was sentenced to
death by the International Military Tribunal for the Far East. He was
hanged on 23 December 1948.
Hideki Tojo
Born in the Kojimachi district of Tokyo on the December 30, 1884,
Tojo was the third son of Hidenori Tojo, a lieutenant general in the
Imperial Japanese Army. In this period Japanese society was
divided in four castes: Merchants, Artisans, Peasants and Samurai.
After the Meiji Restoration in 1868, the caste system was slowly
abolished, ending in 1871 but the distinctions remained and
persisted. This somehow ensured the former samurai’s caste
traditional prestige. Tojo’s family came from such a caste, though
they were relatively low warriors for the great daimyos. His father
was turned from samurai to army officer while his mother was the
daughter of a Buddhist priest, making the family respectable, but
poor.