- Kyūjō Incident
The Nihongo|Kyūjō Incident|宮城事件|Kyūjō Jiken was an attempted
coup d'état inJapan , taking place midnight of14 August 1945 –15 August 1945 , the day whenImperial Japan accepted anunconditional surrender to theAllies of World War II . The attempted coup was put into effect by the Staff Office of theMinistry of War of Japan and by many from theImperial Guard of Japan in order to stop the move to surrender.The officers in attempt to block the decision to surrender to the Allies, killed
Lieutenant General Takeshi Mori of the FirstImperial Guards Division and attempted to counterfeit an order to the effect of occupying theTokyo Imperial Palace . They attempted to place the Emperor under house-arrest, using the 2nd brigade Imperial Guard Infantry. They failed to persuade theEastern District Army (Japan) and the high command of theImperial Japanese Army to move forward with the action. Due to their failure to convince the remaining army to oust theImperial House of Japan , they ultimately committed suicide in traditional Japanese form. As a result, the communique of the intent for a Japanese surrender continued as planned.Background
Decision to accept the Potsdam Declaration
On
August 9 ,1945 the Japanese government decided to accept thePotsdam Declaration in reaction to theatomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki , and to the effective loss of the Pacific and extra-territories. On the same day the Supreme Council for the Direction of War opened before the Japanese Imperial court, where thePrime Minister of Japan Kantarō Suzuki , the 26th Minister of theImperial Japanese Navy Mitsumasa Yonai , and the Minister of Foreign AffairsShigenori Tōgō suggested that the Japanese should accept thePotsdam Declaration , an unconditional surrender, to theEmperor of Japan Hirohito .After the closure of the
Air-raid shelter session, thePrime Minister of Japan mustered the Supreme Council for the Direction of War again, now as theGozen Kaigi , which Emperor Hirohito attended. From midnight of August 10th, the conference of the Gozen Kaigi convened in an underground bomb shelter. Emperor Hirohito agreed to the opinion of the Minister of Foreign Affairs, resulting in the acceptance of thePotsdam Declaration . The communication to theAllies of World War II was later sent by the Japanese envoy ofSwitzerland andSweden .Agitation in the Army
The Ministry of War of Japan knew the decision of the Gozen Kaigi and stirred up a fierce reaction from many officers who intended do-or-die resistance. At 9 o’clock, in the session held in the Ministry of War, the staff officers complained to the Minister of the War of Japan
Korechika Anami , and not all of them understood the persuasion of Anami. After midnight on12 August a San Francisco broadcasting (KGEI) put the reply from theAllies of World War II , and there was a suggestion that the Allies had decided that the authority of the sovereignty of the Japanese government and the Emperor shall subject to the head quarters of the Allies of World War II, against the requisition for the protection of theKokutai from the Imperial Japanese government. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs interpreted this sentence as the restricting the sovereignty, yet the Japanese Army interpreted this sentence more as enslavement. From 3 o’clock the attendees of the imperial families council basically agreed to thesurrender of Japan , yet the cabinet council which was supposed to be held at the same time did not concur. Also, the Supreme Council for the Direction of War tangled with the problem of the protection for the Kokutai. After these proceedings, some Army officers for protection of the Kokutai decided that a coup d'état was needed. At this time, the core group of these officers had already prepared some troops in Tokyo.(兵力使用計画:Heiryoku-shiyo-keikaku))Kyūjō Incident
14 August
The Ministry of War finally disagreed the plan of coup d'état in the session between the Minister of War of Japan
Korechika Anami and the Chief theImperial Japanese Army General Staff Yoshijirō Umezu , on another front, the Prime Minister Suzuki mustered the council of the all cabinet official added some key persons from military and civil in front of theEmperor of Japan and in this council, Emperor Hirohito had accepted the reply of the Allies and described that he would call to all of Japanese people. At around the 1 o’clock when the cabinet council had begun, the chairperson of theNHK was called for by the cabinet intelligence office and required to prepare theGyokuon-hōsō which will be made by Emperor Hirohito. The recording of theGyokuon-hōsō has started at half past 11 o’clock in theImperial Household Ministry and it was sent to the Palace staff ofTokugawa Yoshihiro and locked up in certain room.15 August
The officers of the
Imperial Guard of Japan who was against thesurrender of Japan had confirmed the recording of theGyokuon-hōsō and then held some personnels from NHK and the agency staffs of the cabinet intelligence office. They coerced the interview with the Chief of the division of the Imperial GuardTakeshi Mori and he was persuaded of his entry. At this time, he rejected the persuasion and was murdered with military sword by some high-ranking officer of the Imperial Japanese Army. A part of the division of the Imperial Guard was detached toHibiya and Imperial Household Ministry and some high-ranking officer betook themselves to Eastern District Army and asked to join the rebellion but the commander of the Eastern District Army,Shizuichi Tanaka had already decided to subdue. At 6 a.m. when Emperor Hirohito knew the coup d'état, he said that he would persuade the soldiers. The two records were carried from the Imperial Household Ministry and it was sent to the spare studios ofThe Dai-ichi Mutual Life Insurance Company hall and NHK hall. At half past 11 a.m., one military policeman unsheathed his sword and broke into the studio in order to prevent the broadcast but he was taken into custody. After noon, there was an advance notice and the playing ofKimi ga Yo , then the Emperor recorded Gyokuon-hōsō. The long war was over.Post-war
The relatives of staff officers were not sent to court because of the confusion of the
surrender of Japan , despite their actions violating military and criminal law.ee also
*
Gyokuon-hōsō External links
* [http://kyuujoujiken.hp.infoseek.co.jp/ Researching room for the Kyūjō Incident]
* [http://ww1.m78.com/topix-2/coup%20detat.html The coup d'état by Masao Inaba]
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