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Memo gives Pearl Harbor insight

Emperor Hirohito and PM Tojo’s thinking on eve of attack unveiled

- By Mari Yamaguchi

TOKYO — A newly released memo by a wartime Japanese official provides what a historian says is the first look at the thinking of Emperor Hirohito and Prime Minister Hideki Tojo on the eve of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor that thrust the U.S. into World War II.

While far from conclusive, the five-page document lends credence to the view that Hirohito bears at least some responsibi­lity for starting the war.

At 8:30 p.m. in Tokyo, just hours before the attack, Tojo summoned two top aides for a countdown to war briefing. One of them, Vice Interior Minister Michio Yuzawa, wrote an account three hours after the meeting was over.

“The emperor seemed at ease and unshakable once he had made a decision,” he quoted Tojo as saying.

To what extent Hirohito was responsibl­e for the war is a sensitive topic in Japan, and the bookseller who discovered the memo kept it under wraps for nearly a decade before releasing it to Japan’s Yomiuri newspaper, which published it in July.

Hirohito was protected from indictment in the Tokyo war crimes trials during a U.S. occupation that wanted to use him as a symbol to rebuild Japan as a democratic nation. Hirohito died in 1989 at age 87 after 62 years on the throne.

“It took me nine years to come forward, as I was afraid of a backlash,” said bookshop owner Takeo Hatano, who handled the document carefully as he showed it to Associated Press journalist­s.

“But now I hope the memo would help us figure out what really happened during the war, in which 3.1 million people were killed.”

Takahisa Furukawa, a Nihon University expert on wartime history who has confirmed the authentici­ty of the memo, called it the first detailed portrayal of Tojo and Hirohito just before the attack. Palace documents have confirmed Hirohito’s daytime meeting with Tojo on Dec. 7, 1941, but without elaboratin­g.

The memo supports the view that Hirohito was not as concerned about waging war on the U.S. as was once portrayed, Furukawa said. The emperor had endorsed the government’s decision to scrap diplomatic options at a Dec. 1 meeting, and his unchanged position the day before the attack reassured Tojo.

Yuzawa’s account portrays Tojo as upbeat and feeling a sense of accomplish­ment after all the required administra­tive steps for war had been taken and, most importantl­y, Hirohito had given him the final nod without asking any questions.

“If His Majesty had any regret over negotiatio­ns with Britain and the U.S., he would have looked somewhat grim. There was no such indication, which must be a result of his determinat­ion,” Tojo is quoted as saying in the memo. “I’m completely relieved. Given the current conditions, I could say we have practicall­y won already.”

His optimism was misplaced. The Pearl Harbor attack killed nearly 2,400 U.S. servicemen and caused major damage to the U.S. Pacific Fleet. Within months, however, the tide was turning.

Tojo was blamed for prolonging the war after it was clearly lost, leading to the U.S. atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August 1945. He was later executed as a Class-A war criminal.

Tojo, whose administra­tive skills and loyalty had won Hirohito’s trust, was made prime minister just two months before the Pearl Harbor attack and served in the post for most of World War II.

Furukawa said Tojo’s remarks in the memo about his relief at completing the preparatio­ns for war support evaluation­s of him as a good bureaucrat but not a visionary leader. More decisive leadership might have ended the war earlier, he said.

“Tojo is a bureaucrat who was incapable of making own decisions, so he turned to the emperor as his supervisor. That’s why he had to report everything for the emperor to decide. If the emperor didn’t say no, then he would proceed,” Furukawa said. “Clearly, the memo shows the absence of political leadership in Japan.”

Yuzawa wrote in the memo that he was “moved and honored to get involved in war preparatio­ns at the time of a crucial event that would determine the fate of the Imperial state.”

He was later promoted to interior minister but turned critical of Tojo’s leadership and was dismissed from the Cabinet over a policy difference.

Hatano, a longtime acquaintan­ce of some of Yuzawa’s descendant­s, received the notebook and other items from the family when they wanted to make room in their apartment. He found the memo folded in half inside the notebook about a year later.

“When I recognized the date, Sunday, Dec. 7, 1941, I knew it was something special,” he said.

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AP

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