Takeo Imai

Last updated
Takeo Imai
Takeo Imai.jpg
Imai (middle) signing a document during the surrender of Japan to the Allies in 1945
BornFebruary 23, 1898 (1898-02-23)
Nagano Prefecture, Japan
DiedJune 12, 1982 (1982-06-13) (aged 84)
Rank
  • Japanese Colonel 1939
  • Chief of Staff of the China Expeditionary Army
Alma mater
  • Nagano Junior High School 1915
  • Imperial Japanese Army Academy 1918
Spouse(s)Kimiko
Children5

Takeo Imai (23 February 1898 - 12 June 1982) was a Japanese Major General of the China Expeditionary Army [1] who was born in the Nagano Prefecture. He played a notable role during the Sino-Japanese war and the Japanese invasion of the Philippines during World War II. During the Bataan Death March, he freed prisoners as the orders violated his Bushido code. He served as a Vice-Chief of the General Staff of the China Expeditionary Army, as well as worked for the Japanese embassy in Beiping following the Marco Polo Bridge Incident. In this role he met with Chinese officers at Chichiang to negotiate surrender. Taking on important military roles in China and the Philippines, he was a significant actor throughout Japan's invasion of China and held an important role in negotiating and maintaining peace between the two countries. He was particularly influential in his responsibility of postwar processing and allowing for smooth demobilization transitions. [2] He retired in 1947.

Contents

Education and family

Imai was the fourth and youngest son in the family, with five other siblings.

He attended Jinjou Elementary School, Nagano Junior High School in 1915 and the Imperial Japanese Army Academy in 1918 and graduated from Army War College in 1928. He first worked as an infantry soldier in Toyoma before joining the infantry regiment in Hoeryong, Korea. [3]

Takeo Imai's eldest son Hiroshi died of white blood disease at 6 and his second son Nobuo died due to subarachnoid hemorrhage at 17. His second daughter Takako died on June 12, 1982. He had three sons and two daughters. [4]

Military

Imai was a military official of a respected rank. According to historians, Imai was best known for taking a peaceful and mediating stance in Japan and China's conflictual relations in the late 1930s into the mid-1940s. He kept influential posts, from belonging to the Toyoma Infantry 69th Regiment as the position of Army Captain and Japan's invasion of China until its signing of the Surrender Instrument in August 1945. [5]

Imai's primary military involvements were peace-keeping in the Sino-Japanese war, although he spent a year fighting in the Philippines for the start of the Pacific War.

In December 1935, Imai was based at the Japanese Embassy in Beijing, and his first major undertaking was the Marco Polo Bridge Incident, in which he played a key role in peace negotiations.

China

On July 7, 1937, Imai was a major player in the Marco Polo Incident near Beijing. This war represented the National Revolutionary Army of China and the Imperial Army of Japan.  As a non-expansionist, his goal was to negotiate with Chinese leaders. He established a short-lived ceasefire, which was a recurring event throughout these Chinese and Japanese negotiations until Japanese Prime Minister Fumimaro Konoe's Cabinet decided to send troops into mainland China a few days later. At this point, the ceasefire was broken and the Second Sino-Japanese War began.

During this time, Imai was assigned intelligence expert for Japan's military. He gathered information regarding China's efforts and plans well after the Marco Polo Incident.

From late 1937 and into 1939, wherein he was promoted to Colonel, he would meet with Chinese ambassadors to negotiate peace relations. [5]

On November 3, 1938, Japanese officials, among whom Takeo Imai was a part, were chosen to engage in talks with officials in China with regards to Japan's invasion of China. [6] These officials would not represent Japan in these talks but identified solely under their own name to protect Japan's intentions and stature. By this time, Japan was in control of Hong Kong, Shanghai and multiple other powerful cities and harbours. Due to this, China hoped that Japan was coming to the end of their invasions, but six negotiations between the two states followed without an overall consensus.

In early March 1940, after a string of both official and unofficial negotiations between Chinese and Japanese officials, Imai laid out Chinese demands in Hong Kong. He made five conditions for peace-enablement, which are as follows:

The Philippines

In August 1942, Imai took his troops to invade the Philippines, remaining there until August 31, 1943. During the Bataan Death March Imai was ordered to shoot 1000 US and Filipino prisoners of war who had surrendered on the Bataan Peninsula. The order was commissioned by Chief of Staff Masanobu Tsuji. Imai refused to carry out the order. [4]

The Japanese were seeing increasing losses in their battles by 1944. Imai was sent to Nanking, China, in an attempt to reach a peace agreement with the Chinese Nationalist government.

On the 15th August 1945, Japan surrendered to the Allies. [7] Representing Japan, Imai travelled to Hunan province to officially surrender.

Retirement and death

In August 1945, (Showa 20), after the Japanese government accepted the Potsdam Declaration of the Allied Forces, under the direction of the commander of the China Expeditionary Army, Yasuji Okamura, Hunan was designated by the Chinese side for preliminary negotiations at the end of the war on August 21. He went to the land of Shikou, in the province, and negotiated a stoppage of the China Expeditionary Army with the commanders of the Chinese army, He Yingqin. Immediately after the reception ceremony of the China Expeditionary Army held in Nanjing on September 9, Imai, who was clearly stated by He Yingqin that "Imai is not a war criminal," remained in Nanjing for about a year and a half, and became the head of the general liaison team in Japan. Major General Imai is one of the representatives of the Army, “Chiang Kei-Shek”, and is known for Wang Jingwei and direct peace work with the Chongqing National Government. He was engaged in the reinstatement of military generals and the support activities of those who were designated as war criminals by the Chinese side, and cleaned up after the Sino-Japanese War. [8]

Taeko Imai remained in Nanjing for a period of time after the end of the war. His position at the time was as Vice-Chief of the China Expeditionary Army; working in external affairs and postwar processing as a representative of Japan. He was demobilised in January 1947, when  he returned to Japan and remained there until his death in June 1982 (84 years old). [9] According to researchers, Imai's memoir played an important record of the secret, unofficial negotiations between China and Japan as no official records of those negotiations were kept. [10]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Battle of Nanking</span> 1937 Second Sino-Japanese War battle

The Battle of Nanking was fought in early December 1937 during the Second Sino-Japanese War between the Chinese National Revolutionary Army and the Imperial Japanese Army for control of Nanjing (Nanking), the capital of the Republic of China.

The Treaty of Peace and Friendship between Japan and the People's Republic of China is a peace treaty concluded between the People's Republic of China and Japan on August 12, 1978. The treaty was signed in Beijing by Huang Hua, Foreign Minister of the People's Republic of China, and Sunao Sonoda, Minister for Foreign Affairs of Japan. The treaty went into effect on October 23, 1978 with the state visit of Vice Premier of the PRC Deng Xiaoping to Japan. The treaty had its origin in the Joint Communiqué of the Government of Japan and the Government of the People's Republic of China of 1972. Negotiations on a formal peace treaty began in 1974, but were drawn out over various disputes until 1978. The treaty ultimately consisted of five articles, and was strongly opposed by the Soviet Union.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">China Expeditionary Army</span> Military unit

The China Expeditionary Army was a general army of the Imperial Japanese Army from 1939 to 1945.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Takeo Itō</span> Japanese officer, war criminal 1889-1965

Takeo Itō was a war criminal in the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II.

Central China Expeditionary Army was a field army of the Imperial Japanese Army during the Second Sino-Japanese War.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Weng Wenhao</span> Chinese geologist and politician

Weng Wenhao was a Chinese geologist and politician. He was one of the earliest modern Chinese geologists, and is regarded as the founder of modern Chinese geology and the father of modern Chinese oil industry. From May to November 1948, Weng served as President of the Executive Yuan (Premier) of the Republic of China.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Central China Area Army</span> Military unit

The Central China Area Army was an area army of the Imperial Japanese Army during the Second Sino-Japanese War.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shanghai Expeditionary Army</span> Japanese army, first raised in 1932

The Shanghai Expeditionary Army was a corps-level ad hoc Japanese army in the Second Sino-Japanese War.

The Zhejiang-Jiangxi campaign was a military campaign fought from May to September 1942 as part of the Second Sino-Japanese War. This article in as order of battle, listing the present Chinese and Japanese military forces.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Flag of Wang Jingwei regime</span> National flags of the Reorganized National Government of China 1940–1945

During the Second Sino-Japanese war, the invading Japanese established a variety of puppet governments such as the Provisional Government of China and the Reformed Government of China which used the flag of Five Races Under One Union even though the legitimate Chinese Government had switched to the current day modern flag of the Republic of China.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Zhijiang Dong Autonomous County</span> Autonomous county in Hunan, Peoples Republic of China

Zhijiang Dong Autonomous County, usually referred to as Zhijiang County is an autonomous county of the Dong people in Hunan Province, China. It is under the administration of Huaihua prefecture-level city.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wu Songgao</span>

Wu Songgao was a politician, jurist and political scientist in the Republic of China. He was an important politician during the Wang Jingwei regime. He was born in Wuxian, Jiangsu.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Zhou Xuechang</span> Chinese politician

Zhou Xuechang – November 27, 1952) was a politician in the Republic of China. He was an important figure during the Reorganized National Government of China. His courtesy name was Zhihou (芝侯).

Tokushi Kasahara is a Japanese historian. He is a professor emeritus at Tsuru University and his area of expertise is modern Chinese history.

Akira Fujiwara was a Japanese historian. His academic speciality was modern Japanese history and he was a professor emeritus at Hitotsubashi University. In 1980 he became a member of the Science Council of Japan and was a former chairman of the Historical Science Society of Japan.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">North China Buffer State Strategy</span> Series of political maneuverings in North China undertaken by Japan

The North China Buffer State Strategy is the general term for a series of political manoeuvrings Japan undertook in the five provinces of northern China, Hebei, Chahar, Suiyuan, Shanxi, and Shandong. It was an operation to detach all of northern China from the power of the Nationalist Government and put it under Japanese control or influence.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Zu Feng</span> Chinese actor and director (born 1974)

Zu Feng is a Chinese actor and director. Zu first attracted attention in 2008 for his role as Li Ya in the successful TV drama Lurk. He has earned and been nominated for numerous awards during his career, including winning the Best New Actor Award at the 2011 Chinese Young Generation Film Forum for his role in The Founding of a Party, Society Awardat the Golden Phoenix Awards, and two Huading Award for Best Supporting Actor.

The Sino-Japanese Joint Defence Agreement was a series of secret military unequal treaties between the Republic of China and the Empire of Japan, signed in May 1918. Drawn up following China's entry into the First World War on the part of the Allied Powers, the agreements, which were concluded in secrecy, granted Japan numerous military privileges within Chinese territory along the Sino-Russian border. The content of agreements were leaked to the press at an early stage, sparking a widespread protest movement by Chinese students in Japan and across China. The agreements were officially terminated in January 1921, their continuance made untenable by Chinese public opinion.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">The surrender ceremony of World War II in China war zone</span>

The Japanese surrender ceremony that ended World War II in China occurred in Nanjing on 9 September 1945. The forces of the Imperial Japanese Army agreed with the Allies terms to cease all armed conflict. The ceremony occurred a week after the war had officially ended in Asia on September 2.

The Konoe statements refer to three diplomatic statements made by Fumimaro Konoe's cabinets in the early stages of the Second Sino-Japan war, aimed at establishing a new order in East Asia together with China. The Japanese archives during the period of the invasion of China explicitly record and categorise these three Konoe's declarations:

References

  1. "Imai Takeo". Nihon jinmei daijiten Plus (in Japanese). Kōdansha. Retrieved 6 April 2014.
  2. 王, 家山 (2020-03-31). "浅谈物理学史在物理教学中的功能". 教育研究. 3 (3). doi: 10.32629/er.v3i3.2535 . ISSN   2630-4686. S2CID   243457461.
  3. 今井貞夫『幻の日中和平工作 軍人 今井武夫の生涯』の表紙
  4. 1 2 日中和平工作の記録 (今井武夫と汪兆銘・蔣介石) Record of peace reinforcement Japan/China relations.
  5. 1 2 王琴. "和谈诱降的"谋略专家":今井武夫." 党史纵览 no. 1 (2005): 44.
  6. 孔祥熙与抗战期间的 中 日秘密交涉 cass.cn
  7. 和谈诱降的"谋略专家":今井武夫
  8. Hsu Chung-mao. The Fate of Japanese POWs and Civilians in China After World War II. Think China. 2021.
  9. Book abstract of: Nikkeihei work collections and testimonies.
  10. 杨奎松. "蒋介石抗日态度之研究——以抗战前期中日秘密交涉为例." Kang Ri Zhan Zheng Yan Jiu no. 4 (2000): 54-95.

Bibliography