THE YAMATO DYNASTY, by Sterling and Peggy Seagrave (1999)
PROLOGUE: "Emperor Meets Shogun" pages 1-9
Just before 10 A.M. on September 27, 1946, a maroon 1930 Rolls- Royce with a
canvas-covered top whispered out through the Saku- rada Gate of the imperial
palace in Tokyo and crossed the bridge over its broad moat, followed by
three black Daimlers. Japanese pedestrians knew who it was, turned and bowed
deeply. Maroon was a color reserved for the emperor's cars. Emperor Hirohito
was on his way to a fateful first meeting with Japan's new shogun. General
Douglas MacArthur. Sitting on jump seats in the Rolls facing Hirohito--by
custom no subordinate could share the emperor's seat--were his most senior
adviser, Marquis Kido, and a trusted English-language interpreter. In the
Daimlers were other members of Hirohito's inner council. The emperor's
personal physician accompanied him wherever he went, but on this occasion he
had a particular reason: Hirohito was suffering deep depression made worse
by jaundice. Since Japan's surrender the previous month, the emperor had
slept badly, and today in particular his hands trembled more than usual.
How different from four years earlier, when he had shaken with rage. Then,
in September 1941, three months before Pearl Harbor, the emperor had been
given a detailed briefing on the High Command's plans for a surprise attack
on the United States Navy base and a coordinated lightning conquest of
Southeast Asia. Hirohito had asked the army chief of staff, General
Sugiyama, how long it would take. Circumspectly, the general had replied
that the conquest of Southeast Asia would take only three months. (It took
precisely one week longer than that.) But he did not give an estimate for
the subduing of America. Testily,Hirohito pointed out that when the war with
China had begun in 1937, General Sugiyama protested that China was vast.
This increased Hirohito's anger. "If you call the Chinese hinterland vast,
would you not describe the Pacific as even more immense?" The general
squirmed with embarrassment, and sucked his breath in sharply. Hirohito was
calmed only by repeated assurances that a diplomatic settlement with America
would get first  priority after Japan got the upper hand. In this, his
ministers lied, for both the Imperial Army and Navy by then were committed
to total war, with no serious intention of quitting while they were ahead.
Only a major last-minute concession from America such as dropping its oil
embargo of Japan could have altered events, and everyone knew this was
unlikely. A formal declaration of war had been prepared long in advance,
with the understanding that, "due to a most unfor- tunate last-minute delay
in the English translation," it would not be delivered in Washington until
after the attack on Pearl Harbor had already begun.
The mood in all four cars was somber. What could be seen of Tokyo made it
worse. The Navy Ministry was nothing but rubble. Bomb craters and bombed-out
cars were everywhere. During the Pacific War, 1.5 million Japanese men died
in combat. Some 8 million Japanese civilians were killed or wounded, and 2.5
million homes in Japan were destroyed or badly damaged. During the biggest
of these B-29 raids on Japan, when 1,700 tons of incendiary bombs were
dropped on Tokyo, 100,000 people were killed in a single day and a 125,000
homes destroyed. Although the war was now over, it was estimated that 10
million Japanese might yet starve to death. The population of Tokyo had
fallen from 6.75 million to about 3 million, many living in shanties among
ruins. Osaka and other cities were teeming with disabled veterans, homeless
children, desperate women and vagrants. In Tokyo each day, trucks hauled
piles of bodies to crematoriums. At night, the homeless crowded into subways
to sleep. Others froze to death sleeping rough in Ueno Park. Many died of
malnutrition, and tuberculosis was epidemic.
As the cars sped toward the U.S. embassy compound, there was no military
police escort to halt traffic. To put his visitor at a further disadvantage,
MacArthur had deliberately avoided assigning an escort to the motorcade.
When the traffic light at Toranomon intersection turned red, cross traffic
made it necessary for the emperor's Rolls to come to a stop like all the
other cars. Nobody in the Daimlers could remember that ever happening
before.
MacArthur had been in Japan only a month. He had arrived at Atsuki Air Base
from the Philippines at the end of August, two weeks after Japan's
surrender. By then, only 6000 American troops had arrived to take control of
the Tokyo area, where there were still some 2 million fully armed Japanese
soldiers. The emperor's radio appeal to all Japanese to lay down their arms
had been effective. But there was no certainty that fighting would not flare
up again. Bluff was all important. More than anyone realized.
During those first two weeks in Japan, MacArthur had been pressed repeatedly
to summon the emperor to a private meeting to resolve certain delicate
matters, but MacArthur chose to wait. Conservative policy makers in
Washington, including former president Herbert Hoover, had come to the
conclusion that it was crucial for America's future security interests in
East Asia to get behind-the-scenes cooperation of the imperial family, and
of powerful financial leaders in Japan--but not to be seen in public as
making any concessions to Hirohito, whose image in the West was as bad as
that of General Tojo Hideki, Japan's wartime prime minister. Together, Tojo
and Hirohito were widely seen as the driving forces behind the war.
Hirohito's name came at or near the top of all lists of prospective war
criminals who were to be tried by Allied military tribunals. Through
intermediaries, MacArthur let it be known that the emperor would must take
the initiative, and ask for a meeting with him. Secret negotiations went on
through MacArthur's military secretary and former chief of psychological
warfare, Brigadier General Bonner Fellers, who had unusual private channels
in Japan.
Persuaded by his own family and advisers that such a meeting would be
critical to the preservation of the dynasty, Hirohito responded by arranging
through Foreign Minister Yoshida to see MacArthur on September 27. Because
of the sensitive nature of the meeting, it would take place privately in the
general's living quarters at the embassy, rather than at occupation
headquarters in the Old Ichi Life building opposite the imperial palace.
Despite the unusual secrecy that still surrounds this meeting, both in
America and Japan, the superficial details are well known. After passing the
Okura Museum, the motorcade turned into the embassy gate and rolled up the
drive to the ambassador's residence, where MacArthur was living with his
wife and son. General Fellers, waiting with other U.S. Army officers at the
entrance portico, stepped out to meet the Rolls as it came to a halt. As
Hirohito and Marquis Kido emerged, the American saw with some amusement that
the emperor had abandoned his customary military uniform and was dressed in
1930s diplomatic attire, with formal black tail-coat, wing-collar, striped
cravat and striped trousers. He was carrying a silk top hat, which he now
put squarely on his head, as coached by his chamberlains. At five feet three
inches, Hirohito looked small and frail next to the Americans. His mustache
and wire-rimmed glasses did nothing to disguise his fragility. He seemed
bewildered and tense. General Fellers saluted, then, to put the emperor at
ease, smiled warmly and reached out to shake his hand ,saying, "Welcome,
sir!" Hirohito responded uncertainly by putting out his own hand, an
uncharacteristic gesture that would have astonished most Japanese. Not even
his most senior adviser, Marquis Kido, ever shook the emperor's hand. As
Fellers guided the emperor into the building, Kido tried to stay with them
but another American officer politely but firmly asked the marquis to step
to one side. Only Hirohito's interpreter was allowed to follow. The rest of
the emperor's entourage was herded with Kido into a conference room for
their own discussions with Fellers and others.
While waiting for the motorcade to arrive, General MacArthur had been moving
furniture nervously a few inches this way and that in the deeply carpeted
reception room. In front of a fireplace, he put a side chair next to a big
chesterfield where he planned to sit with the emperor. This side chair,
MacArthur explained to his personal physician, Dr. Roger Egeberg, was there
in case the emperor brought along an interpreter, to give him time to think
before answering questions. The emperor would not really need an
interpreter, MacArthur explained, because as a young man he had gone to
school in America and spoke good English. (This amazing remark, recorded at
the time by Dr. Egeberg, reveals how little MacArthur really knew about the
emperor of Japan, his enemy for the past four years; he may have been
thinking of Hirohito's younger brother, Prince Chichibu, who had studied in
Britain and spoke elegant English.)
When word came that Hirohito had arrived, MacArthur stepped to the door to
greet him, calling "Your Majesty" and giving him an unsmiling but
businesslike handshake. In contrast to the emperor's formal attire, the
general had deliberately chosen to wear khaki "suntans" with no hat, no
ribbons or insignia of rank, and his collar open wide. A well-briefed U.S.
Army photographer was waiting and, as agreed in advance, took three official
photos of the general and the emperor. Hirohito stood stiffly at attention,
face frozen, arms rigid at his sides, while MacArthur towered over him, at
ease, legs apart, arms akimbo and hands jauntily on his hips. This was one
of MacArthur's favorite poses. He was a theatrical man who had staged
dramatic publicity photographs throughout the war, repeatedly wading ashore
at island after island while his favorite photographer took dozens of
exposures to get the effect just right.
As they were shown to their seats before the fire, Hirohito chose to sit
alone in the side chair, so the general ended up on the chesterfield with
the interpreter. This annoyed MacArthur and he badly wanted to smoke, so he
leaned forward to offer the emperor an American cigarette. Although Hirohito
did not smoke, he was so determined to be positive that he accepted anyway,
his hand trembling as the general lit it. He smoked the entire cigarette,
without inhaling, while MacArthur puffed at his corncob pipe, and this gave
both men a chance to gather their thoughts. A Japanese servant brought
coffee rather than the traditional pot of very hot green tea, but the
emperor did not touch it. There was speculation later that he was warned to
consume nothing for fear of poison, but it is more likely that he was simply
too tense to pick up a cup.
MacArthur, who was 65, opened the conversation by remarking that he had been
received by Hirohito's father in 1906, at the close of the recent
Russo-Japanese War. During the forty-minute conversation, the emperor's
interpreter made selective notes. His job was to see that whatever the
emperor said on the spur of the moment was put so skillfully in English that
no nuance could be misconstrued, and conformed with policy decisions made at
the palace before the meeting. One copy of his notes later went to the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and another into the emperor's personal files.
Although MacArthur and Hirohito had agreed that their talk would be kept
absolutely secret, years later in his memoirs Mac- Arthur quoted the emperor
as saying: "I bear sole responsibility for whatever happened, for whatever
incidents occurred in conjunction with Japan's prosecution of the war.
Furthermore, I bear direct and sole responsibility for every action taken in
Japan's name by every commander, every soldier, and every politician. As for
my own life, whatever judgment you choose to make, it does not matter to me.
I bear sole responsibility" MacArthur grandly concluded that the emperor's
willingness to assume responsibility for everything that had gone wrong made
him unquestionably "the first gentleman of Japan." In December 1975, a
Japanese magazine published what it said were the interpreters's notes. The
two versions did not agree. The inter- preter's notes made no mention of
Hirohito offering to take some responsibility for the war, and were deeply
disappointed when he did not.  It is unlikely that a statement of such
historic significance would be left out of the written record. Exactly what
Hirohito said to MacArthur remains a mystery, unless we believe the
general's memory. Given his confusion about Hirohito going to school in
America, that is risky. But, as we will see, this was not the only time
MacArthur (and others) put words in Hirohito's mouth.
Ten minutes after their meeting was supposed to end, MacArthur and the
emperor came out with happy looks on their faces. The general was introduced
to the emperor's aides and then escorted Hirohito to his car. On his way
back to the palace, the emperor seemed relieved and talked much more than
usual. He slept better as well. He was certain now that he could escape
arrest or prose-  cution for war crimes.
What was it that put smiles on their faces so soon after a war without
mercy, and the horrors of Hiroshima and Nagasaki?
Two people who eavesdropped on the meeting were the general's wife Jean and
Dr. Egeberg, who--with MacArthur's full knowledge-- hid behind the red
velvet drapes in the reception hall, but later claimed that they only
overheard an occasional phrase.
We can eavesdrop in a different way. To read the bare details recounted so
far is to see this great turning point with only one eye, in flat two
dimensions. We can now open the other eye, for today we know what else was
going on. It is a surprising and deeply disturbing story.
The general's chief concern that day, quite naturally, was to ensure his own
public success as America's proconsul in Japan, which he hoped would lead to
his being chosen by the Republican Party as its candidate for president in
the 1948 elections. Becoming president of the United States had obsessed
MacArthur since the early 1930s, and had shaped many of his actions.
Liberal Washington policy-makers, particularly New Deal Democrats, wanted to
alter the postwar power structure of Japan permanently to make it more
democratic. MacArthur was a reactionary conservative, not a liberal by any
measure, yet he had to appear to be carrying out Washington's orders. He and
his inner circle of advisers, including Herbert Hoover, concluded that his
success in occupied Japan would depend on manipulating Hirohito. The way he
went about this would have to be kept absolutely secret because of the
methods to be used and the trade-offs involved. He would have to frighten
the emperor with the treat of being indicted, prosecuted and hanged (or
shot), and then offer to protect him in exchange for his secret collusion.
Using carrot and stick, and outright extortion, he would induce Hirohito to
give them inside knowledge of Japan's financial cliques and other vital
power relationships, so that key people could be put under pressure, deals
could be made and Japan's post- war power structure could be rearranged to
suit MacArthur's conservative  political and financial backers, rather than
American liberals.
During those first weeks after the surrender, great effort already was being
made to distance the emperor from direct responsibility, for Pearl Harbor in
particular, shifting the blame entirely to General Tojo. This had been
decided in secret talks between conservative  American and Japanese envoys
in Switzerland, long before the war ended. To rescue Hirohito, everyone
would have to be persuaded that the emperor was "a captive of Tojo and the
militarists"  who were "exclusively responsible for the war."
In keeping with this strategy, two days before seeing MacArthur, Hirohito
said in written replies to questions from a New York Times correspondent
that Tojo was responsible for the government's failure to communicate
Japan's declaration of war to Washington prior to the Pearl Harbor attack.
This was untrue; the delay was a ruse they had all agreed upon in September,
long in advance of the attack.
At no time during the remaining forty-four years of his life did Hirohito
ever publicly accept personal responsibility for the war, whether for
starting it (which angered Americans) or for losing it (which angered
Japanese). Marquis Kido became so distressed by Hirohito's refusal to accept
responsibility that he privately advised the emperor to abdicate rather than
disgrace his ancestors. Hirohito grieved over the tragedy that had befallen
his country, but felt no responsibility whatever for the failure of his
military commanders, who had assured him of victory repeatedly only to let
him down. Although the ultimate decision to continue the war for two more
years remained with Hirohito, he saw it as their failure not his.
The rescue of Hirohito would have to be drawn out over several years. If he
was exonerated too quickly, he could slip off the hook. Whenever he became
obstinate, evasive or hesitant, MacArthur would frighten him with word of
new demands for his prosecution, from Congress, from the Allies or--mast
dreaded of all-- from the Kremlin. To be sure this extortion would have to
be carried out with great tact and subtlety. But MacArthur had long
experience of being vague and oblique.
Indeed, as they left the embassy in the Rolls, Hirohito told Marquis Kido
that MacArthur had said: "I believe Your Majesty knows about the people and
important men in the [Japanese] political world, so from now on, I would
like to have your advice on various matters."
In what follows, we will unfold new evidence of the massive fraud the
ensued, who was involved, and how major witnesses including General Tojo
himself were suborned by MacArthur's staff and forced to falsify their
testimony and perjure themselves before the inter- national war crimes
tribunal. At least one general was hanged for a crime at which he was not
present, forced to take the fall to protect Hirohito's uncle Prince Asaka,
the butcher of Nanking, who escaped punishment ao any kind. But it did not
stop there. Soon matters got completely out of hand.
Mistakenly, MacArthur and his inner circle thought it was enough to take the
emperor himself hostage. They got it wrong. Real power in Japan remained in
the shadows. He could squeeze the emperor like a lemon till his pips
squeaked, but the real power-brokers felt no pain. They watched from the
wings and from backstage, and figured out what MAcArthur was really after.
The secret exorcism of Hirohito involved a lot of horse trading, which was
skillfully used by Japanese negotiators. Once they had participated with
MacArthur and his aides in perjuring witnesses to rescue the emperor, they
could pressure MacArthur repeatedly for the rescue of others. This led first
to the exoneration of the whole imperial family, then to that of the entire
financial and industrial elite of Japan (a group that had been the Allies'
explicit target for purge and prosecution). All the big Japanese banks and
zaibatsu financial cliques that had bankrolled the war were originally to be
dissolved, but were let off. They were excused from paying war reparations
on the argument that Japan was "bankrupt." While Germany paid some 30
billion pounds in compensation and reparations over the years, Japan paid
only $2 billion  pounds. Even today, Germany continues this program of com-
pensation and reparations, but Japan dug in its heels and said it was all
settled in 1951. Instead of encouraging the democratization of Japan and the
growth of alternative political parties, MacArthur thwarted opposition
groups, clamped down on postwar labor unrest and jailed any and all
demonstrators. Next came freedom for all the indicted war criminals locked
up in Sugamo Prison, including underworld  figures who had participated in
the looting of billions of dollars in treasure from a dozen conquered
countries. Finally, there was exoneration for all the 220,000 people who
were initially blacklisted by America for their roles in the war. It may not
have been MacArthur's original intention to let all these people off, but
once the emperor's advisers realized what the general wanted, it was a
simple matter to take advantage, patiently, step by step. Extortion can work
both ways.
Most Japanese learned about the private meeting between the emperor and the
general only when MacArthur insisted on publication of the photo in every
major newspaper in Japan. This caused an uproar because it made the formally
attired emperor look absurdly subordinate to the rudely casual American.
Previously only carefully vetted photographers had been able to take
pictures of the emperor, using a telephoto lens from a distance, showing
only the upper part of his body  and never showing him in relation to
others. Many Japanese still believed that if they looked directly into the
emperor's face they would be blinded. The photograph of Hirohito with
MacArthur was a masterful political stroke, of a sort. But it backfired when
MacArthur's efforts to manipulate Hirohito were turned to Japan's advantage.
[CONTINUED AS TOKYO FAMILIES]





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