Korechika Anami was a general in the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II, and was War Minister at the time of the surrender of Japan.
Background
Korechika Anami was born in Taketa, Oita Prefecture, Japan in 1887. He grew up in Tokyo, Japan and in Tokushima Prefecture. Aspiring to be an officer from a young age, he looked up to General Count Maresuke Nogi. His father, Nao Anami, was an official in the Home Ministry.
Education
In September 1900, he graduated from a military junior academy in Hiroshima, Japan. He attended the Army Academy between November 1905 and December 1906. In November 1918, he graduated from the Army Staff College.
Career
Upon graduation, he was made a second lieutenant and was attached to the 1st Infantry Regiment. In Dec 1908, he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant. In Nov 1910, he was attached to a military academy. In Nov 1916, he was promoted to the rank of captain. In Apr 1919, he was attached to the Army General Staff Headquarters. In Feb 1922, he was promoted to the rank of major. In Aug 1923, he was named the chief of staff of the Sakhalin Expeditionary Army, which was the occupation army for the Russian (northern) half of Sakhalin island. In Aug 1925, he was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel. In Apr 1926, he was attached to the Army High Command. In Aug 1927, he was posted to France as a military attaché. In Dec 1927, he was attached to 45th Infantry Regiment; in Aug 1928, he was made the regiment's commanding officer. In Aug 1929, he was made an army advisor to Emperor Showa. In Aug 1930, he was promoted to the rank of colonel. In Aug 1933, he was made the commanding officer of the 2nd Guards Infantry Regiment. In Aug 1934, he was made the Commandant of the Tokyo Military Preparatory School in Tokyo, Japan. In Mar 1935, he was promoted to the rank of major general. In Aug 1936, he was made the head of the Military Affairs Bureau of the Army Ministry. In Mar 1937, he was made the head of the Personnel Bureau of the same ministry.
After the war began in Asia, Korechika Anami was promoted to the rank of lieutenant general in Mar 1938. He rose to divisional command later that year when he was given the 109th Division; in that role, he saw combat in China. Returning to Japan in the fall of 1939, he was made the deputy commanding officer of the Japanese Army in Oct 1939. In Apr 1941, he was made the commanding officer of the 11th Army, which was fighting in central China. In this role, he participated in the Sep 1941 Second Battle of Changsha, which resulted in the Japanese Army failing to capture the Chinese city in Hunan Province. In Jul 1942, he was made the commanding officer of the 2nd Area Army, which was stationed in northeastern China in the Japanese-sponsored puppet state of Manchukuo. In May 1943, he was promoted to the rank of general. In Nov 1943, his 2nd Area Army was moved to the occupied Dutch East Indies. In Dec 1944, he was made the Inspector General of Army Aviation. In Apr 1945, he was made the Army Minister in Prime Minister Kantaro Suzuki's cabinet. As a cabinet minister, he counseled the prime minister against surrendering, proposing to organize defenses designed to inflict maximum damage to invaders. This continued even after the first atomic bombing against the city of Hiroshima, Japan; he argued that it was unlikely for the United States to have more than one operational atomic bomb. His fierce opposition to surrender finally ceased when Emperor Showa announced his intention to end the war. He ordered his subordinates to obey the Emperor, and he refused to join the coup d'état that took place in the final hours of the war. In the morning of 15 Aug 1945, after signing a surrender document of the prime minister's cabinet, he committed seppuku ritual suicide.
Anami was buried at the municipal Tama Cemetery in Fuchu in western Tokyo, Japan. His sword and blood-stained dress uniform were given to the Yushukan Museum in Tokyo.
Membership
Supreme War Council
,
Versailles
Connections
Anami's son Anami Koreshige served as Japan's ambassador to China from 2001 to 2006.