(Redirected from Kijuro Shidehara)
'Baron ' (
11 August 1872 -
10 March 1951) was a prominent pre-World War II
Japanese
diplomat and the 44th
Prime Minister of Japan from
9 October 1945 to
22 May 1946. He was a leading proponent of
pacifism in Japan before and after
World War II. His wife, Masako, was the fourth daughter of
Iwasaki Yataro, founder of the
Mitsubishi ''
zaibatsu.''
Early life and early career
Shidehara was born in
Kadoma,
Osaka. His father was the first president of
Taipei Imperial University. Shidehara attended
Tokyo Imperial University, and graduated from the Faculty of Law. After graduation, he found a position within the
Foreign Ministry and was sent to a council to Chemulpo in
Korea in 1896.
He subsequently served in the Japanese embassy in
London,
Antwerp and
Washington D.C. and as ambassador to the
Netherlands, returning to Japan in 1915.
In 1915, Shidehara was appointed Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs and continued in this position during five consecutive administrations. In 1919, he was named ambassador to the
United States and was Japan's leading negotiator during the
Washington Naval Conference. His negotiations led to the return of
Shandong Province to
China. However, while he was ambassador, the United States enacted discriminatory immigration laws against Japanese, which created much ill will in Japan.
Shidehara was elevated to the title of ''danshaku'' (
baron) under the ''
kazoku'' peerage system in 1920, and appointed to a seat in the
House of Peers in 1925.
First term as Foreign Minister
In 1924, Shidehara became
Minister of Foreign Affairs in the cabinet of
Prime Minister Kato Takaaki and continued in this post under Prime Ministers
Wakatsuki Reijiro and
Hamaguchi Osachi. Despite growing
Japanese militarism, Shidehara attempted to maintain a non-interventionist policy toward China, and good relations with
Great Britain and the
United States, which he admired. In his initial speech to the
Diet of Japan, he pledged to uphold the principles of the
League of Nations.
The term "Shidehara diplomacy" came to describe Japan's liberal foreign policy during the 1920s. In October 1925, he surprised other delegates to the Beijing Customs Conference in pushing for agreement to China’s demands for tariff autonomy. In March 1927, during the
Nanjing Incident, he refused to agree to an ultimatum prepared by other foreign powers threatening retaliation for the actions of
Chiang Kai-shek's
Guomintang troops for their attacks on foreign consulates and settlements.
Disgruntlement by the military over Shidehara's China policies was one of the factors that led to the collapse of the administration of Prime Minister Wakatsuki in April 1927. During his diplomatic career, Shidehara was known for his excellent command of the
English language. At one press conference, an American reporter was confused regarding the pronunciation of Shidehara's name: the foreign minister replied, "I'm Hi(he)-dehara, and my wife is Shi(she)-dehara."
Second term as Foreign Minister
Shidehara returned as Foreign Minister in 1931, and immediately resumed the non-interventionist policy in China, attempting to restore good relations with
Chiang Kai-shek's
Guomintang government now based in
Nanjing.
This policy was assailed by military interests who believed it was weakening the country, especially after the conclusion of the
London Naval Conference in 1930, which precipitated a major political crisis.
When Prime Minister
Hamaguchi Osachi was seriously wounded in an assassination attempted, Shidehara served as interim prime minister until March 1931. In September 1931, the
Kwangtung Army invaded and occupied
Manchuria in the
Manchurian Incident without prior authorization from the central government. This effectively ended the non-interventionist policy towards China, and Shidehara’s career as foreign minister.
In October 1931, Shidehara was featured on the cover of ''
TIME'' with the caption "Japan's Man of Peace and War."
[1]
Shidehara remained in government as a member of the
House of Peers from 1931-1945. He maintained a low profile through the end of
World War II.
Prime Minister
At the time of Japan's surrender in 1945, Shidehara was in semi-retirement. However, largely because of his pro-American reputation, he was appointed to serve as Japan’s second post-war prime minister, from
9 October 1945 to
22 May 1946. Along with the post of Prime Minister, Shidehara became president of the
Progressive Party (''Shinpo-tō'').
Shidehara's cabinet drafted a new constitution for Japan in line with General
Douglas MacArthur's policy directives, but the draft was vetoed by the
occupation authorities. According to MacArthur and others, it was Shidehara who originally proposed the inclusion of
Article 9 of the Constitution of Japan, a provision which limits Japan's
state sovereignty in that it forbids Japan from waging war. Shidehara, in his memoirs ''Gaikō gojunen'' ("Fifty-years Diplomacy", 1951) also admitted to his authorship, and described how the idea came to him on a train ride to Tokyo. Already when he was ambassador in Washington, he had become acquainted with the idea of 'outlawing war' in international and constitutional law. One of his famous sayings was: “Let us create a world without war (sensou naki sekai) together with the world-humanity (sekai jinrui).”
However, his supposed conservative economic policies and family ties to the Mitsubishi interests made him unpopular with the leftist movement.
The Shidehara cabinet resigned following Japan's first postwar election, when the
Liberal Party of Japan captured most of the votes.
Shigeru Yoshida became prime minister in Shidehara's wake.
Shidehara joined the Liberal Party a year later, after Prime Minister
Katayama Tetsu formed a
socialist government. As one of Katayama's harshest critics, Shidehara was elected president of the
House of Representatives. He died in this post in 1951.
References
★ Bix, Herbert B. ''Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan''. Harper Perennial (2001). ISBN 0060931302
★ Brendon, Piers. ''The Dark Valley: A Panorama of the 1930s''. Vintage; Reprint edition (2002). ISBN 0375708081
★ Dower, John W. ''Embracing Defeat: Japan in the Wake of World War'' II. W. W. Norton & Company (2000). ISBN 0393320278.
★ Schlichtmann, Klaus. 'A Statesman for The Twenty-First Century? The Life and Diplomacy of Shidehara Kijûrô (1872-1951)', Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan, fourth series, vol. 10 (1995), pp. 33-67
★ Shiota, Ushio. ''Saigo no gohoko: Saisho Shidehara Kijuro''. Bungei Shunju (1992). ISBN 4163463801
★ Takemoto, Toru. ''Failure of Liberalism in Japan: Shidehara Kijuro's Encounter With Anti-Liberals''. Rowman & Littlefield (1979). ISBN 0819106984