(Redirected from Kwangtung Army)The 'Kwantung Army', also known as the 'Guandong Army' or 'KantÅ Army' ( ''KantÅgun''; ), was a unit of the
Imperial Japanese Army (IJA). It took its name from the
Kwantung Peninsula[1] where it was based.
Headquartered in
Hsinking (modern
Changchun), it became the largest and most prestigious command in the IJA. Many of its
personnel, such as
Chief of Staff Hideki Tojo, were promoted to high positions in both the
military and
civil government. Prince
Tsuneyoshi Takeda worked as liaison officer between the Imperial house and the Kwantung Army.
History
The unit was originally established in
1906 as the 'Kwantung Garrison' to defend the
Japanese-controlled
Kwantung Leased Territory and the areas adjacent to the
South Manchurian Railway. Composed of an
infantry division and a heavy siege
artillery battalion, it was stationed within the Kwantung Leased Territory. Supplementing this force were six independent
garrison battalions as railway guards deployed along the railway zone, making a total troop strength of 10,000 men. Since the reorganization of 1919, this
military unit was called the Kwantung Army.
Although the Kwantung Army was nominally subordinate to the Japanese High Command, its leadership demonstrated significant self-determination, as conspirators in the Army plotted the assassination of
Zhang Zuolin in 1928 and the
Mukden Incident and the subsequent
invasion of Manchuria (1931) leading to the foundation of
Manchukuo in 1932. The Army was heavily augmented, by up to 700,000 troops in 1941, to defend the whole territory of
Manchuria and
Inner Mongolia.
Generals and young
officers virtually controlled the
puppet government of Manchukuo Emperor
Pu Yi.
The Army fought in the opening phase of the
Second Sino-Japanese War in
Operation Nekka and
Operation Chahar and against the
Soviet Union's
Red Army at the
Nomonhan in 1939, sustaining heavy casualties. After the Nomonhan incident, the Army became under direct control of the
Imperial General Headquarters.
Its performance against the Red Army anticipated some of the defects of the IJA as a whole, which became apparent during
World War Two in the Pacific. Although a source of constant unrest during the 1930s, the Army remained remarkably obedient during the 1940s, proof that the Japanese High Command could keep control—as long as it was willing to retain it.
After the outbreak of the
Pacific War, many troops from the Kwantung Army were transferred from Manchuria to the Pacific islands. At the time of
Operation August Storm, when the Soviet Red Army invaded Japanese-occupied Manchuria in August 1945, the Army's strength was nearly 600,000. The Army by that time was comprised of one armored division, 25 infantry divisions, six independent brigades, and up to 25 security battalions. However, much of its heavy weapons and ammunition reserves and best personnel had been transferred to the Pacific, which left the Kwantung Army as a counterinsurgency and border security force.
Soviets and Japanese were fighting for control over Manchuria, Northern China
[2]. To cope with the Soviet invasion, the Kwantung Army planned to form a defense line near
Hsinking, which had become the capital of Manchukuo, but on August 18, 1945, 1st Far East Front of Red Army took Kharbin and arrested the Chiefs of Staff declaring ultimatum to surrender the rest of Kwantung Army
[3]. At that time the Red Army discovered secret labs with biological weapons of mass destruction at
Unit 100 and
Unit 731 where critical amount of plaque bacteria was prepared by Japanese and packed in small containers for delivery, in quantities enough to kill all humans on the planet
[4]. Japanese Generals H. Hata and Yamada sent their messages to Tokyo.
Emperor Hirohito ordered them to surrender. At this point, historians relate, little remained of the once-proud Kwantung Army. Its remnants either lay dead on the battlefield or were on their way to Soviet
Prisoner-of-war camps. Hundreds of thousands of
Japanese prisoners of war were forced to work in Soviet
labor camps in
Siberia,
Russian Far East and
Mongolia. They were not freed until the 1950s and many of them were forced to stay in Siberia. A notable mutiny of the
Manchukuo Defence Force also occurred at this time.
The Kwantung Army was also linked to some of the most infamous
Japanese war crimes, including the operation of several
biological warfare experimentation program facilities directed by
Shiro Ishii such as
Unit 100 and
Unit 731.
In 1948, the
Tokyo tribunal sentenced to death some military who were part of this army as officers. Amongst them were generals
Seishiro Itagaki,
Iwane Matsui,
Kenji Doihara,
Hideki Tojo and
Akira Muto. They were hung at Sugamo prison; generals
Shunroku Hata, Hasimoto and ten others were sentenced to life in prison for their crimes against humanity
[5].
Notes
1. The name ''Kwantung'' means "east of Shanhaiguan".
2. Russian military document (in Russian language): [1]
3. A Russian military publication on Kwantung Army: [2]
4. A Russian military publication on Kwantung Army: [3]
5. A Russian military publication on Kwantung Army: [4]
See also
★
Japanese war crimes
★
Military history of Japan
★
Military history of China
★
World War II
★
Organization of the Kwantung Army of Japan
★
Japanese nationalism
★
Sadao Araki