'Sadao Araki' (Japanese: è’æœ¨ 貞夫 ''Araki Sadao'',
May 26,
1877–
November 2,
1966) was a Japanese soldier, member of nobility (
Baron), politician, and political philosopher born in
Tokyo. He was probably the most important of the
Japanese Empire's nationalist
right-wing thinkers; possibly as equal to
German Nazi ideologist
Alfred Rosenberg.
Araki was the principal proponent of
totalitarianism,
militarism,
expansionism, and
loyalty to the
emperor. He developed the right-wing (and in practical terms
fascist) ideas of the
Kodoha nationalist group.
He was on active military service during 1918-19 during the Japanese intervention in
Siberia against the
Soviet Communists). He was also
War Minister for two periods, when he represented the real power in government, and the
Education Minister, where he promoted militaristic education. His works related to the
Japanese Army and government, and he was an expert on
Russian/
Soviet topics.
Military career
Araki graduated from the
Imperial Japanese Army Academy in November 1897; he attained the rank of 2nd Lt. in June of the following year.
Promoted to a 1st Lt in November of 1900, Araki served as Company Commander of the 1st Infantry Regiment,
Imperial Guard Division during the
Russo-Japanese War. He was promoted to Captain in June of 1904. He was posted to the
Army General Staff in April of 1908, and served as a Language Officer stationed in
Russia from November 1909 to May 1913, when he was made
Military Attaché to the same.
Araki was made a Adjutant attached to the
War Ministry in March 1914, and oversaw the
Kwantung Army as its
Governor-General, after receiving a promotion to
Major in July, 1918. He served as a Staff Officer at Expeditionary Army Headquarters in
Vladivostok beginning that November, and the following July, he was made Regimental Commander of the 23d Infantry. During this period in
Siberia, Araki carried out secret missions in the
Russian Far East and
Lake Baikal areas.
Continuing his rise up the career ladder, now-Major General Araki was made commander of the 8th Infantry Brigade in March 1923. He served as Provost Marshal General from January 1924 until May 1925; this is when he rejoined the
Army General Staff as Bureau Chief. Araki was promoted to Lt. General in July of 1927 and was then made Commandant of the
Army War College in August of the next year. He served as the 6th Division Commander from 1929-1931, when he was appointed
Inspector General of Military Training.
His rise to power was complete with the receipt of his portfolio as
Minister of War in December, 1931 as a member of the Inukai Cabinet, and from 1932, the Saito Cabinet.
He was promoted to the rank of full General in October, 1933.
and receiving the noblity title of
Baron in 1935.
Political and thinking career
Political and ideological works
As a colonel, Araki led the ''
Kodaha'' faction (Imperial Benevolent Rule or Action Group), with
Jinzaburo Mazaki,
Heisuke Yanagawa and
Hideyoshi Obata. Their opposition was the ''
Toseiha'' (Control Group) led by General
Kazushige Ugaki. The ''Kodaha'' represented the
radical and
ultranationalist elements within the army; the ''Toseiha'' attempted to represent the more conservative
moderates. These groups had a common intellectual origin in the
Double Leaf Society, a 1920s military thinking group, supporting ''
samurai'' ideals. The groups were later to merge, and to incorporate a mixture of
right-wing and
socialist ideas, particularly those of
Kita Ikki and the fascist thinking of
Nakano Seigo.
Araki then became a leading member of the
Imperial Way Faction (''Kodoha'') supporting
Showa nationalism. He was put on the reserve list as a result of the
February 26 Incident. He was the
Minister of Education from
1938 to
1939. As a military theorist for the
Imperial Japanese Army, he worked on integrating
militaristic ideals into the national education system. Araki took his lead from the
German education system and ''
Bushido'' code. He sought to adapt "
Seishin Kyoiku" (spiritual training) to the support of military training. Araki was a solid supporter of the Japanese Army's
Strike North Group, and its intention to fight against
Communism in
Soviet Far East and
Siberia, during the 1929-39 period; he was also a fervent opponent of communism and
Bolshevism in Japan itself.
Araki and the Mukden Incident
General Araki had become commandant of the
Army War College in 1928, and was an important proponent of
Kwantung Army intervention, in the
Mukden Incident. In Manchuria, the three main conspirators of the Kwantung Army had essentially seized control, putting one of their own,
Shigeru Honjo, in as commander of the Kwantung Army. Honjo made sure there was no interference with the plotters.
From that position, he had been working with the younger officers to further the aims of the
ultranationalists. The radical army cliques begin unauthorized studies of
China and the preparation of war scenarios. They begin their new round of plots which included the aims of taking the government away from the civilians to remove imperial advisors and isolate the Emperor (the so-called
ShÅwa Reformation), starting agitation amongst the radical Japanese civilians in
Manchuria and uniting the many
secret societies. By 1929 the conspiracy was fully formed, consisting mainly of colonels and lieutenant-colonels, and preparations to finally seize Manchuria began. The officers knew they would need another "incident" to justify their actions. Eventually 24 officers were pulled together to create just such an incident. By September 20th, the radicals had control of the army and the Prime Minister was weakening. The Kwantung Army had 12,000 men on the attack but needed the reinforcements from
Korea. The reinforcements would have been held up by government confusion and lack of approval, but the
Chosen Army commander
Senjuro Hayashi ordered the reinforcements moved from Korea without permission and the Kwantung Army continued its attacks.
In October, the Kwantung Army intensified its actions and was beyond the control of Tokyo. The
Cherry Blossom Society decided to act with yet another coup attempt in
Tokyo to completely eliminate the civilian government. Overconfidence after the success of the Kwantung Army and let the plan slip out early. Quietly, the main conspirators, including
Kingoro Hashimoto and General Araki, were arrested. The harshest sentence was 20 days confinement, with most given 10 days, to be served at local geisha houses, and two resignations. Shortly afterwards, another coup attempt was defused, causing more chaos for the Japanese government. The Kwantung Army ignored warnings from the
League of Nations to stop its aggression. An investigation was planned but by the time it prepared to leave Manchuria had already fallen. Prime Minister
Reiijiro Wakatsuki resigned in December and when the new cabinet was formed, General Araki was
War Minister and the real power in
Japan. The
Kwantung Army forced the last member of the
ManchuDynasty,
Henry Puyi, to head the
Japanese colony of Manchuria. In February, 1932, Manchuria changed its name to
Manchukuo and became the
kingdom of the Kwantung Army, why would continue its quest to swallow up
Manchuria,
Mongolia and
Northern China through the next several years.
Araki, Totalitarianism, Militarism and Expansionism
Prince Saionji, one of the Emperor's closest and strongest advisors, attempted to stop the military take-over of the government. In a compromise, a naval officer was chosen to become
Prime Minister, Admiral
Makoto Saito. Araki remained as
War Minister and immediately began making demands on the new government. Later that month, the Japanese unveiled its new foreign policy, which they dubbed the Japanese
Monroe Doctrine (
Hakko Ichiu and
Amau doctrines) that was a blueprint for
Japanese expansionism in
Asia.
From September 1932 onwards, the Japanese were becoming more locked into the course that would lead them into the
Pacific War and Araki was leading the way.
Totalitarianism,
militarism and
expansionism were to become the rule and few voices would be able even to speak out in opposition. In a September 23rd news conference Araki first mentioned the philosophy of ''
Kodoha'' (The Imperial Way). The concept of Kodo linked the
Emperor, the people, land and morality as one and indivisible. This led to the creation of a "new"
Shinto and increased Emperor worship, Araki also was the mastermind of the ''
Seishin Kyoiku'' (spiritual training) in the army.
The state was being transformed into a creation that served the Army and the Emperor, while the Army transformed into a fanatical force ready to die for their leaders and Emperor. Araki proposed the integration of the ''
samurai'' code in the national education system, himself believing in militaristic education. To support this, a massive armaments campaign was undertaken and the military, especially officers and NCOs, were expanded. They believed that the faith of the Japanese military was enough to defeat any enemy, no matter their size and strength. Samurai swords (
katana) came back into fashion as the
martial embodiment of these beliefs. General Araki founded the ''
Kokuhonsha'' (Society for the Foundation of the State), a secret society containing some of the most powerful generals, admirals and civilians dedicated to the Imperial Way. A number of officers were, however, revitalizing the ''
Toseiha'' (Control Faction) of the military to oppose them, looking to
Hitler's
Germany for the kind of controlled state they sought. The ''Toseiha'' scored a victory in January 1934 when Araki was forced to step down due to the excesses of the Kwantung Army and his replacement was one of their own, General
Senjuro Hayashi. The struggle between the two groups, ''Toseiha'' and ''Kodaha'', would continue quietly throughout the government and the war in
North China would continue apace until February of 1936.
Other political actions
The founder of
Unit 731, General
Ishii Shiro, had Araki Sadao when
Minister of the Army as patron. Araki was
Military Councillor, January 1934; baron, 1935; retired, March 1936 (after the
2-26 Incident);
Education Minister in the
Konoye Cabinet of 1937-. Until August 1945 he remained involved in the creation of the
Japanese Doctrines in Showa Period.
Araki, with Shinto theologians and philosophers, organized doctrine to conform with "
State Shinto" thinking structure, the
Showa period expression of the
Meiji period's "Emperor Worship".
Summary of influence
★ He formed a syncretic nationalist
right-socialist basic political doctrine. His ideas was served to form the
Militarism-Socialism national doctrine, of
Japanese Empire from the early
Showa period to August 1945.
★ Proposer of the ''
Kodoha'' (Imperial Way) ideology.
★ He was possibly considered the principal Army ideologist and outstanding fascist or physical-force thinker (see
Japanese fascism) of the
Japanese Empire, during the
Showa period.
★ He was an important supporter of fervent loyalty to the Emperor and the formation of new Shinto national religious beliefs.
★ He was an ardent advocate of militaristic education.
★ He possibly promoted the creation of the official academic text ''
Kokutai no Hongi'' (Japan's Fundamentals of National Policy).
★ He supported some measures and laws on
eugenics.
★ He introduced ''
Seishin Kyoiku'' (Spiritual Training), to support military training.
★ A founder and leader of the ''
Kodaha'' (Action Group), the radical inner Army faction, then founder and important member in the ''
Kodoha'' nationalist party.
★ Involvement in the "moral national bible" "
Shinmin no Michi" ("The Path of Subjects") an effective
catechism on nation, religion, cultural, social and ideological topics. All citizens needed to have it.
★ Founder and prominent active member of the ''
Kokuhonsha''.
★ Theoretician of the ''
Sakura Kai'' (Cherry Blossom Society).
★ Active conspirator and theorist of the '
Showa Reformation', and linked ''
coups d'état''.
★ He was a leading Japanese expert on
Russia and the
Soviet Union, fanatically opposed to communism, and supporter of Japanese military action in
Siberia and the
Soviet Far East.
★ He possibly contributed to the ''
Yamato Damashii'' (Yamato Spirit) political doctrine.
★ As an Army thinker, he proposed and supported totalitarianism and militarism at home, along with
Japanese expansionism abroad. He was an important supporter of the ''
Hakko Ichiu'' (eight squares of the World) and
Amau Doctrines.
★ He was not the immediate creator of, but was a solid supporter of, the ''
Shintaisen'' (New National Structure) and ''
Saisei itchi'' (Religion and Government Unity) political doctrines.
★ He was a prominent supporter of the
Kwantung Army and its actions, a conspirator in the
Mukden incident, and an Army supporter during the
China incident.
★ He partially inspired ''
Kikosaku'', the
Kempeitai security doctrine.
After 1945
Araki was tried as a
Class A war criminal and sentenced to life imprisonment but was released in
1955 for health reasons. He died 11 years later.