Emperor Hirohito (Showa) and Empress Nagako


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I'm not sure what this is supposed to mean, either. Roosevelt certainly assumed the US would be in a war far more than two months before Pearl Harbor, and prepared to some extent on that assumption. It doesn't mean he wished for it.
 
The Words of Emperor Showa: Records of Imperial Audiences - NHK Documentary - TV | NHK WORLD-JAPAN Live & Programs

September 3, 2022
8:10 - 9:00 / 15:10 - 16:00 / 22:10 - 23:00
September 4, 2022
3:10 - 4:00
A series of records kept by a top aide to Emperor Showa (Hirohito) in the postwar years have come to light. "Records of Imperial Audiences" by Michiji Tajima, the first commoner to lead the Imperial Household Agency, captures dialogues between the Emperor and himself spanning almost 5 years. [...]
 
Letters between Emperor Showa and Pope Pius XII shed light on Japan-Vatican ties | NHK WORLD-JAPAN News
[...]

Nihon University Professor Matsumoto Saho found the letters among documents declassified in 2020 in the Vatican Apostolic Archive. They consist of two letters from the pope and two replies from the emperor in 1952.

In a letter sent in October, the pope congratulates Japan for regaining its sovereignty and for the coming of age of the then-crown prince, who is now Emperor Emeritus Akihito. The San Francisco Peace Treaty took effect in April of that year, bringing an end to the postwar occupation of Japan.

Emperor Showa wrote in reply that the Imperial Family and the people of Japan would like to express their deep gratitude to the pope for his congratulatory message.

The Emperor is said have sought to establish ties with the Holy See two months before the attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941 that marked the start of the Pacific War.

[...]
 
The Imperial Household Agency learned records of Empress Kojun (1903-2000) will be completed in March 2025. The project began in April 2008 as a 12 year plan, collecting diaries of close aides, official documents from IHA and local governments related to visits domestic & foreign, documents from former Kuni-no-miya family, newspapers and magazines, etc.

Empress Kojun's chronicles or Veritable Records (Jitsuroku 実録) took longer due to delays in the compilation of the Emperor Showa Chronicles which began in 1990 (completed in 2014 with 2 extensions) and work to publish his chronicles for the public. The agency has earmarked about 5.62 million yen for editing costs in FY2024 general account budget request. Empress Kojun's Chronicles will be structured like Emperor Showa’s, a chronological list of events and is expected to be half the size of Emperor Showa's 61 volumes (~12,000 pages)

After the IHA delivers the book to the Emperor, it will make it an administrative document subject to information disclosure and will be able to view and copy it. Publication for the general public has not yet been decided, but the agency is considering making it available on its website.

Source: Mainichi
 
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Yamato’s final mission blamed on mix-up with emperor’s intent | The Asahi Shimbun
The behemoth battleship Yamato was dispatched on its suicidal mission to Okinawa in 1945 because of a naval officer's misunderstanding of a question posed by the emperor, according to a newly disclosed document.

The Yamato was sunk by U.S. carrier-borne aircraft on April 7, 1945, as it sailed toward Okinawa where its commanders were ordered to beach the vessel and use its mighty arsenal as a gun battery.

More than 4,000 sailors, equivalent to the total fatalities linked to kamikaze suicide air attacks, were killed in the desperate maritime operation toward the end of World War II.

[...]

The latest finding reinforces the possibility that the Yamato’s one-way mission to Okinawa was abruptly hatched on April 4, 1945, as Emperor Hirohito, posthumously known as Emperor Showa, “asked” a naval executive officer about the status of available surface vessels.

The operation was finalized on the next day, April 5, 1945. [...]

“Such a large-scale mission was developed too hastily, indicating how grave the impact of the emperor’s comment on the navy was,” said Kazushige Todaka, director of the Yamato Museum in Kure, Hiroshima Prefecture, who studies historical facts about the Imperial Japanese Navy.

He continued, “Excessively concerned with doing what they thought the emperor wanted and upholding the navy’s honor, officers seemingly rushed to reach the decision. This could also explain the shoddy implementation of the plan.”

[...]
 
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