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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group

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To: epicure who wrote (222660)3/6/2007 10:20:10 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (1) of 281500
 
It's EZ...

en.wikipedia.org

ibiblio.org

And, remember, even after 2 bombs, there was part of the military which didn't want to surrender; to the point of trying a coup against the emperor...

The only question remaining now was if Japan's military leaders would allow the emperor to surrender. Loyalty to the emperor was an absolute in the Japanese military, but so was the refusal to surrender, and now that the two had come into conflict, open rebellion was a possible result. The emperor recorded a message in which he personally accepted the Allied surrender terms, to be broadcast over Japanese radio the following day. This way everyone in Japan would know that surrender was the emperor's personal will. Some within the Japanese military actually attempted to steal this recording before it could be broadcast, while others attempted a more general military coup in order to seize power and continue the war. Other elements of the Japanese military remained loyal to the emperor. The Minister of War, General Anami Korechika, personally supported continuing the war, but he also could not bring himself to openly rebel against his emperor. The strength of his dilemma was such that he opted for suicide as the only honorable way out. In the end, his refusal to assist the coup plotters was instrumental in their defeat by elements within the military that remained loyal to the emperor.

mbe.doe.gov
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