Ever since his execution in 1948, some historians of World War II have wondered how the remains of wartime Japanese Prime Minister and convicted Class A war criminal Hideki Tojo were disposed of.
the Roosevelt administration realized that it could not let the Japanese culture of death – the creation of then-Japanese prime minister Hideki Tojo – prevail. Two Marines from the 2nd ...
Japan's economic security minister Sanae Takaichi on Tuesday visited the war-linked Yasukuni shrine, seen by some of Tokyo's ...
The Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo is a source of friction between Japan and its neighbours. Beijing and Seoul see it as a symbol ...
Each morning at sunrise Japan’s most importantsitting-down soldier, Premier General Hideki Tojo, rides Tokyo’sstreets for half an hour. Policeman Ono was overcome with trepidationone morning ...
The South Korean government on Tuesday expressed regret over the visit of a Japanese minister and more than 90 lawmakers to ...
Bass writes in “Judgment at Tokyo: World War II on Trial and the Making of Modern ... wartime prime minister and minister of ...
A young ensign—“real eager to get off that ship and get into action,” in the recollection of an enlisted Navy man who ...
Prime Minister Fumio Kishida made a ritual spring offering to Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo, viewed by Chinese and Koreans as a ...
Masahiko Tsugawa (Gen. Hideki Tojo)Scott Wilson (Prosecutor Joseph B. Keenan)Ronny Cox (Chief Justice Sir William Webb)Gitan Ôtsuru (Yasuo Tachibana)Naho Toda (Akiko Shintani)Suresh Oberoi ...
In 1958, John Clagett wrote a novel titled The Slot about life aboard a PT boat during World War II. He was by then an ... Benito Mussolini, Hideki Tojo, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Winston Churchill ...