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Shigeru Honjō

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Shigeru Honjō
NameShigeru Honjō
CaptionGeneral Honjō in 1933
Birth date10 May 1876
Birth placeHyōgo Prefecture, Empire of Japan
Death date30 November 1945 (aged 69)
Death placeTokyo, Occupied Japan
AllegianceEmpire of Japan
BranchImperial Japanese Army
Serviceyears1897–1936
RankGeneral
CommandsKwantung Army, 4th Division
BattlesRusso-Japanese War, Siberian Intervention, Mukden Incident, Second Sino-Japanese War
AwardsOrder of the Golden Kite, Order of the Rising Sun

Shigeru Honjō was a senior officer in the Imperial Japanese Army who rose to the rank of General and served as the commanding officer of the Kwantung Army during a pivotal period of Japanese expansionism. He is most infamously associated with the Mukden Incident of 1931, a staged event that provided the pretext for the Japanese invasion of Manchuria. His later career included command of the Japanese First Army during the early stages of the Second Sino-Japanese War before his eventual retirement and post-war suicide.

Early life and military career

Born in Hyōgo Prefecture, he graduated from the Imperial Japanese Army Academy in 1897 and later from the Army War College. Honjō saw early combat experience as a junior officer during the Russo-Japanese War, serving with distinction in major engagements like the Battle of Mukden. His career progressed through various staff and command positions, including a role in the Siberian Intervention following the Russian Revolution. He was appointed commander of the 4th Division in 1929 and, after a brief posting to the Supreme War Council, was assigned as the commanding general of the Kwantung Army in 1931, a position that placed him at the center of escalating tensions in Northeast China.

Role in the Mukden Incident

As commander of the Kwantung Army, he was the senior officer present during the critical events of September 1931, though his precise role remains a subject of historical debate. On the night of 18 September, officers of the Kwantung Army, including Seishirō Itagaki and Kanji Ishiwara, orchestrated the Mukden Incident by sabotaging a section of the South Manchuria Railway near Liutiaohu. Honjō, upon receiving reports, authorized the full-scale retaliation and offensive operations that followed, rapidly expanding beyond Mukden to occupy key cities like Changchun and Jilin despite receiving restraining cables from the Imperial General Headquarters in Tokyo. This unauthorized aggression led directly to the complete Japanese invasion of Manchuria and the subsequent establishment of the puppet state of Manchukuo.

Command in the Second Sino-Japanese War

After his tenure with the Kwantung Army, he served as a military councillor before being recalled to active command following the outbreak of full-scale war with China in 1937. He was appointed the first commanding general of the Japanese First Army, which was heavily engaged in the North China Theater of the Second Sino-Japanese War. His forces were involved in the Battle of Beiping–Tianjin and subsequent campaigns in Shanxi province, including actions around Taiyuan. However, he was relieved of his field command in late 1937 and transferred back to the Supreme War Council, effectively ending his active military career. He was placed on the reserve list in 1939 and fully retired in 1942.

Post-war life and legacy

Following the surrender of Japan and the beginning of the Occupation of Japan, he was identified as a potential suspect for war crimes prosecution by the International Military Tribunal for the Far East. Before he could be arrested and formally charged, he committed suicide at his home in Tokyo on 30 November 1945. His death removed a key witness to the decision-making process behind the Mukden Incident. Historians regard him as a central, if sometimes passive, figure in the Kwantung Army's insubordination, which significantly undermined civilian control in Japan and set the nation on a path toward total war in Asia.

Category:Imperial Japanese Army generals Category:Japanese military personnel of the Second Sino-Japanese War Category:Japanese suicides