Kenkichi Yoshizawa
Kenkichi Yoshizawa | |
---|---|
芳沢 謙吉 | |
Foreign Minister of Japan | |
In office 14 January 1932 – 26 May 1932 | |
Monarch | Emperor Shōwa |
Preceded by | Inukai Tsuyoshi |
Succeeded by | Saitō Makoto |
Personal details | |
Born |
Jōetsu, Niigata Prefecture, Japan | 24 January 1874
Died |
5 January 1965 90) Tokyo, Japan | (aged
Political party | Rikken Seiyūkai |
Alma mater | Tokyo Imperial University |
Kenkichi Yoshizawa (芳沢 謙吉 Yoshizawa Kenkichi, 24 January 1874 – 5 January 1965) was a Japanese diplomat in the Empire of Japan, serving as 46th Foreign Minister of Japan in 1932. He was the maternal grandfather of Sadako Ogata, the former United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees from 1991-2001.
Biography
Yoshizawa was a native of what is now part of Joetsu city, Niigata Prefecture. He was a graduate of the English literature department of the Tokyo Imperial University and entered the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1899. He was assigned to the Japanese consulate in Amoy, China in 1902, and later to the consulate in Shanghai.
In 1905, Yoshizawa married the eldest daughter of politician (and future Prime Minister) Tsuyoshi Inukai, and moved to London. He continued to live in England for the next several years, eventually becoming First Secretary to the Japanese embassy. He was given the post of Consul-General in Hankou, China in 1912.
Diplomatic career
Yoshizawa served as Minister to China from 1923-1929, and was stationed at the Japanese consulates at Beijing and Tianjin. He met with Soviet Foreign Minister Lev Karakhan in Beijing in 1925 for talks which led to the formal establishment of diplomatic relations between Japan and the Soviet Union per the Soviet–Japanese Basic Convention.[1]
Yoshizawa later served as Japanese ambassador to France and official representative to the League of Nations.[2]
He was appointed to the cabinet of Prime Minister Inukai Tsuyoshi as Foreign Minister from January 14, 1932 to May 26, 1932. On receiving word of his appointment, Yoshizawa traveled from Europe back to Japan via the Trans-Siberian Railway and Manchuria to see conditions first-hand.[3] Following the assassination of Inukai in the May 15 Incident, the Inukai cabinet was dissolved. However, Yoshizawa received an appointment to the House of Peers (present day House of Councillors) by command of Emperor Shōwa, and joined the Rikken Seiyūkai political party.
In the period immediately prior to the start of the Pacific War, Yoshizawa was appointed as a special envoy by Prime Minister Fumimaro Konoe to the Netherlands East Indies following the diplomatic mission of Ichizo Kobayashi. Yoshizawa was assigned to present a new set of demands on the Dutch government in Batavia, which were deliberately intended to be unacceptable.[4]
- Adherence to Japan's vision and policy in South East Asia,
- Unrestricted rights to explore and exploit minerals all over the Dutch East Indies
- Unrestricted fishing and shipping rights in all the waters of the Dutch East Indies
- Unrestricted rights to start all sorts of commercial enterprises
- Japans export to the DEI must be increased to more than 80% of all imports of the Dutch East Indies
- The existing demand for oil was slightly increased to 3,800,000 tons
- The Dutch East Indies was to supply Japan with 1,000,000 tons of tin, 400,000 tons of bauxite, 180,000 tons of nickel, 30,000 tons of rubber, 30,000 tons of coconut oil and 10,000 tons of sugar.
- Airline and telegraph connections between Japan and the Dutch East Indies
In December 1940, Yoshizawa was met by Hubertus Johannes van Mook, deputy minister of Economic Affairs, K. L. J. Enthoven, director of Justice, and Hoessein Djajadiningrat, director of Education and Religion. The negotiations dragged on unsuccessfully, and on June 11, 1941, the Liaison Meeting of the Imperial General Headquarters and Government decided to recall Yoshizawa and terminate the talks.[5] Yoshizawa suddenly announced to the Dutch his plan to depart and asked to be received by the Dutch Governor-General A. W. L. Tjarda van Starkenborgh Stachouwer on June 17, 1941. The latter was worried that he might receive a declaration of war, but to his relief Yoshizawa only handed him a draft declaration stating that the negotiations had ended without an agreement.
From 1941-1944, Yoshizawa served as Japanese ambassador to French Indochina. The posting was mostly symbolic, as by then mostly under Japanese military occupation. In August 1945, he became a member of the Privy Council.
After the end of World War II, the surrender of Japan, Yoshizawa was purged from public office by the American occupation authorities. In post-war Japan, he was appointed as Japanese ambassador to the Republic of China on Taiwan in 1952. He retired from public life in December 1956.
References
- Beasley, W.G. (1991). Japanese Imperialism 1894-1945. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-822168-1.
- Ferguson, Niall (2006). The War of the World; Twentieth Century Conflict and the Descent of the West. Penguin Press. ISBN 1-59420-100-5.
- Nish, Ian (2005). Japanese Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period. Harvard University Asia Center. ISBN 0-674-01778-1.
- Wilson, Sandra (2001). The Manchurian Crisis and Japanese Society 1931-1933. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-25056-0.
External links
Notes
- ↑ Nish, Japanese Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period, page 52
- ↑ Wilson, The Manchurian Crisis and Japanese Society 1931-1933, page 20
- ↑ Nish, Japanese Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period, page 78
- ↑ Ferguson, The War of the World; Twentieth Century Conflict and the Descent of the West, page 494
- ↑ The 29th Imperial General Headquarters and Government Liaison Conference