On
this date, 26 April 1947, a Japanese War Criminal, Tani Hisao A.K.A the Tiger
of Kyushu was executed by the firing squad for his part in the Nanjing
Massacre. Let us not forget the thousands of innocent Chinese brutally murdered
during World War II.
Lieutenant General Tani Hisao
|
INTERNET SOURCE: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hisao_Tani
Hisao Tani
(谷 寿夫 Tani Hisao, 22 December 1882 – 26 April 1947)
was a Lieutenant General in the Imperial Japanese Army in the Second
Sino-Japanese War, and was implicated in the Nanjing Massacre.
Nickname
|
Tiger of
Kyushu
|
Born
|
December
22, 1882
Okayama, Japan |
Died
|
April 26,
1947 (aged 64)
Shanghai, China |
Allegiance
|
Empire of
Japan
|
Service/branch
|
Imperial
Japanese Army
|
Years of
service
|
1903–1945
|
Rank
|
Lieutenant
General
|
Commands
held
|
Imperial
Japanese Army
|
Battles/wars
|
Russo-Japanese
War, Second Sino-Japanese War, Pacific War
|
Biography
Tani
was a native of Okayama Prefecture. He graduated from the 15th class of the Imperial
Japanese Army Academy in 1903 and from the 24th class of the Army War College.
He saw service as a second lieutenant in the Imperial Guard's infantry regiment
during the Russo–Japanese War. Subsequently, he was posted to Great Britain as
a military attaché from 1915–18, during which time he was an official observer
for the Japanese government on the combat situation on the Western Front in World
War I. After his return to Japan, from 1922–24, he was attached to 6th
Regiment/IJA 3rd Division.
In
1924 Tani became an instructor at the Army War College, and his texts on strategy
and tactics during the Russo–Japanese War became required reading.
From
1929–32 Tani was assigned to various posts in the Imperial General Staff, and
in 1932 when was made Chairman of Military Investigation. In 1933 he took
command of the 2nd Imperial Guards Brigade, and in 1934, Commandant of the Tokyo
Bay Fortress, and in 1935 Command of the 9th Depot Division.
From
1935–37 Tani was commanding officer of the 6th Division (Imperial Japanese
Army), which was assigned to the China Expeditionary Army in December 1937
under the overall command of General Matsui Iwane. The 6th Division fought in
North China during the Peiking – Hankow Railway Operation. Shipped south with
the Japanese 10th Army, it took part in the end of the Battle of Shanghai, and
the Battle of Nanking.
Returning
to Japan at the end of 1937, Tani became Commander in Chief of the Central
Defence Army until 1939 when he went into reserve and retired. In 1945, towards
the end of World War II, Tani was recalled to active service and given command
of the IJA 59th Army and Chugoku Army District.
The chief Japanese
invader officer Tani Hisao (left), who was in charge of the Nanjing Massacre,
1937, about 300,000 Chinese were killed.
|
Trial
and Execution
After
the end of World War II, the Chinese government demanded that Tani be
extradited to China to stand trial for war crimes at the Nanjing War Crimes
Tribunal. Some historians portrayed the prosecution at the trial as incoherent
and incompetent, and pointed out its alleged errors, such as the prosecution
repeatedly blaming Tani for actions of the IJA 16th Division (which he did not
command), instead of the IJA 6th Division, confusing events between the Battle
of Shanghai and the Battle of Nanjing, and accusing Tani of atrocities on dates
after which he had already been transferred back to Japan. Nevertheless, as the
commander of the IJA 16th Division, General Kesago Nakajima had died in 1945,
and General Matsui Iwane would be executed by the Americans after the Tokyo War
Crimes Tribunal, Tani was the highest surviving commander in Chinese
custody, and his association in Chinese minds with the Battle of Nanjing and
its aftermath meant that a guilty verdict was certain. Tani was convicted of
instigating, inspiring and encouraging the men under his command to stage
general massacres of prisoners of war and non-combatants and to perpetrate such
crimes as rape, plunder and wanton destruction of property, during the Battle
of Shanghai, Battle of Nanking and early in its occupation, the Rape of Nanking, and he was consequently
executed on 26 April 1947.
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