On
this date, 19 June 1947, a Japanese War Criminal, Kōsō Abe was executed by
hanging in Guam. I will post the information about him from Wikipedia.
Born
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March 24, 1892
Mikawa, Yamagata, Japan |
Died
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June 19, 1947 (aged 55)
Guam |
Allegiance
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Service/branch
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Years of service
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1912-1945
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Rank
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Commands held
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Battles/wars
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Kōsō Abe
(阿部 孝壮 Abe Kōsō, 24 March 1892 – 19 June 1947) was an
admiral in the Imperial Japanese Navy during World War II.
Biography
Early
career
A
native of what is now the town of Mikawa, Yamagata prefecture in northern Japan,
Abe was a graduate of the 40th class of the Imperial Japanese Naval Academy in
1912. He ranked 73rd out of 144 cadets. He served as midshipman on the cruisers
Azuma and Yakumo from 1912–1913, and after commissioning as an ensign
in 1915, was assigned to the cruiser Izumo.
He returned to naval artillery and torpedo school later that year, and did not
graduate until late 1917, so he was unable to participate in combat operations
in World War I.
As
a lieutenant from 1918, lieutenant commander from 1924, and commander from
1930, he served as chief gunnery officer on the destroyers Yamakaze
and Akikaze,
cruisers Asama,
Naka
and Ashigara,
and battleships Haruna,
Yamashiro
and Hyūga.
He was promoted to captain on 15 November 1934.
Abe
was given his first command on 15 November 1935, the cruiser Jintsu.
He subsequently served as captain of Naka, Tenryū,
Mikuma,
Myōkō,
and Hiei
in the 1930s.
Abe
was promoted to rear admiral on 15 November 1940. He commanded the transport
division for the Port Moresby Invasion Force in abortive Operation Mo during the Battle of the Coral
Sea.
The
Makin Raid incident
From
5 February 1942 – 29 November 1943, Abe was commander of the 6th Base Force at Kwajalein
in the Marshall Islands. As such, he was essentially the wartime military
governor of the Marshall Islands, Gilbert Islands, Nauru, Ocean Island and Wake
Island in the central Pacific Ocean.
On
17–18 August 1942, a force of approximately 200 US Marine commandos landed by submarine
and raided Makin Island. The Makin Island raid was intended to destroy Japanese
installations, gather intelligence data, test raiding tactics, boost home front
morale, and possibly to divert Japanese attention from Guadalcanal. At a loss
of 30 men, the US Marines killed the 85 - 160 Japanese, destroyed the radio
station, fuel depot, supplies and installations. The raid attracted much
attention in the American press, spawning a 1942 propaganda movie entitled Gung
Ho!, but its military significance was negligible. Nine US Marines who had
been accidentally left behind during the raid were captured by Japanese forces,
and moved as prisoners of war to Kwajalein, where they were held for about a
month.
The
initial plan was to send those American prisoners to Japan for incarceration.
However, Abe was advised by central military authorities in Tokyo that the new
official policy was to execute all prisoners of war in the field, and not to
hold any in captivity or to send them to the home islands. Reportedly over the
protests of Captain Yoshio Obara (local Japanese commander on Kwajalein) and
Commander Hiusakichi Naiki (Chief of military-police on Kwajalein) (although
this has been disputed by historian W. Emerson Wiles who states that Obara and
Naiki were willing participants), Abe ordered the execution of the prisoners by
beheading on 16 October 1942.
Subsequent
career
From
27 December 1943 – 25 April 1945, Abe was Commandant of the Tateyama Naval Gunnery School in Tateyama, Chiba, Japan. Until the end of
the war, he served as a commander of base units at Sasebo Naval Base in Kyūshū, Japan.
After
the war, Abe was arrested by SCAP
authorities and charged with war crimes, largely based on witness
testimony regarding the Makin Raid Incident. Abe was extradited to Guam, where
a military tribunal
convicted him of "violation of the law and custom of war and the moral
standards of civilized society." Abe was executed by hanging on 19 June
1947 on Guam.
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