Imperial Japanese Navy General Staff

The Imperial Japanese Navy General Staff (軍令部, Gunreibu) was the highest organ within the Imperial Japanese Navy. In charge of planning and operations, it was headed by an Admiral headquartered in Tokyo.

Imperial Japanese Navy HQ, 1930s

History

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Created in 1893, the Navy General Staff took over operational (as opposed to administrative) authority over the Imperial Japanese Navy from the Navy Ministry. It was responsible for the planning and execution of national defense strategy. Through the Imperial General Headquarters it reported directly to the Emperor, not to the Prime Minister, National Diet or even the Navy Ministry. It was always headed by an admiral on active duty, and was based in Tokyo.

"The ministry was responsible for the naval budget, ship construction, weapons procurement, personnel, relations with the Diet and the cabinet and broad matters of naval policy. The General Staff directed the operations of the fleet and the preparation of war plans".[1]

After the Washington Naval Conference of 1921–22, where Japan agreed to keep the size of its fleet smaller than that of the United Kingdom and the United States, the Imperial Japanese Navy became divided into the mutually hostile Fleet Faction and Treaty Faction political cliques. The Navy Ministry tended to be pro-Treaty Faction and was anxious to maintain the Anglo-Japanese Alliance. However the Navy General Staff came to be dominated by the Fleet faction, and gradually gained ascendancy in the 1930s with increasing Japanese militarism. The Navy General Staff pushed through the attack on Pearl Harbor against the wishes of the more diplomatic Navy Ministry.

After 1937, both the Navy Minister and the Chief of the Navy General Staff were members of the Imperial General Headquarters.

With the defeat of the Empire of Japan in World War II, the Navy General Staff was abolished together with the Imperial Japanese Navy by the American occupation authorities in November 1945 and was not revived by the post-war Constitution of Japan.

Organization

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The General Staff was organized as follows:

  • 1st Department: Operations Bureau
    • 1st Section: Operations
    • 2nd Section: Training
  • 2nd Department: Weapons and Mobilization Bureau
    • 3rd Section: Weapons
    • 4th Section: Mobilization
  • 3rd Department: Intelligence Bureau
    • 5th Section: Intelligence for America
    • 6th Section: Intelligence for China
    • 7th Section: Intelligence for Soviet Union
    • 8th Section: Intelligence for UK and Europe
  • 4th Department: Communications Bureau
    • 9th Section: Communications
    • 10th Section: Cryptography

Chiefs of the General Staff

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No. Portrait Chief of the General Staff Took office Left office Time in office
1Toshiyoshi, ItōRear Admiral
Itō Toshiyoshi
伊藤雋吉

(1840–1921)
8 March 188917 May 188970 days
2Shinanojō, ArichiRear Admiral
Arichi Shinanojō
有地品之允

(1843–1919)
17 May 188917 June 18912 years, 31 days
3Yoshika, InoueRear Admiral
Baron Inoue Yoshika
井上良馨

(1845–1929)
17 June 189112 December 18921 year, 178 days
4Kuranosuke, NakamutaVice Admiral
Viscount Nakamuta Kuranosuke
中牟田倉之助

(1837–1916)
12 December 1892[a]18 July 1894[b]1 year, 218 days
5Sukenori, KabayamaVice Admiral[c]
Viscount Kabayama Sukenori
樺山資紀

(1837–1922)
18 July 189411 May 1895[d]297 days
6Sukeyuki, ItōVice Admiral[f]
Itō Sukeyuki[e]
伊藤雋吉

(1843–1914)
11 May 189520 December 190510 years, 223 days
7Heihachirō, TōgōAdmiral
Tōgō Heihachirō[g]
東郷平八郎

(1848–1934)
20 December 19051 December 19093 years, 346 days
8Gorō, IjuinVice Admiral[h]
Baron Ijūin Gorō
伊集院五郎

(1848–1934)
1 December 190922 April 19144 years, 142 days
9Hayao, ShimamuraVice Admiral[j]
Shimamura Hayao[i]
島村速雄

(1858–1923)
22 April 19141 December 19206 years, 223 days
10Gentarō, YamashitaAdmiral
Yamashita Gentarō
山下源太郎

(1863–1931)
1 December 192015 April 19254 years, 135 days
11Suzuki, KantarōAdmiral
Kantarō Suzuki
鈴木貫太郎

(1868–1948)
15 April 192522 January 1929[k]3 years, 282 days
12Kato, KanjiAdmiral
Katō Hiroharu
加藤寛治

(1870–1939)
22 January 192911 June 1930[l]1 year, 140 days
13Naomi, TaniguchiVice Admiral
Taniguchi Naomi [ja]
谷口尚真

(1870–1941)
11 June 19302 February 1932[m]1 year, 236 days
14Hiroyasu, FushimiAdmiral[n]
Prince Fushimi Hiroyasu
伏見宮博恭王

(1875–1946)
2 February 19329 April 19419 years, 66 days
15Osami, NaganoAdmiral[o]
Nagano Osami
永野修身

(1880–1947)
9 April 194121 February 1944[p]2 years, 318 days
16Shigetarō, ShimadaAdmiral
Shimada Shigetarō
嶋田繁太郎

(1883–1976)
21 February 1944[q]2 August 1944[r]163 days
17Koshirō, OikawaAdmiral
Oikawa Koshirō
及川古志郎

(1883–1958)
2 August 194429 May 1945[s]300 days
18Soemu, ToyodaAdmiral
Toyoda Soemu
豊田副武

(1885–1957)
29 May 194515 October 1945139 days

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Concurrently Headmaster of the Naval War College until 20 May 1893.
  2. ^ Re-assigned to Privy Council over objections to escalating hostilities with China that led to the First Sino-Japanese War.
  3. ^ Promoted to Admiral on 5 May 1895.
  4. ^ Resigned to accept appointment as first Governor-General of Taiwan.
  5. ^ Created Viscount on 5 August 1898.
  6. ^ Promoted to Admiral on 28 September 1898.
  7. ^ Created Count on 21 September 1907.
  8. ^ Promoted to Admiral on 1 December 1910.
  9. ^ Created Baron on 14 July 1916.
  10. ^ Promoted to Admiral on 28 August 1915.
  11. ^ Resigned to become Grand Chamberlain.
  12. ^ Resigned rather than attend a state dinner in honor of US Ambassador William Richards Castle Jr.
  13. ^ Forced to resign due to tepid support for the Japanese invasion of Manchuria.
  14. ^ Promoted to Marshal Admiral on 27 May 1932.
  15. ^ Promoted to Marshal Admiral on 21 June 1943.
  16. ^ Forced to resign following Operation Hailstone.
  17. ^ Concurrently Minister of the Navy until 17 July 1944.
  18. ^ Forced to resign after the downfall of the Tōjō Cabinet following the loss of Saipan.
  19. ^ Resigned in protest of the Emperor's refusal to consider peace proposals.

References

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  1. ^ Spector

Bibliography

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  • Asada, Sadao (2006). From Mahan to Pearl Harbor: The Imperial Japanese Navy and the United States. US Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-042-8.
  • Schencking, J. Charles (2005). Making Waves: Politics, Propaganda, And The Emergence Of The Imperial Japanese Navy, 1868-1922. Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-4977-9.
  • Spector, Ronald (1985). Eagle Against the Sun. New York: Vintage Books. ISBN 0-394-74101-3.
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