« [SSJ: 8900] Sophia University ICC Lecture announcement (April 27) | Main | [SSJ: 8902] Sophia University ICC lecture Annoucement (April 15) »

April 8, 2015

[SSJ: 8901] DIJ History and Humanities Study Group 17 April: Minohara on wartime intelligence

From: The DIJ History and Humanities Study Group
Date: 2015/04/08

We invite you to join the next session of the DIJ History and Humanities Study Group on

Friday, 17 April 2015, 18.00 h (please note the different weekday and time)

Tosh Minohara
(Kobe University)

If there was a Rubicon in the path to Pearl Harbor, it would most certainly be November 26, 1941, the day when Togo Shigenori – the leading proponent against war – lost all hope for peace and felt that Japan now had to rise. Of course, Togo was no pacifist, but at the same time he was quite cognizant of the fact that a war with the U.S.
could not be won. If so, then what forces pushed Togo toward to this tragedy? Was it, as many have claimed in the past, because the so-called Hull Note was so uncompromising that it basically amounted to an ultimatum?

In light of recent revelations in prewar Japanese SIGINT documents from the US National Archives, the National Security Agency archives, the Japanese Diplomatic Records Office, and the British National Archives, the purpose of this presentation will be
two-fold: first, to provide a brief overview of the obscure history of the Japanese Black Chamber; and second, to examine/evaluate the role that intelligence played in decision making in Tokyo during the particularly critical juncture of November 1941 when the U.S.-Japan talks were being. In conclusion, a more viable alternative explanation behind the Togo hensetsu
(volte-face) will be given which will lead to a greater insight into the complex chain of events which ultimately led to the fateful decision to go to war.

Tosh MINOHARA is Professor of Diplomatic History at the Graduate School of L aw at Kobe University. His primary research focus is on U.S.-Japan relations and has numerous publications including: "The Japanese Exclusion Act and U .S.-Japan Relations: The Truth behind the 'Grave Consequences' of the 'Ha nihara Note'" (Iwanami Shoten, 2002) [Shimizu Hiroshi Book Award], The Ant i-Japanese Movement in California and U.S.-Japan Relations: The Friction bet ween Japan and the US over the Immigration Problem in 1906-1921 (Yuhikaku, 2 006), Japan's Major Policy Issues,
2000-2009: From the Perspective of Diplo macy and Security [editor and contributor] (Kashiwashobo, 2011), An Alternat e History of Japan-US Exchanges: Reading the 20th Century in Materials of th e America-Japan Society" [co-editor and contributor] (Chuokoronshinsha,
201 2), The 100-year History of the Japan-US Relations surrounding 'War': From the Russo-Japanese War to the War against Terrorism [editor and contributor ] (Asahi Shimbun Press, 2012), Tumultuous Decade, Empire, Society, and Diplo macy in 1930s Japan [co-editor and contributor] (University of Toronto Press , 2013), and The Decade of the Great War: Japan and the Wider World in the 1 910s [co-editor and contributor] (Brill, 2014).

The DIJ History and Humanities Study Group is a forum open to scholars working on Japan in any field of the humanities. It is organized by Miki Aoyama-Olschina and Torsten Weber. All are welcome to attend, but registration (weber@dijtokyo.org) is appreciated.

German Institute for Japanese Studies (DIJ) Jochi Kioizaka Bldg. 2F, 7-1 Kioicho;, Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo; 102-0094, Phone: 03-3222-5077.
For a map please refer to www.dijtokyo.org

Approved by ssjmod at 09:39 AM