Emas general yamashita biography
General Tomoyuki Yamashita
From 1938 to 1940, Yamashita commanded the 4th Division of the Japanese army in Northern China. In late 1940, Yamashita visited Europe and met Hitler and Mussolini.
On 6 November 1941, Yamashita was given command of the 25th Army. He had just a month to prepare his army for the attack on Singapore and Malaya, scheduled for 8 December. Despite this short preparation period, Yamashita’s attack was successful and he became known as the ‘Tiger of Malaya’. He captured 130,000 Prisoners of War during the campaign, the largest number in British and Commonwealth military history.
Yamashita’s successes increased his influence in Tokyo. This would have displeased his rival Tojo, who is thought to have been behind Yamshita’s 1942 appointment as commander of the Japanese 1st Army in Manchuria. This command would keep Yamashita out of the most important theatre of war - the Pacific - and dilute his influence in Tokyo.
In October 1944, as America’s giant war machine made significant inroads into the Japanese military, Yamashita was appointed head of the 14th Area Army and was tasked with defending the Philippines. He had over 250,000 soldiers at his disposal, but this vast force was less an efficient fighting unit and more a logistical nightmare: America’s supremacy at sea made it almost impossible to supply his men. America’s submarines and planes mercilessly hunted down Japanese supply ships.
Yamashita was forced out of Manila by the advancing Americans and re-established his headquarters in the mountains of northern Luzon. Between February and March 1945 Japanese soldiers in and around Manila killed over 100,000 Filipino civilians. The ‘Manila Massacre’ would later be used as evidence in Yamashita’s war trial.
On 2 September, Yamashita surrendered his remaining troops, which now numbered less than 50,000. On 25 September he was arrested and formally charged with war crimes. He was accused of failing to control his men who carried out massacres (for example, at the Alexandra Hospital in Singapore and at Manila in the Philippines). The trial took place in the Philippines.
Yamashita’s defence attorney argued that Yamashita could not be held responsible for the massacre in Manila: communications in the Philippines were so poor that he was not aware of happenings in Manila while he was in Lurzon. Colonel Harry Clarke, Snr. also argued that Yamashita had recognised illegalities in Singapore and punished the men responsible: he had, for example, ordered the execution of the officers in charge of the soldiers who had carried out the killings at the Alexandra Hospital.
This defence failed. On 7 December 1945, Yamashita was found guilty of war crimes under a precedent that became known as the ‘Yamashita Standard’: a commanding officer had to take full responsibility for the actions of the men under his command.
Hearsay evidence had been utilised during court proceedings and the legitimacy of the trial was subsequently called into question. Appeals to both the Philippines Supreme Court and the US Supreme Court failed. It is thought that Douglas MacArthur wanted a swift trial with a guilty verdict to set a precedent for subsequent war trials.
On 23 February 1946 Yamashita was executed by hanging. These were his final words:
“I believe I have done my duty to the best of my ability throughout the whole war. Now at the time of my death and before God I have nothing to be ashamed of. Please remember me to the American officers who defended me.”