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Haruhiko Nishi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Japanese diplomat

Haruhiko Nishi (西 春彦,Nishi Haruhiko; April 29, 1893 inKagoshima Prefecture – September 20, 1986) was a Japanesediplomat.

Prewar service

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In 1925, as diplomatic relations between the Soviet and the Japanese governments were established, was appointed Secretary of the Embassy in Moscow. Served as Counselor of the Embassy in Moscow from June 1939 to August 1940.[1]

Wartime service

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Nishi served as Japanese Vice-Minister for Foreign Affairs in 1941, at the time of theattack on Pearl Harbor. Available evidence shows that he was not notified in advance about the intention to launch the attack, and on the morning of December 8, 1941, heard about it over the radio.[2][3] He resigned his position as vice-minister on September 2, 1942, following the resignation of Foreign MinisterShigenori Togo.[4]

After the war

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During the Tokyo War Crimes Trial at theInternational Military Tribunal for the Far East in 1946-1948, he served as defence counsel to some of the Japanese war criminals. He served as first postwar Japanese ambassador toAustralia in 1952-1955.[5][6] As ambassador, he attended the memorial service forANZAC in April 1953, and no protests were made against his presence.[7]

He served as Ambassador to the UK in 1955-1957.

Nishi's granddaughterEiko Todo is the founder of theJapan Dyslexic Society, which she did after finding out that her son had that problem.[8]Japanese artistAkito Nishi is one of his descendants.

His legacy

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Today, Haruhiko Nishi is esteemed in Australian academic circles, and an annual Crawford-Nishi lecture atAustralian National University was started in 2009.[5]

References

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  1. ^"Another Jap Minister Resigns"The Argus, September 3, 1942 (Australian newspaper appearing until 1954)
  2. ^Takeo Iguchi, "Covering their tracks on the way to war"The Japan Times, Sunday, Dec. 15, 2002[1] (the author of this article served under Nishi in later years)
  3. ^"Controversy over Japan's Surprise Attack on the United States and Britain in December 1941, by Prof. Takeo Iguchi". Archived fromthe original on 2011-06-15. Retrieved2010-11-03.
  4. ^New York Times, September 3, 1942
  5. ^ab"Not Found".{{cite web}}:Missing or empty|url= (help)
  6. ^"About Cabinet notebooks". Archived fromthe original on 2009-06-28. Retrieved2009-06-23.
  7. ^Canberra Times, April 27, 1953
  8. ^Vivienne Kenrick, article about Eiko Todo,The Japan Times, Nov. 10, 2001[2]
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