
Notes penned by wartime leader Hideki Tojo in the closing days of World War II show that he thought government leaders and the population were spineless for supporting unconditional surrender to the allied forces. He also thought the imperial system should be preserved at all costs, and that if this was not acceptable to the allies, Japan should continue fighting to the last man. Tojo, who was executed for war crimes on Dec. 23, 1948, feared a public backlash against the imperial forces if Japan agreed to unconditional surrender. Were that to happen, he wrote that "the Japanese people will curse the military forces (of imperial Japan)"...more...