The Eurasian Triangle. Russia, the Caucasus and Japan, 1904-1945

(WallPaper) #1

The Akashi Operations Ë 17


again traveled to southern Russia and the Caucasus, where demonstrations and indus-


trial strikes frequently took place. According to Tanaka, he even dreamed of becoming


an industrial worker and a revolutionary himself. He also associated closely with some


leaders. Subsequently, in the 1920s, he confessed they had become so famous that he


could not reveal their names publicly.¹²His biographers further suspect that he met the


young Stalin in the Caucasus. Tanaka himself stated that he had met Stalin and helped


him with money, at least, this is what he told his emissary to Stalin in 1927 after becom-


ing prime minister.¹³He did not say, however, where and when. Although one account


mentions a meeting near Irkutsk in Siberia,¹⁴this cannot be correct, because in June


1902, having been promoted to major, Tanaka returned to Tokyo, whereas Stalin was


exiled to Siberia for the rst time in 1903. Although Tanaka’s meeting with Stalin can-


not be conrmed by other sources, it seems to be the case that Tanaka did cultivate


close ties with revolutionaries in the Caucasus and elsewhere.


Tanaka returned home convinced that Russia was so big and rich in resources


that merely winning war against it or capturing some territory from it would not help.


What was important, according to him, was to facilitate Russia’s own self-destruction


by supporting destructive forces from within.¹⁵This idea was almost certainly shared


by some strategists within and without the Japanese military.


In 1903, oddly in view of the growing tension between the two countries, Tanaka,


along with twenty other Japanese politicians and military commanders, was dec-


orated by the Russian government (in his case, with the Order of St. Ann Second


Rank).¹⁶Those Russians who hosted Tanaka’s tenure in the Novocherkassk regiment


were in turn recommended for decoration by the Japanese government.¹⁷


2.2 The Akashi Operations


Tanaka’s activities were followed by Motojir ̄o Akashi, who as an intelligence ocer


became much better known than Tanaka. Colonel Akashi was appointed a Japanese


military attaché in St. Petersburg in 1902 and stayed there until February 1904, when


the Russo-Japanese War broke out. Akashi then moved from St. Petersburg to Stock-


holm in Sweden. But because his ocial position as a military attaché in Stockholm


12 Tanaka Giichi denki, 165.
13 Quoted in Kaoru Furukawa,Yume harukanaru: kindai nihon no kyojin Kuhara Fusanosuke(Tokyo:
PHP Kenkyujo, 2009), 356–57. ̄
14 Furukawa,Yume harukanaru, 357.
15 Tanaka Giichi denki, p. 169.
16 The Japan Center for Asian Historical Records (National Archives of Japan; hereafter JACAR): http:
//www.jacar.go.jp (reference code: A10112576300).
17 JACAR, reference code: A10112549800.

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