America\'s Military Adversaries. From Colonial Times to the Present

(John Hannent) #1

feet above the waves to escape detection,
they arrived over Bougainville precisely two
hours later, just as the punctual admiral’s
plane was approaching. Several bursts of gun-
fire sent it careening into the jungles below,
killing him. Yamamoto’s death constitutes the
only instance in World War II where a high-
ranking enemy official was deliberately
marked for assassination. His demise was a
severe blow to national morale and left a vac-
uum in Japanese strategic thinking that re-
mained unfilled.


Bibliography
Agawa, Hiroyuki. The Reluctant Admiral: Yamamoto
and the Imperial Navy.New York: Kodansha Interna-
tional, 1979; Glines, Carrol V. Attack on Yamamoto.
New York: Orion Books, 1993; Hall, Cargill, ed.Light-
ning Over Bougainville: The Yamamoto Mission Re-


considered.Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution
Press, 1991; Howarth, Stephen, ed. Men of War: Great
NavalLeaders of World War II.New York: St. Martin’s
Press, 1993; Hoyt, Edwin P. Yamamoto: The Man Who
Planned Pearl Harbor.New York: McGraw Hill, 1991;
Koda, Yoji. “Commander Dilemma: Admiral Ya-
mamoto and the ‘Gradual Attrition’ Strategy.” Naval
War College Review46 (1993): 63–79; Peattie, Mark R.
Sunburst: The Rise of Japanese Naval Air Power,
1909–1941.Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press,
2001; Prados, John. Combined Fleet Decoded: The Se-
cret History of American Intelligence and the Japa-
nese Navy in World War II.New York: Random
House, 1995; Sweetman, Jack, ed. The Great Admi-
rals: Command at Sea, 1587–1945.Annapolis, MD:
Naval Institute Press, 1997; Sweetman, Jack, ed. Great
American Naval Battles.Annapolis, MD: Naval Insti-
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sion, Sunday, April 18, 1943.Fredericksburg, TX:
Admiral Nimitz Foundation, 1988.

YAMASHITA, TOMOYUKI


Yamashita, Tomoyuki


(November 8, 1885–January 23, 1946)
Japanese General


A


brilliant strategist, Yamashita inflicted
one of Great Britain’s most serious de-
feats at Singapore in 1942. Two years
later he capably directed a last-ditch defense
of the Philippines before being executed as a
war criminal. The circumstances surrounding
his death, however, have never been legally
resolved and remain controversial.
Tomoyuki Yamashita was born in Kochi
Prefecture, Shikoku Island, on November 8,
1885, the son of a village doctor. Intent upon a
military career, he trained at the Hiroshima
Military Preparedness School before graduat-
ing from the Imperial Military Academy in



  1. Yamashita then fulfilled routine assign-
    ments until being appointed to the staff of the
    Infantry School in 1908. Good conduct landed
    him at the Army Staff College in Tokyo, where


he graduated at the top of his class in 1915.
Yamashita subsequently served as a military
attaché to Austria, Hungary, and Switzerland
for several years. In this last assignment, he
entered an uneasy relationship with another
rising officer, Hideki Tojo. Yamashita re-
turned home in 1925, where he advanced to
the rank of lieutenant colonel. However, that
same year he supported plans for a partial re-
duction of the military, thereby gaining the en-
mity of ultranationalists headed by the ambi-
tious Tojo.
The onset of the Great Depression in 1929,
and the economic dislocation that ensued,
generated extreme nationalism and mili-
tarism within the Japanese army. Yamashita
had since became associated with the so-
called Imperial Way faction, which called for
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