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  1. Anami was promoted to lieutenant colonel in August 1925. From August–December 1925, Anami was sent as a military attaché to France. On his return to Japan, he was assigned to the 45th Infantry Regiment, and became unit commander in August 1928. From August 1929 to August 1930, Anami served as Aide-de-camp to Emperor Hirohito.

  2. Korechika Anami / 阿南 惟幾, Anami Korechika, 21 February 1887 – 15 August 1945/ was born in Taketa city in Ōita Prefecture, where his father was a senior bureaucrat in the Home Ministry and grew up in Tokyo and in Tokushima Prefecture. He attended the 18th class of the Imperial Japanese Army Academy and was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Infantry in December 1906.

  3. 30. Mai 2013 · Anami Korechika, minster of war, even went to consult with the head of the Japanese nuclear weapons program on the night of Aug. 7. The idea that Japan’s leaders didn’t know about nuclear ...

  4. 15. Aug. 2020 · Gegen die Annahme votierten dagegen die Generäle Anami Korechika und Umezu Yoshijiro, der eine Kriegsminister, der andere Stabschef der Armee, sowie dessen Kollege von der Marine Admiral Toyoda ...

  5. Died. General Korechika Anami, Army bureaucrat and War Minister in the Suzuki Cabinet; and Vice Admiral Takejiro Onishi, originator of Kamikaze ("divine wind," i.e., suicide) tactics; both by harakiri, induced by the Japanese surrender; in Tokyo. General Anami was a military mystic. He once called on Japan's soldiers "to defend the Imperial ...

  6. Korechika Anami was born in Taketa, Oita Prefecture, Japan in 1887. He grew up in Tokyo, Japan and in Tokushima Prefecture. Aspiring to be an officer from a young age, he looked up to General Count Maresuke Nogi. His father, Nao Anami, was an official in the Home Ministry.

  7. Three members held out for three additional terms: Army Minister General Korechika Anami and the Chiefs of Staff of the Army, General Yoshijiro Umezu, and Navy, Admiral Soemu Toyoda. These additional terms included: 1) Japan would disarm her own forces; 2) Japan would conduct any “so-called” war crimes trials of her own nationals; and 3) there would be no occupation of Japan. This last ...