Teiichi Suzuki
Teiichi Suzuki (鈴木 貞一 Suzuki Teiichi, December 16, 1888 – July 15, 1989) was a Japanese army general who helped plan Japan's economy in World War II.
Life during the war
Suzuki, who served as a lieutenant general in the Imperial Army, was the last surviving member of a group of top leaders convicted of war crimes. He was the primary planner of Japan's wartime economy, serving as state minister of the Planning Board from 1941 to 1943. After Japan's defeat in 1945, he stood trial along with Prime Minister Hideki Tōjō and 26 other wartime leaders. Tojo and six others were condemned and hanged. Suzuki was given a life sentence by the International Military Tribunal for the Far East in 1948, but he was released on parole from Sugamo Prison for war crimes in Tokyo in 1955 and given a full pardon. After briefly returning to government service, he dropped from public view and refused to see reporters. He died of heart failure on July 15, 1989 at 100 years old. He was the last surviving defendant of the main Tokyo/Nuremberg trials, outliving Rudolph Hess, who had committed suicide two years earlier.
Timeline
1934–1935 | Instructor at the War College |
1935–1936 | Investigator, Cabinet Research Bureau |
1936–1937 | Commanding Officer 14th Regiment |
1937–1938 | Attached to 16th Division |
1938 | Chief of Staff 3rd Army |
1938–1940 | Head of Political Affairs Bureau, Asia Development Board |
1940–1941 | Head of General Affairs Bureau, Asia Development Board |
1941 | Retired |
1941–1943 | Minister of State |
1941–1943 | Chief of the Cabinet Planning Board |
1943–1944 | Advisor to the Government |
1945–1948 | Arrested and tried as an A class war criminal |
1948 | Condemned to life imprisonment as an A war criminal |
1955 | Released |
External links
- Papers that pushed for Pacific War revisited; Fabricated logistics data supplied by Cabinet member helped military railroad government - Japan Times (Accessed 14 August 2013)