Eisaku Satō
Eisaku Satō | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
佐藤 栄作 | |||||
Prime Minister of Japan | |||||
In office 9 November 1964 – 7 July 1972 | |||||
Monarch | Hirohito | ||||
Preceded by | Hayato Ikeda | ||||
Succeeded by | Kakuei Tanaka | ||||
President of the Liberal Democratic Party | |||||
In office 1 December 1964 – 5 July 1972 | |||||
Vice President | Shojiro Kawashima | ||||
Secretary-General | |||||
Preceded by | Hayato Ikeda | ||||
Succeeded by | Kakuei Tanaka | ||||
Member of the House of Representatives | |||||
In office 23 January 1949 – 3 June 1975 | |||||
Constituency | Yamaguchi 2nd | ||||
Personal details | |||||
Born | Tabuse, Yamaguchi, Empire of Japan | 27 March 1901||||
Died | 3 June 1975 Tokyo, Japan | (aged 74)||||
Political party | Liberal Democratic Party (1955–1975) | ||||
Other political affiliations | Liberal Party (1949–1955) | ||||
Spouse |
Hiroko Satō (m. 1926) | ||||
Children | 2, including Shinji | ||||
Relatives | Nobusuke Kishi (brother) Shinzo Abe (grandnephew) Nobuo Kishi (grandnephew) | ||||
Alma mater | Tokyo Imperial University | ||||
Awards | Nobel Peace Prize (1974) | ||||
Signature | |||||
Japanese name | |||||
Shinjitai | 佐藤栄作 | ||||
Kyūjitai | 佐藤榮作 | ||||
Kana | さとう えいさく | ||||
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Eisaku Satō (佐藤 栄作, Satō Eisaku, 27 March 1901 – 3 June 1975) was a Japanese politician who served as prime minister of Japan from 1964 to 1972. He is the third longest-serving prime minister, and ranks second in longest uninterrupted service as prime minister.
Satō entered the National Diet in 1949 as a member of the Liberal Party. Gradually rising through the ranks of Japanese politics, he held a series of cabinet positions. His brother Nobusuke Kishi served as prime minister from 1957 to 1960. In 1964 he succeeded Hayato Ikeda as prime minister, becoming the first prime minister to have been born in the 20th century. Satō was the second prime minister to come from the Satō–Kishi–Abe family.
As prime minister, Satō presided over a period of rapid economic growth. He arranged for the formal return of Okinawa (Ryukyu Islands; occupied by the United States since the end of the Second World War) to Japanese control. Satō brought Japan into the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, for which he received the Nobel Peace Prize as a co-recipient in 1974.
Early life
[edit]Satō was born on 27 March 1901, in Tabuse, Yamaguchi Prefecture, the third son of businessman Hidesuke Satō and his wife Moyo. His father had worked in the Yamaguchi Prefectural Office, but quit in 1898, and started a sake brewing business in Kishida, Tabuse. The family had a history in sake brewing and had held the right for sake brewing for generations.[1] Sato's great-grandfather was a samurai of the Chōshū Domain, with their outsized influence in Meiji era Japan, with more Meiji and Taisho prime ministers coming from Yamaguchi than any other prefecture. His two older brothers were Ichirō Satō, who would become a vice admiral, and Nobusuke Kishi, who served as prime minister from 1957-1960.[2]
Satō studied German law at Tokyo Imperial University and in 1923, passed the senior civil service examinations. Upon graduation the following year, he became a civil servant in the Ministry of Railways. He served as Director of the Osaka Railways Bureau from 1944 to 1946 and Vice-Minister for Transport from 1947 to 1948.[3]
Satō entered the Diet in 1949 as a member of the Liberal Party.
He served as Minister of Postal Services and Telecommunications from July 1951 to July 1952. Sato gradually rose through the ranks of Japanese politics, becoming chief cabinet secretary to then prime minister Shigeru Yoshida from January 1953 to July 1954. He later served as minister of construction from October 1952 to February 1953.
After the Liberal Party merged with the Japan Democratic Party to form the Liberal Democratic Party, Satō served as chairman of the party executive council from December 1957 to June 1958, followed by a post as minister of finance in the cabinet of his brother Nobusuke Kishi from 1958-1960. As minister of finance, Sato requested the US to fund conservatives.[4]
Satō also served in the cabinets of Kishi's successor as prime minister, Hayato Ikeda. From July 1961 to July 1962, Satō was Minister of International Trade and Industry. From July 1963 to June 1964 he was concurrently head of the Hokkaidō Development Agency and of the Science and Technology Agency.
Prime minister
[edit]Satō succeeded Ikeda after the latter resigned due to ill health.[5] He would go on to serve the longest stint of any prime minister up until that time, and by the late 1960s he appeared to have single-handed control over the entire Japanese government. He was a popular prime minister due to the growing economy; his foreign policy, which was a balancing act between the interests of the United States and China, was more tenuous. Student political radicalization led to numerous protests against Satō's support of the United States–Japan Security Treaty, and Japanese tacit support for American military operations in Vietnam. This opposition peaked with the 1968–1969 Japanese university protests, which eventually forced Satō to close the prestigious University of Tokyo for a year in 1969.[6]
After three terms as prime minister, Satō decided not to run for a fourth. His heir apparent, Takeo Fukuda, won the Sato faction's support in the subsequent Diet elections, but the more popular MITI minister, Kakuei Tanaka, won the vote, ending the Satō faction's dominance.
Relations with China and Taiwan
[edit]Satō is the last Prime minister of Japan to visit Taiwan during his term. In 1965, Satō approved a US$150 million loan to Taiwan. He visited Taipei in September 1967. In 1969, Satō insisted that the defense of Taiwan was necessary for the safety of Japan. Satō followed the United States in most major issues, but Satō opposed the Nixon visit to China.[7] Satō also bitterly opposed the entry of the PRC into the United Nations in 1971.
Relations with South Korea
[edit]On 22 June 1965, the Satō government and South Korea under Park Chung Hee signed the Treaty on Basic Relations Between Japan and the Republic of Korea, which normalized relations between Japan and South Korea for the first time. Relations with Japan had previously not been officially established since Korea's decolonization and division at the end of World War II.
Nuclear affairs
[edit]In the 1960s Sato argued that Japan needed nuclear weapons to match those of China, but the United States opposed such. The Johnson administration pressed Japan to sign the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, ending, for then, Japan's nuclear ambitions.[8]
Satō introduced the Three Non-Nuclear Principles on 11 December 1967, which means non-production, non-possession, and non-introduction of nuclear weapons. He later suggested the "Four-Pillars Nuclear Policy".[clarification needed] During the prime ministership of Satō, Japan entered the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. The Diet passed a resolution formally adopting the principles in 1971. For this he received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1974.
However, recent inquiries show that behind the scenes, Satō was more accommodating towards US plans of stationing nuclear weapons on Japanese soil. In December 2008, the Japanese government declassified a document showing that during a visit to the US in January 1965, he was discussing with US officials the possibility of using nuclear weapons against the People's Republic of China.[9] In December 2009, his son reported that his father agreed in a November 1969 conversation with US President Nixon to allow the stationing of nuclear warheads in Okinawa once it was restored to Japanese sovereignty.[10]
Okinawa issues
[edit]Since the end of the Second World War, Okinawa had been occupied by the United States. While visiting the United States in January 1965, Satō openly asked President Lyndon Johnson to return Okinawa to Japan. In August 1965, Satō became the first post-war prime minister of Japan to visit Okinawa.
In 1969, Satō struck a deal with U.S. president Richard Nixon to repatriate Okinawa and remove its nuclear weaponry: this deal was controversial because it allowed the U.S. forces in Japan to maintain bases in Okinawa after repatriation.[11] Okinawa was formally returned to Japan on 15 May 1972, which also included the Senkaku Islands (also known as the Diaoyu Islands in China and the subject, since 1971, of a Sino-Japanese sovereignty dispute; see Senkaku Islands dispute).
Relations with Southeast Asia
[edit]During Satō's term, Japan participated in the creation of the Asian Development Bank in 1966 and held a ministerial level conference on Southeast Asian economic development.[12] It was the first international conference sponsored by the Japanese government in the postwar period. In 1967, he was also the first Japanese prime minister to visit Singapore. He was largely supportive of the South Vietnamese government throughout the Vietnam War.
Later life
[edit]Upon leaving the premiership in 1972 to an approval rating of 19% (by April) and a fractured party, Satō moved back to his home in Setagaya Ward, Tokyo, staying out of the eyes of the media but remaining in the Diet. His reputation, however, quickly began to be rehabilitated, starting in November of that year with his awarding of the Grand Cordon of the Supreme Order of the Chrysanthemum. Satō opened up to the media after the award, with outlets noting his visual image change, with a longer hairstyle reminiscent of the post-presidency of Lyndon B. Johnson.[13]
Satō quickly settled into his life as an elder statesman. In January 1973, Satō and his wife were invited to President Richard Nixon's second inauguration. Satō maintained close relations with Nixon, sending him his personal condolences upon his resignation and attending his funeral.[14]
Upon returning to Japan, his successor, the initially-popular Kakuei Tanaka, who had been handed a rebuke with 17 seat losses in the 1972 Japanese general election, looked to Satō to repair relations within the LDP, especially towards his rival Takeo Fukuda. Both men were Satō's protegés, and Satō advised Tanaka in the forming of his post-election cabinet, notably including Fukuda as director-general of the Administrative Agency. Although privately critical towards Tanaka's government, Satō remained in the public eye a unifier within the LDP.[15]
Satō shared the Nobel Peace Prize with Seán MacBride in 1974. He was awarded for representing the Japanese people's will for peace, and for signing the nuclear arms Non-Proliferation Treaty in 1970.[16] He was the first Asian to accept the Nobel Peace Prize. (In 1973, Vietnamese politician Le Duc Tho had become the first Asian to win the prize, but Tho had rejected it.[17]) Satō began working with McBride shortly after, joining Amnesty International.[18]
In April 1975, as part of his last foreign visit before his death, Satō was chosen as the LDP representative to attend the funeral of Chiang Kai-Shek. However, upon protest from the Chinese government of Satō's role as "official envoy of the LDP president", his role was relegated to a "friendship representative".[19]
Death
[edit]On 19 May 1975, Satō attended a dinner in Shikiraku, a restaurant in Tokyo's Tsukiji district, attended by Fukuda. During the event, he suffered a massive stroke, resulting in a coma. He was held in an emergency unit in the restaurant for four days before being moved to hospital.[20] He died at 12:55 a.m. on 3 June at the Jikei University Medical Center, aged 74. After a public funeral, his ashes were buried in the family cemetery at Tabuse.
Satō was posthumously honored with the Collar of the Order of the Chrysanthemum, the highest honor in the Japanese honors system.
Personal life
[edit]Satō married Hiroko Matsuoka (松岡 寛子, 5 January 1907 – 16 April 1987) in 1926 and had two sons, Ryūtarō and Shinji. Hiroko's father, Matsusuke Satō, was Eisaku's paternal uncle. After Matsusuke died in 1911, Hiroko was raised by her maternal uncle, diplomat Yōsuke Matsuoka. Their son Shinji followed his father into politics, serving in both houses and as a cabinet minister. Shinji's son-in-law, Masashi Adachi, currently serves in the House of Councillors, and formerly worked as an aide for his cousin-in-law, Eisaku's grandnephew, Shinzo Abe.
In a 1969 Shukan Asahi interview with novelist Shūsaku Endō, Hiroko accused Satō of being a rake and a wife-beater.[21] His hobbies included golf, fishing, and the Japanese tea ceremony.[3] Nobusuke Kishi (his older brother) and Shinzō Abe (his grandnephew) were also both prime ministers.[22]
Honours
[edit]Satō received the following awards:
- Golden Pheasant Award of the Scout Association of Japan (1970)[23]
- Grand Cordon of the Order of the Chrysanthemum (3 November 1972)
- Nobel Peace Prize (12 May 1974)[3]
- Collar of the Order of the Chrysanthemum (3 June 1975; posthumous)
- Junior First Rank (3 June 1975)
Foreign honours
[edit]- Spain: Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Isabella the Catholic (23 February 1965)[24]
- Malaysia: Honorary Grand Commander of the Order of the Defender of the Realm (S.M.N.) (1967)[25]
- Singapore: The Order of Temasek (25 September 1967)[26]
- Mexico: Sash of the Order of the Aztec Eagle (9 March 1972)
- Paraguay: Grand Cross of National Order of Merit (5 April 1972)
- South Korea: Order of Diplomatic Service Merit (1969)[27]
- Laos: Order of the Million Elephants and the White Parasol (1966)
- Indonesia: Star of the Republic of Indonesia, 2nd Class (1973)
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Yamada, Eizō; 山田栄三 (1988). Seiden Satō Eisaku. Shinchōsha. p. 23. ISBN 4-10-370701-1. OCLC 20260847.
- ^ Kurzman, Dan (1960). Kishi and Japan: The Search for the Sun. Obolensky. ISBN 9780839210573.
- ^ a b c "The Nobel Peace Prize 1974". Nobel Prize. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
- ^ Weiner, Tim (9 October 1994). "C.I.A. Spent Millions to Support Japanese Right in 50's and 60's". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 16 July 2022.
- ^ Kapur, Nick (2018). Japan at the Crossroads: Conflict and Compromise after Anpo. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. p. 98. ISBN 978-0674984424.
- ^ Feilier. Learning to Bow. Page 80
- ^ MacMillan. Nixon and Mao: The Week that Changed the World
- ^ "Imagine This: Japan Builds Nuclear Weapons". 25 May 2019.
- ^ "Editorial: The U.S. nuclear umbrella, past and future". Archived from the original on 19 January 2021. Retrieved 9 January 2011.
- ^ "Document on secret Japan-U.S. nuclear pact kept by ex-PM Sato's family". Archived from the original on 17 October 2018. Retrieved 9 January 2011.
- ^ Ambrose. The Rise to Globalism. Page 235
- ^ Hoshiro, Hiroyuki (7 May 2007). "Postwar Japanese and Southeast Asian History - A New Viewpoint". Research and Information Center for Asian Studies. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
- ^ Tsuda 2023, pp. 8–9.
- ^ Tsuda 2023, p. 12.
- ^ Tsuda 2023, pp. 13–14.
- ^ "Eisaku Sato". Nobel Prize. The Norwegian Nobel Institute. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
- ^ Pace, Eric (14 October 1990). "Le Duc Tho, Top Hanoi Aide, Dies at 79". The New York Times. Retrieved 21 October 2013.
- ^ Tsuda 2023, pp. 18–19.
- ^ Tsuda 2023, p. 13.
- ^ Tsuda 2023, p. 19.
- ^ "The Wife Tells All". Time. 10 January 1969. Archived from the original on 17 December 2007. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
- ^ "1986 dual elections offer clue to Abe's plans".
- ^ 䝪䞊䜲䝇䜹䜴䝖日本連盟 きじ章受章者 [Recipient of the Golden Pheasant Award of the Scout Association of Japan] (PDF). Reinanzaka Scout Club (in Japanese). 23 May 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 August 2020.
- ^ "Boletín Oficial del Estado" (PDF).
- ^ "Semakan Penerima Darjah Kebesaran, Bintang dan Pingat". Archived from the original on 19 July 2019. Retrieved 24 August 2018.
- ^ "Indonesia President Yudhoyono Conferred The Singapore Order of Temasek (First Class)". 11 September 2014.
- ^ South Korean Government Decorated 12 Japanese Extreme Right Figures
Books
[edit]- Tsuda, Taro (17 October 2023). "Elder statesman as a jack-of-all-trades: The case of Satō Eisaku in 1970s Japan". Contemporary Japan. doi:10.1080/18692729.2023.2247735.
Further reading
[edit]- Dufourmont, Eddy (2008). "Satō Eisaku, Yasuoka Masahiro and the Re-Establishment of 11 February as National Day: the Political Use of National Memory in Postwar Japan". In Wolfgang Schwentker and Sven Saaler ed., The Power of Memory in Modern Japan, Brill, pp. 204–222. ISBN 978-19-05-24638-0
- Edström Bert (1999). Japan's Evolving Foreign Policy Doctrine: From Yoshida to Miyazawa. Palgrave Macmillan. Chapter 5: "The Cautious and Discreet Prime Minister: Satō Eisaku". ISBN 978-1-349-27303-4
- Hattori, Ryuji (2020). Eisaku Sato, Japanese Prime Minister, 1964–72: Okinawa, Foreign Relations, Domestic Politics and the Nobel Prize. Routledge. ISBN 978-1003083306
- Hoey, Fintan (2015). Satō, America and the Cold War: US-Japanese Relations, 1964–72. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-137-45763-9
- Kapur, Nick (2018). "The Empire Strikes Back? The 1968 Meiji Centennial Celebrations and the Revival of Japanese Nationalism". Japanese Studies 38:3. pp. 305–328.
- Tsuda, Taro (2019). Satō Eisaku and the Establishment of Single-Party Rule in Postwar Japan[permanent dead link]. PhD dissertation. Harvard University.
External links
[edit]- Film Footage of Eisaku Sato's State Visit to Washington DC Archived 26 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine
- Eisaku Satō on Nobelprize.org including the Nobel Lecture 11 December 1974 The Pursuit of Peace and Japan in the Nuclear Age
- Satō Eisaku EB article
- Japanese government home page
- Brief summary of the debate around Eiskau Sato's Nobel Prize at OpenLearn Archived 7 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
- 1901 births
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- Japanese Nobel laureates
- Nobel Peace Prize laureates
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- Satō–Kishi–Abe family