Hideki Tojo

Hideki Tōjō (1884–1948) was a general in the Imperial Japanese Army and the 40th Prime Minister of Japan during much of World War II, serving from 18 October 1941 to 22 July 1944. After the end of the war, Tōjō was sentenced to death for war crimes.

Hideki Tojo in Worldwar
Hideki Tojo was the prime minister of Japan during the aborted World War II and the invasion of Earth by the Race's Conquest Fleet. Under his administration, hundreds of thousands of Chinese, Filipino and Korean civilians and Allied prisoners of war were abused, enslaved, tortured, starved, raped, and subjected to brutal medical experimentation. Prisoners from the Race's Conquest Fleet were treated similarly and were often forcibly addicted to ginger to make them more tractable.

Tojo survived the Race's explosive-metal bomb attack on Tokyo and lived to see Atvar call for a peace conference at Cairo in 1944. Japan was invited, and Tojo sent Shigenori Togo to represent him.

Given how barbarically Tojo had treated Americans and their allies in World War II, one might have expected the United States to put pressure on Japan to oust him when the smaller country fell within the larger one's economic sphere of influence after the Peace of Cairo. However, Tojo was still prime minister in 1965 at the age of eighty-one. He attended the funeral of President Earl Warren in Little Rock, Arkansas.

Hideki Tojo in Days of Infamy
Hideki Tojo gave his blessing to the invasion of Hawaii in December, 1941, despite his misgivings as an army general.

Hideki Tojo in The War That Came Early
Hideki Tojo became Prime Minister of Japan in the closing days of 1940 as relations between Japan and the United State deteriorated, until war came in January, 1941. During his term, Japan was able to fight not only the U.S., but Britain, France, and Dutch forces in the Pacific, making substantial territorial gains very quickly.