Imperial Japanese Navy

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From its beginning during the Meiji Restoration in 1869, to its World War II defeat in 1945, the Imperial Japanese Navy was the branch of the Japanese military responsible for naval warfare. While competition between armies and navies was common in many nations, there was unusual separation, despite the existence of Imperial General Headquarters (Japan), between the Japanese Army and Navy.

Again as with other countries, there was a Navy Ministry with administrative responsibility and a Naval General Staff headed by the senior professional Chief of Naval General Staff. Below the Chief of Staff was the Commander-in-Chief, Combined Fleet, who had operational but not policy responsibility. For example, Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto had been Navy Vice-Minister during the policy discussions about starting the Second World War. He was transferred to Combined Fleet, in part, because there was a credible assassination threat to him from pro-war zealots, and, since the CinC's headquarters was on a battleship, he could be better protected.[1]

The Cabinet Law (Japan) gave the Army and Navy a de facto veto over any Japanese government, since it required that the Army and Navy present candidate Army and Navy Minister from the list of serving officers. If a service declined to name a candidate, no Prime Minister could form a government.

References

  1. Hiroyuki Agawa (1982), The Reluctant Admiral: Yamamoto and the Imperial Navy, Kodansha America, ISBN 978-0870115127