كاكوي تاناكا

(تم التحويل من Kakuei Tanaka)
Kakuei Tanaka
田中 角栄
Kakuei Tanaka 197207.jpg
Portrait photo released on appointment of Prime Minister as Prime Minister
رئيس وزراء اليابان رقم 40
في المنصب
7 July 1972 – 9 December 1974
العاهل Shōwa
سبقه Eisaku Satō
خلفه Takeo Miki
Minister of International Trade and Industry
في المنصب
5 July 1971 – 7 July 1972
رئيس الوزراء Eisaku Satō
سبقه Kiichi Miyazawa
خلفه Yasuhiro Nakasone
Minister of Finance
في المنصب
18 July 1962 – 3 June 1965
رئيس الوزراء Hayato Ikeda
Eisaku Satō
سبقه Mikio Mizuta
خلفه Takeo Fukuda
Minister of Posts and Telecommunications
في المنصب
10 July 1957 – 12 June 1958
رئيس الوزراء Nobusuke Kishi
سبقه Taro Hirai
خلفه Yutaka Terao
تفاصيل شخصية
وُلِد (1918-05-04)4 مايو 1918
Nishiyama, Japan
توفي 16 ديسمبر 1993(1993-12-16) (aged 75)
طوكيو، اليابان
الحزب Liberal Democratic Party (1955–1993)
انتماءات سياسية
أخرى
Democratic Party (1947–1950)
Democratic Liberal Party (1950–1955)
الزوج Hana Sakamoto
الأنجال Masanori Tanaka (by Hana Sakamoto, died age 4)
Makiko Tanaka (by Hana Sakamoto)
Kyo Tanaka (by Tsujiwako)
Hitoshi Tanaka (by Tsujiwako)
Atsuko Sato (by Akiko Sato)
التوقيع
Military career
الولاء اليابان
الخدمة/الفرع إمبراطورية اليابان
سنين الخدمة1939-1941
الرتبةSuperior Private
المعارك/الحروبSecond Sino-Japanese War
Second World War

Kakuei Tanaka (田中 角栄 or 田中 角榮, Tanaka Kakuei, 4 May 1918 – 16 December 1993) was a Japanese politician who served in the House of Representatives from 26 April 1947 to 24 January 1990, and as the 40th Prime Minister of Japan from 7 July 1972 to 9 December 1974 (his two terms being divided by the 1972 general election).

After a power struggle with Takeo Fukuda, he became the most influential member of the ruling Liberal Democratic Party from the mid-1960s until the mid-1980s. He was a central figure in several political scandals, culminating in the Lockheed bribery scandals of 1976 which led to his arrest and trial; he was found guilty by two lower courts, but his case remained open before the Supreme Court through his death. The scandals, coupled with a debilitating stroke he suffered in 1985, led to the collapse of his political faction, with most members regrouping under the leadership of Noboru Takeshita in 1987.[بحاجة لمصدر]

He was nicknamed Kaku-san[1] and was known as the "Shadow Shōgun" (闇将軍, Yami-shōgun).[2][3] His political-economic direction is called the construction state (土建国家, Doken Kokka).[4] He was strongly identified with the construction industry but never served as construction minister.[3] His daughter Makiko Tanaka and son-in-law Naoki Tanaka remain active political figures in Japan.


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رئيس الوزراء

پورتريه حين أصبح كاكوي تاناكا رئيساً للوزراء
كاكوي تاناكا مع ريتشارد نيكسون (في واشنطن العاصمة في يوليو 1973)

Although Satō wanted Fukuda to become the next prime minister, Tanaka's popularity, along with support from the factions of Yasuhiro Nakasone and Masayoshi Ōhira, gave him a 282–190 victory over Fukuda in the LDP's 1971 party president election. He entered the office with the highest popularity rating of any new premier in Japanese history.


السياسة الخارجية

One of Tanaka's most remembered achievements is normalizing Japanese relations with the People's Republic of China, which occurred around the same time as Richard Nixon's efforts to do the same for Chinese relations with the United States.[5] In 1972, Tanaka met with Chinese premier Zhou Enlai to discuss the normalization of relations between the two countries. Among other matters, they discussed the Senkaku Islands, which would later become a major point of contention between the two countries. Tanaka reportedly asked Zhou "What is your view on the Senkaku Islands? Some people say things about them to me," to which Zhou replied "I do not want to talk about it this time. If there wasn't oil, neither Taiwan nor the United States would make this an issue."[6] Just two months after taking office, Tanaka met Chinese Communist Party chairman Mao Zedong.[5]

During 1973 and 1974, Tanaka visited the United States, France, Britain, West Germany, Italy, the Soviet Union, the Philippines, Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia. He appeared on the US television program Meet the Press to have a direct dialogue with Americans during his visit to the US in July/August 1973. His visit to Europe was the first visit by a Japanese prime minister since 1962, and his visit to the USSR was the first since 1956.[7]

His state visit to Indonesia as invited by President Soeharto to discuss Indo-Japanese trade relations was protested by a number of local anti-Japanese sentiments denying international investment, which occurred on 15 January 1974. Japanese-manufactured material and buildings were destroyed by Indonesian protesters. 11 people were dead, a further 300 were injured, and 775 protesters were arrested. As a result, the Soeharto regime dissolved the president's private counselor constitution and took control of the national security leadership. The incident henceforth became well known as the Malari Incident (Peristiwa Malari).

السياسة الاقتصادية

Upon taking office in 1972, Tanaka published an ambitious infrastructure plan for Japan which called for a new network of expressways and high-speed rail lines throughout the country. It was a plan that Tanaka once wrote in his book "Theory of Remodeling the Japanese Islands".He envisioned moving more economic functions to secondary cities with populations in the 300,000–400,000 range, and linking these cities to Tokyo, Osaka and other cores by high-speed rail, a revolutionary view at a time when only one Shinkansen line existed.[5]

انظر أيضاً

الهامش

  1. ^ "The World: Tanaka: Prisoner of 'Money Power'." Time. Monday August 9, 1976. Retrieved on August 29, 2010.
  2. ^ "Dark Day for the Shadow Shogun". Time. 1.
  3. ^ أ ب Sterngold, James (17 December 1993). "Kakuei Tanaka, 75, Ex-Premier and Political Force in Japan, Dies". New York Times. Retrieved 15 January 2014.
  4. ^ McCormack, Gavan. "Koizumi's Kingdom of Illusion". The Asia-Pacific Journal: Japan Focus. Under Tanaka and his successors, "the doken kokka spread a web of power and corruption throughout the country....
  5. ^ أ ب ت خطأ استشهاد: وسم <ref> غير صحيح؛ لا نص تم توفيره للمراجع المسماة ikegami
  6. ^ Ikeda, Takashi (26 November 2013). "Getting Senkaku History Right". The Diplomat. Retrieved 15 January 2014.
  7. ^ "Diplomatic Efforts Made by Japan: Prime Minister Tanaka's Visits to Various Countries". Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Japan). Retrieved 15 January 2014.

وصلات خارجية

مجلس نواب اليابان
منصب حديث Chair, Committee on Commerce and Industry of the مجلس النواب الياباني
1955
تبعه
Hiroshi Kanda
مناصب سياسية
سبقه
Taro Hirai
Minister of Posts and Telecommunications
1957–1958
تبعه
Yutaka Terao
سبقه
Mikio Mizuta
Minister of Finance
1962–1965
تبعه
Takeo Fukuda
سبقه
Kiichi Miyazawa
Minister of International Trade and Industry
1971–1972
تبعه
Yasuhiro Nakasone
سبقه
Eisaku Satō
Prime Minister of Japan
1972–1974
تبعه
Takeo Miki
مناصب حزبية
سبقه
Takeo Fukuda
Chair, Policy Research Committee of the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan
1961–1962
تبعه
Okinori Kaya
سبقه
Takeo Miki
Secretary General of the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan
1965–1966
تبعه
Takeo Fukuda
سبقه
Takeo Fukuda
Secretary General of the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan
1968–1971
تبعه
Shigeru Hori
سبقه
Eisaku Satō
President of the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan
1972–1974
تبعه
Takeo Miki
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