A12 THE SPOKESMAN • TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 2022 OFFBEAT OREGON Part 2 of the opium smuggler’s foster son E ditor’s note: This is the second in a three-part series on Oregon- raised Yosuke Matsuoka, who became the foreign minister of Imperial Japan. BY FINN J.D. JOHN Yosuke Matsuoka left his Oregon home for the last time in 1902, when he was 22 years old. He’d lived in Oregon and, briefly, California, since age 13. His Oregon years had been happy ones, and he would re- member them fondly for the rest of his life. Oregon would remember him fondly, too — until Pearl Harbor Day, of course. Within 25 years of his graduation he would be probably the most famous University of Oregon alumnus in the world. Within 50, he was its most notorious. That, of course, was all far in the future. Just now, back in Japan, Matsuoka was not find- ing his hard-earned U. of O. degree very useful; no Japanese universities would recognize it. That effectively foreclosed future studies at Tokyo Impe- rial University. As the son of a merchant, he lacked any of the family connections that might be parlayed into a civil service career, nor did he have any law- school connections that could help him in Japan. So he took the Foreign Ser- vice exam instead and launched upon a career as a diplomat. As a diplomat, Matsuoka was excellent. His natural “gift of gab” had been nurtured and shaped in the boisterous, out- going style of frontier Oregon. He’d worked in a newspaper office in Oakland, Calif., for long enough to know how to get along well with reporters. He could be garrulous and gaffe prone, but he was generous with his time, was obviously brilliant, and was very good at the political games that always come along with diplomacy. He quickly rose through the ranks. After World War One, he was in the Japanese delegation to the Versailles Peace Conference. For many years after that Matsuoka served as an exec- utive in the South Manchu- rian Railway Company, a Jap- anese-owned railroad cutting through Chinese territory which Japan had seized from Tsarist Russia in the Russo-Jap- anese War. Then in 1931 came the “Manchuria Incident.” A cabal of Japanese army officers blew up some dynamite near a South Manchurian Railway Company line, blamed the Chinese for it, and used it as a pretext to invade and occupy Manchuria and set up the puppet state of Man- chuko there. Faced with this fait Sources Agony of Choice: Matsuoka Yosuke and the Rise and Fall of the Japanese Empire, 1880-1946, a book by David J. Lu published in 2002 by Lexington Books; “Yosuke Matsuoka: The Far-Western Roots of a World-Political Vision,” an article by Masa- haru Ano published in the Summer 1997 issue of Or- egon Historical Quarterly; “Americans Rate Canada, Britain, France, Japan Most Favorably,” an article by Me- gan Brenan published on news.gallup.com on March 14, 2022 accompli, and wanting to keep the conquered territory, the Japanese government backed the officers up. The League of Nations strongly objected, and Matsuoka, by now a widely in- ternationally known diplomat, was assigned to the League to handle the fallout. Matsuoka was bitterly op- posed to the idea of Japan with- drawing from the League of Nations and tried very hard to prevent it. But, ironically enough, it was he that had to lead the Japanese delegation in their dramatic walkout on Feb. 24, 1933. On the way back to Japan, Matsuoka worried about what his reception might be. After all, his diplomacy had failed — Japan had withdrawn from the League of Nations. As a businessman, he knew what that meant. Internationally, it was a bad look. It made Japan look like a rogue state and an unreliable foreign investment partner. But when he arrived back home, he was welcomed as a hero. The pageantry of the Jap- anese delegation’s dramatic exit, heads held high in solemn dig- nity, had appealed to the pop- ulace. Matsuoka was, at that moment, the most popular man in Japan other than the actual emperor. But all was not as peachy as it might have looked. With no personal family networks to support him, he had to seek support where he could find it. And the business elites that would ordinarily be with him were furious about Japan’s with- drawal from the League. It may have been an important point of national honor, but it was going to cost them a lot of money. Ja- pan was now almost an interna- tional pariah. And yet the population of la- borers and farm workers loved him. So Matsuoka took the path of William Jennings Bryan, whom he had once met in California, and stepped into the role of a populist politician. His idea was to build a fascist-style grassroots organization similar to the one Mussolini developed in Italy. But after two years of barn- storming around the country giving populist speeches, he knew he was not going to be able to get enough traction to build the mass support he’d need to overcome the challenges of being a political outsider. So in 1935, when offered the pres- idency of the South Manchuria Railroad, he accepted and went back to Manchuria. Then in 1940, Matsuoka’s old acquaintance Fumimaro Konoe took over as prime minister. Seeking a foreign minister who knew diplomacy and would get along well with the army and navy ministers, Konoe tapped Matsuoka for the job. Matsuoka was only foreign minister for a year. But it was an extraordinarily action-packed year. From the start, his goal was to forge an official alliance with Nazi Germany. He was convinced that only as a part- ner with Germany could Japan negotiate on an equal footing with its greatest Pacific rival, the United States. And he hoped that the treaty could be spun as a failure for the Roosevelt administration, caus- ing Roosevelt to lose the 1940 election. Matsuoka had given up on ever being able to do busi- ness with Roosevelt’s people — they were too intransigently opposed to Japan’s occupation of Manchuria, which he consid- ered an indispensable “lifeline” of raw materials for the island empire. A new administration under Wendell Wilkie would be eager to break from the old regime, and perhaps with the right kind of diplomacy it could be brought around to Japan’s way of thinking. Then the U.S. could broker a peace-with-honor deal for both China and Japan. Both countries had been bogged down in a stalemate in Manchu- ria for half a decade. The problem was, Mat- suoka thought he understood America, when in fact what he understood was the rough- and-tumble waterfront districts and lumber camps of 1890s Portland. He thought of Amer- icans as a bluff, straightforward bunch who despised weakness but respected guts and strength. He also thought of them as not being too hung up on things like anti-smuggling laws. The sheer audacity of the Blum-Dunbar gang’s opium operations had commanded respect in Port- land. Matsuoka thought Amer- icans would respond positively to similar kinds of audacity played out on the international FIND IT in the SPOKESMAN CLASSIFIEDS stage in Manchuria. He also seems not to have understood that the Japanese army’s atroci- ties in Manchuria were the real problem there. But America in 1940 was completely unlike waterfront Portland in 1893. In fact, throughout the late 1930s, Or- egon raconteur Stewart Hol- brook made a good living pumping old retired waterfront gangsters for stories of those crazy old days and publishing them in the Morning Oregonian for modern readers to shake their heads over in amazement at how much different their world had become. Matsuoka was a living anach- ronism, and his confidence in his understanding of the coun- try he spent his teenage years in was about to bite him, and his country, really hard. — This is the second install- ment of a three-part series. We’ll talk about how that Matsuoka’s misplaced ideas played out next week. █ Finn J.D. John teaches at Oregon State University and writes about odd tidbits of Oregon history. His book, Heroes and Rascals of Old Oregon, was recently published by Ouragan House Publishers. To contact him or suggest a topic: finn@offbeatoregon.com or 541- 357-2222. 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