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  1. Hiroshi Saito (斎藤 博, Saitō Hiroshi, December 24, 1886 – February 26, 1939) was the Japanese ambassador to the United States from 1934 till his resignation in October 1938. He died months later in February 1939.

  2. Jan 1, 2015 · Hornbeck warned FDR that a former U.S. ambassador to Japan had attended a banquet at which the Japanese ambassador (presumably Saito) had told him that the embassy hoped Matsukata would stay in Washington “indefinitely” for just such a purpose.

  3. Who was Ambassador Saitō, and why does a monument on his behalf stand today at the Naval Academy?

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  4. Nov 30, 2018 · Several months later, Japanese ambassador to the United States Hiroshi Saito elaborated on Konoe’s position in a speech printed in the journal World Affairs at the same as time the events were occurring in Nanjing (December 1937):

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    Funeral ceremonies held for Hiroshi Saito, Japanese ambassador, and American visitors in Japan, 1939

    Album documents the funeral ceremonies of the Japanese ambassador Hiroshi Saito and the activities of the accompanying American Navy representatives and U.S. and Japanese government delegates in Ja...

    - Saitō, Hiroshi,--1886-1939--Death & burial--Japan
    - Funeral rites & ceremonies--Japan--1930-1940
    - Military personnel--American--Japan--1930-1940
    - Sailors--American--Japan--1930-1940
    Portrait photographs--1930-1940
    Group portraits--1930-1940
    Photographic prints--1930-1940
    Photograph albums--1930-1940
    - Title devised by Library staff.
    - Most photographs have brief typewritten captions. Prints measure 23 x 17 cm.
    - Transfer; 1954.

    Rights status of individual images not evaluated. For general information see: "Copyright and Other Restrictions ...," https://www.loc.gov/rr/print/195_copr.html

  5. The task of justifying what, to much of the world, appeared as naked aggression fell to Japanese politicians and diplomats. Hiroshi Saito, Japanese ambassador to the United States, delivered the following explanation, which was reprinted in the journal World Affairs in December 1937.

  6. PROFILE of Hirosi Saito, the Japanese Ambassador tells about his career, his shrewdness as a diplomat, his hobbies, and family life. Long residence in this country and wide reading of American...

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