Emperor Hirohito of Japan recorded the imperial edict in his office. Although Emperor Hirohito ordered the surrender on 10, hardliners including Army Prime Minister Anamin, Chief of General Staff Umezu Yoshijiro, Kamikaze Special Forces Captain West Weixi, former Japanese Prime Minister Ji Tianmao, Foreign Minister Shigemitsu Mamoru and Interior Minister Yukio Hatoyama still failed to reach an agreement on the surrender.
14 August 10: 30, the emperor held the last command meeting. In the face of the main warring factions that have not yet reached a consensus, Hirohito decided to order the quarrel to stop and asked Prime Minister Suzuki to draft an imperial edict to prepare for the end of the war. Finally, the imperial edict was completed, and one of them was presented to the emperor, who decided to announce the imperial edict to the world in August 15. The emperor came to his office in the middle of the night to record the imperial edict, and ended the recording in the morning 1. Because Kimura Koichi, the home secretary, got the news that someone was planning a rebellion in the War Department and ordered the recording to be hidden.
/kloc-in the early morning of August, 0/5, in order to prevent the release of Emperor Hirohito's imperial edict, army officers Masahiko Takeshita, Jiro Yoshizaki and other rebel officers killed Lieutenant General Takeshi Mori, the head of the Guards Division, and issued a military mobilization order in the name of the head of the Guards Division, which once took control of the palace. But before they found the records, General Tanaka (the Japanese army in charge of national defense affairs in kanto region, Japan) put down the rebellion (it is said that Emperor Hirohito came forward to solve the rebellion), and most of the first attempts of the rebellion ended in suicide. 12, after announcer Tian Xinxian released the hour time to the audience, the studio of Japan Broadcasting Association played "Jade Sound Broadcasting".