, 1947 Kido was not only the chief advisor to the emperor; he was a major liaison between the emperor and the government, and a representative of the Japanese government to the
Allied Occupation Forces. He advised
General MacArthur on many aspects of the logistics surrounding the surrender, the end of the war, and the
Occupation of Japan. One of his chief motives was consistently to protect the honor of the emperor. In the
International Military Tribunal for the Far East held in Tokyo after the war, Kido was charged as a
Class A War Criminal. He initially attempted to plead guilty in order to protect the emperor by taking all responsibility for imperial decisions advocating war unto himself. His personal diary, kept in detail since 1930, was voluntarily turned over to the prosecution, and became an important document in determining the internal workings of the Japanese government during the war and was often cited by the prosecution as evidence against the defendants, including Kido himself. Kido was found guilty of Counts 1, 27, 29, 31, and 32, and was sentenced to life imprisonment in
Sugamo Prison, Tokyo. In 1951, as the Occupation of Japan was ending, Kido sent a message to the emperor, advising him as he had advised three years earlier, to accept responsibility for the defeat and abdicate, at the end of the American Occupation. In addition, Kido opposed the idea of continuing to punish
war criminals under Japanese law after the end of the American Occupation. According to his diary, "those called war criminals by the enemy's standards, especially those in responsible positions, were all performing loyal duties, and to punish them in the name of the emperor would be unbearable". In 1953, due to health problems, Kido was released from prison. He lived the rest of his life in
Oiso,
Kanagawa Prefecture and had a flat in Tokyo's
Aoyama. He died at age 87 of
cirrhosis of the liver at the
Imperial Household Agency hospital in Tokyo in 1977. His grave is at the
Tama Cemetery in Tokyo. Kido was married to Kodama Tsuruko, the daughter of General
Kodama Gentaro. He had two sons and one daughter. ==Cabinet positions==