A native of
Aichi Prefecture, Kanda graduated from the 23rd class of the
Imperial Japanese Army Academy in 1911 and was assigned to the
Kwantung Army and based out of the
South Manchurian Railway office in
Harbin in his early career. He graduated from the 31st class of the
Army Staff College in 1934. From 1934–1936, he was assigned as
military attaché to
Turkey. On his return to Japan, he served for a year as an instructor at the Army War College before being reassigned to serve as Chief of the 4th Section of the 2nd Bureau of the
Imperial Japanese Army General Staff, where he was (despite his fluency in the
Russian language) in charge of collecting and analyzing
military intelligence reports from
Europe and
North America. With the outbreak of the
Second Sino-Japanese War in 1937, he was assigned briefly to be commander of the IJA 45th Infantry Regiment, but soon returned to a staff position as Chief of the 1st Section (and later Chief of the 1st Bureau) of the powerful
Inspectorate General of Military Training. In 1941, he was promoted to
Lieutenant general and commander of the
IJA 6th Division, which was initially assigned to China, and fought at the
Third Battle of Changsha. The division was later transferred to the
Solomon Islands from 1943–1945. He was second-in-command of the
IJA 17th Army under General
Harukichi Hyakutake during the initial period of the
Bougainville campaign, and (as
lieutenant general) later took command of the 17th Army after Hyakutake suffered a stroke in 1945. Kanda surrendered Japanese forces on
Bougainville to
Allied commanders on 8 September 1945. After the war, Kanda was tried and convicted of
war crimes by the Allies, sentenced to 14 years imprisonment, and began his sentence in 1948. He served four years in prison, and was released in 1952. He died in 1983. ==References==