Who signed the unconditional surrender of Japan?

From August 265438 to February1August 23, 945, the world-famous negotiation and surrender conference of Japanese invaders was held in Qiliqiao, Zhijiang, Hunan. He Qinying, commander-in-chief of the China Theater Army, accepted the surrender of Takeo Imai, deputy chief of staff of the Chinese Dispatching Command (dispatched by Okamura Ningji, the supreme commander of the Japanese invaders), marking the complete disillusionment of Japanese imperialism's attempt to destroy China, thus writing the most glorious page of the Chinese nation's resistance to foreign aggression. After Zhijiang surrendered, the Japanese base camp ordered all Japanese troops to surrender on September 3rd, and China was divided into 16 airdrop zone 10 1 to accept the Japanese surrender. It was the first contact between representatives of the Chinese and Japanese armed forces after the war, with the aim of preparing for Nanjing's surrender. This is the first time since the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-1895 that a representative of Japan sat in the seat of the defeated, waiting for orders from the Chinese side. 1945 On September 9th, the Japanese surrender ceremony in China Theater was held in Nanjing. On behalf of China, He accepted the surrender signed and sealed by Okamura Ningji, commander-in-chief of the Japanese invaders (submitted by Kobayashi Saburo, chief of staff of the Japanese invaders)1At 9: 00 on September 2, 945, the Japanese surrender ceremony was held on the USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay. Shigemitsu Mamoru, Japan's new foreign minister, signed the surrender letter on behalf of the Japanese emperor and * * *, and Umezu Yoshijiro, the army chief of staff, signed the surrender letter on behalf of the Imperial Base Camp. Subsequently, representatives of the allied countries who accepted the surrender, General MacArthur, Supreme Commander of the Allied Forces, Admiral Nimitz of the United States, Admiral Xu Yongchang of China, Admiral Fleischer of the United Kingdom, Admiral Jerry Vico of the Soviet Union and representatives of Australia, Canada, France, the Netherlands and New Zealand signed in turn. At this point, Japan, the last of the three fascist axis countries, formally surrendered.