Tokubetsu Koto Keisatu: Difference between revisions

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Translated variously as "Special Higher Police" or "Thought Police", the '''''Tokubetsu koto keisatu''''' a civilian security organization of pre-1945 Japanese [[Naimusho]] (loosely translated "Home Ministry"), distinct from the military [[kempetai]], [[Civilian Spy Service]], or naval and military intelligence. Another common Japanese name for it was simply Tokko, but this must be disambiguated from the use of Tokko to cover all suicide attacks, not simply [[kamikaze]] aircraft.
First created in 1911 as an agency of the Police Bureau (Naimusho Keihokyoko) of the [[Naimusho]] home ministry, it was formalized as the enforcement arm of the [[Peace Preservation Law]] of 1925,<ref>{{citation
| url = http://www.willamette.edu/~rloftus/peacepres.html
| title = Peace Preservation Law (Chian-ijihô)
| author = Ronald P. Loftus
| publisher = Willamette University
}}</ref> it was  focused on subversion against the [[kokutai]] essence of Japan, as well as the monarchy. The Law criminalized communism and socialism.
By 1928, there were offices in each prefectural capital, as well as foreign offices in  Berlin, Shanghai, and London. A 1932 reorganization created the departments:<ref>{{citation
| title = An instance of treason: Ozaki Hotsumi and the Sorge spy ring
| author = Chalmers A. Johnson
|  publisher = Stanford University Press | year = 1990
| url = http://books.google.com/books?id=x-aeAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA8&lpg=PA8&dq=Naimusho+%22thought+police%22&source=bl&ots=kARehe1Hhr&sig=IyWPEmycjEuE15TQguPD_bU8H98&hl=en&ei=qfOSTNuPDsP98Ab9tvyMDA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=4&ved=0CCEQ6AEwAzgK#v=onepage&q=Naimusho%20%22thought%20police%22&f=false
}}</ref>
#Left-wing activities
#Right-wing activities
#Foreign nationals in Japan
#Labor relations
#Koreans in Japan
#Arbitration
==References==
{{reflist|2}}

Revision as of 13:33, 17 September 2010

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Translated variously as "Special Higher Police" or "Thought Police", the Tokubetsu koto keisatu a civilian security organization of pre-1945 Japanese Naimusho (loosely translated "Home Ministry"), distinct from the military kempetai, Civilian Spy Service, or naval and military intelligence. Another common Japanese name for it was simply Tokko, but this must be disambiguated from the use of Tokko to cover all suicide attacks, not simply kamikaze aircraft.

First created in 1911 as an agency of the Police Bureau (Naimusho Keihokyoko) of the Naimusho home ministry, it was formalized as the enforcement arm of the Peace Preservation Law of 1925,[1] it was focused on subversion against the kokutai essence of Japan, as well as the monarchy. The Law criminalized communism and socialism.

By 1928, there were offices in each prefectural capital, as well as foreign offices in Berlin, Shanghai, and London. A 1932 reorganization created the departments:[2]

  1. Left-wing activities
  2. Right-wing activities
  3. Foreign nationals in Japan
  4. Labor relations
  5. Koreans in Japan
  6. Arbitration

References

  1. Ronald P. Loftus, Peace Preservation Law (Chian-ijihô), Willamette University
  2. Chalmers A. Johnson (1990), An instance of treason: Ozaki Hotsumi and the Sorge spy ring, Stanford University Press