Tokubetsu Kōtō Keisatsu

The special higher police bureau, censorship section of the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department.

Special Higher Police (特別高等警察, Tokubetsu Kōtō Keisatsu), often shortened to Tokkō (特高, Tokkō), was a police force established in 1911 in Japan, specifically to investigate and control political groups and ideologies deemed to be a threat to public order.[1] Its main function was as a civilian counterpart to the military's Kempeitai and Tokkeitai, and it can be considered roughly equivalent to the Federal Bureau of Investigation in the United States in terms of combining both criminal investigation and counter-espionage functions. It has been less charitably compared to the Nazi Gestapo secret police. The Tokkō was also known as the Peace Police (治安警察, Chian Keisatsu) or more notoriously by the term Thought Police (思想警察, Shisō Keisatsu),[2]

History

The High Treason Incident of 1910 was the stimulus for the establishment of the Tokkō under the aegis of the Home Ministry. With the Russian Revolution, unrest at home due to the Rice Riots of 1918, increase in strikes and labor unrest from the labor movement, and Samil Uprising in Korea, the Tokkō was greatly expanded under the administration of Hara Takashi, and subsequent prime ministers. The Tokkō was charged with suppressing "dangerous thoughts" that could endanger the state. It was primarily concerned with anarchism, communism, socialism, and the growing foreign population within Japan, but its scope gradually increased to include religious groups, pacifists, student activists, liberals, and ultrarightists.

After the passage of the Peace Preservation Law of 1925, the power of the Tokkō was expanded tremendously, and it expanded to include branches in every Japanese prefecture, major city, and overseas locations with a large Japanese population (including Shanghai, London and Berlin). In the late 1920s and 1930s, the Tokkō launched a sustained campaign to destroy the Japanese Communist Party with several waves of mass arrests of known members, sympathizers and suspected sympathizers (March 15 incident).

The Tokkō was composed of six departments (Special Police Work, Foreign Surveillance, Koreans in Japan, Labor Relations, Censorship, Arbitration). In 1927, a sub-bureau was added, the Thought Section of the Criminal Affairs Bureau, to deal with the study and suppression of subversive ideologies. The Tokkō made use of both uniformed and non-uniformed officers, along with a large network of informants. These informants were often undercover officers infiltrating suspect organizations and acting as agents provocateur, or voluntary informants from Tonarigumi neighborhood associations. Counter-espionage activities also included monitoring external telephone and radio communications inside or outside Japan and nearby areas.

By 1936, the Tokkō had arrested 59,013 people, of whom 5000 had been brought to trial; about half of those received prison sentences. Prisoners were forced to write accounts of how they had become involved with "dangerous ideologies", rewriting these essays until their interrogators were happy with the work. These works then were used to prove their criminal involvement. The Tokkō was abolished in October 1945 by the Allied Occupation authorities. This directly led to prince Naruhiko Higashikuni's resignation as prime minister.

Principal agents and officers

Notable cases involving the Tokkō

  • The secret police of the futuristic country of Oceania are referred to as the Thought Police, abbreviated as Thinkpol in Newspeak in Nineteen Eighty-Four
  • The Tokubetsu Kōtō Keisatsu are the focus of a brief subplot in the 2013 Japanese film The Wind Rises; during the film, protagonist Jiro Horikoshi is informed that he is wanted by the Tokkō for his connections with an opponent of the Nazi Party, and is forced into hiding as a result.

See also

References

  1. W. G. Beasley, The Rise of Modern Japan, p 184 ISBN 0-312-04077-6
  2. Edwin P. Hoyt, Japan's War, p 113 ISBN 0-07-030612-5
  3. The Japanese Police State: Tokko in Interwar Japan By Elise K. Tipton Page 97
  4. Stalin's Spy: Richard Sorge and the Tokyo Espionage Ring By Robert Whymant

Bibliography

  • Botsman, Daniel V (2004). Punishment and Power in the Making of Modern Japan. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-11491-9.
  • Katzenstein, Peter J (1996). Cultural Norms and National Security: Police and Military in Postwar Japan. Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-8332-8.
  • Tipton, Elise (2001). Japanese Police State Tokko - the Interwar Japan. Allen and Unwin. ASIN: B000TYWIKW.

Further reading

  • Elise K. Tipton (May 8, 2014). Japanese Police State: Tokko in Interwar Japan. Bloomsbury Academic.
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