TY - JOUR
T1 - [In Press] The Imperial Japanese Army’s Tokumu Kikan-Special Service Organisations : connections between wartime and peacetime intelligence activities
AU - Llewelyn, James
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - The Imperial Japanese Army’s (IJA) Tokumu Kikan, or Special Service Organisations were special warfare units that specialised in HUMINT collection and fifth column activities. These small well-trained military-civilian elite units were force multipliers for the IJA, operating in China, as well as across Southeast Asia in support of Japan’s southward advance. Under central figures such as former chief of IJA intelligence, Lieutenant General Arisue Seizō, many wartime Tokumu Kikan personnel undertook a suite of new intelligence activities in the post-war period–inside Japan and in neighbouring countries–as Japan sought to manage its defeat and occupation, and rebuild its intelligence capabilities.
AB - The Imperial Japanese Army’s (IJA) Tokumu Kikan, or Special Service Organisations were special warfare units that specialised in HUMINT collection and fifth column activities. These small well-trained military-civilian elite units were force multipliers for the IJA, operating in China, as well as across Southeast Asia in support of Japan’s southward advance. Under central figures such as former chief of IJA intelligence, Lieutenant General Arisue Seizō, many wartime Tokumu Kikan personnel undertook a suite of new intelligence activities in the post-war period–inside Japan and in neighbouring countries–as Japan sought to manage its defeat and occupation, and rebuild its intelligence capabilities.
UR - https://hdl.handle.net/1959.7/uws:60528
U2 - 10.1080/16161262.2021.1889277
DO - 10.1080/16161262.2021.1889277
M3 - Article
SN - 1616-1262
JO - Journal of Intelligence History
JF - Journal of Intelligence History
ER -