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KWANTUNG ARMY (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   123490


Army that never was: the unrealistic 1936 Kwantung army plan for an inner Mongolian army / Boyd, James   Journal Article
Boyd, James Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Between 1932 and 1945 the Japanese military raised a number of 'puppet' armies. While research has focused on the motives of those who opted to collaborate with the Japanese during the period, little work has been done regarding the composition of these forces. The article examines the Kwantung Army's January 1936 plans for an Inner Mongolian Army, and the reasons why this 'army' never eventuated in the form that had been planned. This sheds light on how officers of the Kwantung Army understood, and misunderstood, the potential of peoples of North China to become useful collaborators in wresting the region from the Nationalist Chinese control.
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2
ID:   184037


Japanese military intelligence activity against the USSR: 1922-1945 / Zorikhin, Aleksandr   Journal Article
Aleksandr ZORIKHIN Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract A Japanese military intelligence agency has been continuously operating globally since 1871, and Russia has been consistently a major target of it. Following the end of the intervention in 1922, the government of Japan proceeded to improve relations with the USSR, for which reason the intelligence services of the Empire monitored military and economic capacity-building measures and the foreign policy of the Soviet authorities in the Far East, refraining from subversive activities. Soviet national security agencies managed to feed the military intelligence of Japan, the central intelligence body of the Empire, with overstated information about the status of the Red Army. That is why, from 1923 to 1931, Tokyo's military planning with respect to the USSR was defensive in nature.
Key Words Intelligence  Japan  Military Mission  Agent  Kwantung Army  Soviet Union 
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