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For a general list of fascist movements, see List of fascist movements. This list has been divided into four sections for reasons of length: List of fascist movements by country A–F; List of fascist movements by country G–M; List of fascist movements by country N–T; List of fascist movements by country U–Z
Military cliques began to dominate the national government starting in the 1930s. A major militarist nationalist movement which existed in Japan from the 1920s to the 1930s was the Imperial Way Faction, or "Kodoha". In 1936, Japan and Germany signed the Anti-Comintern Pact, aimed at countering the Soviet Union and the Communist International.
Tōhōkai (東方会, Society of the East) was a Japanese fascist political party. The party was active in Japan during the 1930s and early 1940s. Its origins lay in the right-wing political organization Kokumin Domei which was formed by Adachi Kenzō in 1933.
List of fascist movements; List of fascist movements by country; List of Ku Klux Klan organizations; List of neo-Nazi bands. List of National Socialist black metal bands; List of organizations designated by the Southern Poverty Law Center as hate groups; List of white nationalist organizations; Radical right (Europe) Radical right (United States)
Fascism Today: A World Survey is a book by the historian Angelo Del Boca, writing with Mario Giovana.It is a survey of radical right-wing movements, from the roots of fascism to a present-day (1960s) country-by-country discussion.
The National Socialist Japanese Workers' Party [nb 1] is a neo-Nazi political party in Japan. It is headed by Kazunari Yamada [ ja ] , who maintains a website and blog which includes praise for Adolf Hitler and the September 11 attacks .
Tricolour Flame – far-right neo-fascist; Italian Social Movement – right-wing to far-right, from 1946 to 1995; National Fascist Party – historic, ruled Italy from 1922 to 1943; Republican Fascist Party; Fascism and Freedom Movement – far-right, neo-fascist and anti-zionist, split from Italian Social Movement
Nobusuke Kishi, one of the leaders of the reform bureaucrats. The reform bureaucrats (Japanese: 革新官僚, Hepburn: Kakushin Kanryō), also called revisionist bureaucrats or renovationist bureaucrats, were a group of Japanese civilian statesmen and planners during and after the Second World War, active in the states of the Empire of Japan and its puppet state, Manchukuo.