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The Black Dragon Society (Kyūjitai; 黑龍會; Shinjitai: 黒竜会, kokuryūkai), or the Amur River Society, was a prominent paramilitary, ultranationalist group in Japan. History [ edit ]
Tōyama Mitsuru (頭山 満, 27 May 1855 – 5 October 1944) was a Japanese far right and ultra nationalist politician who founded secret societies called Genyosha (Black Ocean Society) and Kokuryukai (Black Dragon Society). [1] [2] Tōyama was an Anti Communist and a strong proponent of Pan Asianism. [3]
Takahashi's Society for the Development of Our Own was a major organization in Black America responsible for the dissemination of pro-Japanese propaganda. [4] He recruited several thousand members to the Pan-Asian cause, most of them of African-American, Filipino, or East Asian descent.
Kōtarō Yoshida (吉田 幸太郎, Yoshida Kōtarō, October 1883–1966) [1] was a 19th- to 20th-century Japanese martial artist.There have been claims that Yoshida was a member of the Kokuryukai, Amur River Society (also known as the Black Dragon Society), an ultra-nationalist organization of disenfranchised ex-samurai who promulgated "pan-Asiatic ascendancy" in line with the rise of ...
The Kokuryu-kai, a successor to the Dark Ocean Society, actively participated in advancing the interests of Japanese ultranationalists. Tōyama Mitsuru, the founder of the Black Dragon Society, believed in the idea of the Hakkō ichiu and supported a war with the Soviet Union. [122]
The right-wing, ultranationalist Kokuryūkai (Amur River Association/Black Dragon Society), was founded in 1901. Kita—who held views on Russia and Korea remarkably similar to those espoused by the Kokuryukai—was sent by that organization as a special member, who would write for them from China and send reports on the ongoing situation at ...
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In 1940 Kinoaki Matsuo published a book on how Japan planned to win a war with the United States. The war would not formally begin for another thirteen months. The Three Power Alliance And The United States-Japanese War , written by Matsuo while he was serving as a liaison between the Japanese Foreign Office and the Admiralty, openly discussed ...