【Chongtong Juntong CC Security Bureau】
Before and after the September 18th Incident in 1931, the Whampoa students organized a secret organization within the Kuomintang that was loyal to the Communist Party and demanded the Anti-Japanese War, the "Lixing Society." In 1932, the "Lixing Agency" Secret Service was merged into the second division of the "Military Commission Investigation and Statistics Bureau", with Dai Li as the director. The director was concurrently appointed by Chen Lifu, then Secretary-General of the Kuomintang Central Committee. And one is the predecessor of the "Zhongtong", originally named "The Investigation and Statistics Section of the Central Organization Department of the Kuomintang."
After the outbreak of the Anti-Japanese War in 1938, the first and second places were independent. One was renamed as the "Investigation and Statistics Bureau of the Central Executive Committee of the Chinese Kuomintang", referred to as "Zhongtong"; the second office was still called the "Military Commission Investigation and Statistics Bureau", referred to as "Military Unification". "Zhongtong" is a spy organization of the CC party affairs system led by Chen Guofu and Chen Lifu, and "juntong" can be regarded as a spy organization of the military system. After the victory of the Anti-Japanese War, the Military Control Bureau was reorganized as the Secret Bureau of the Ministry of National Defense, with Zheng Jiemin as the director, and Tang Zong and Mao Renfeng as the deputy directors. In 1947, Mao Renfeng took over as the director.
【Bianbao】
The border security department was called the Security Office of the Shaanxi-Gansu-Ningxia Border Region of the Communist Party of China. On November 5, 1935, the Northwest Political Security Bureau was formally established in Wayaobao, based on the cadres of the political security bureau in the former Central Soviet Area and the Red Army. Suppression of counter-revolutionaries and defense work in the Soviet area and the Red Army.
【No. 76】
No. 76, the full name is Wang Puppet "KMT Central Executive Committee Secret Service Headquarters", named after it is located at No. 76 Jisifeier Road (now No. 435 Wanhangdu Road) in Shanghai. It is a product of Japan's policy of aggression against China. In 1939, under the recommendation of the Japanese consulate in Shanghai, former Kuomintang agents Li Shiqun and Ding Mocun, who had already surrendered to the enemy, met with Doihara, representative of the Japanese military, and put forward the "Shanghai Secret Service Plan", which received attention. The Japanese base camp issued the "Instructions for Aid to Dingmo Village's Special Agents." In May 1939, Wang Jingwei arrived in Shanghai to form a puppet regime. The Japanese military decided to let Li, Ding and Wang join forces. After the "sixth national congress" of the Wang Puppet Kuomintang, the secret service headquarters of the special committee of the Central Executive Committee of the Wang Puppet Kuomintang was formally established, with Zhou Fohai as the chairman of the special committee and Ding Mocun as the deputy chairman. Li Shiqun is the secretary-general, with Ding Mocun as the director of the secret service headquarters and Li Shiqun as the deputy director.
【Japan Super High Technology】
In the 1920s, in order to prevent the spread of communism, the Japanese military police set up a special agency special high-tech. Tecco was established on July 4, 1928. It has strengthened ideological control not only on Japanese domestic soldiers and military, but also on domestic citizens. The "Japanese Consulate Police Station" in various parts of China occupied by the Japanese army also has a special high-tech department, which specializes in spy and espionage activities. The Japanese military police and its affiliated super high-tech companies in the colonies and occupied territories also undertake security, administrative affairs, and have prisons. The commander-in-chief of the military police directly under the dispatched army can be seen by its great power. The arrogant and domineering images of the military police and the plainclothes of Tegatech that we have seen in the film and television dramas are not fictional.
After World War II, about 1,000 Japanese Class B and Class C war criminals were hanged and shot, of which 300 were military police.