You should be ashamed to know how you have been complicit in the foolish and despicable evil, i.e., the Nazis.
The following is from the serial column of Ms. Sakurai Yoshiko, who brings the weekly Shincho release today to a successful conclusion.
This article also proves that she is a national treasure defined by Saicho and a supreme national treasure.
It is a must-read not only for the Japanese people but also for people all over the world.
At the same time, the reality of the Korean media that she told me about proved my thesis 100% correct.
Korea is a country of “abysmal evil” and “plausible lies.”
People worldwide, especially Alexis Dudden of the United States and the German people, must read to bear in mind.
You should be ashamed to know how you have been complicit in the foolish and despicable evil, i.e., the Nazis.
Korea’s MBC, at an appallingly low level
On August 10, MBC’s PD Notebook aired a program titled “Illicit Trade: The National Intelligence Service (South Korea) and the Japanese Far Right.
I had it translated into Japanese and watched it, but the content was so poor that it could only be called “investigative reporting.
Without concrete evidence, the program claimed that the National Institute for Basic National Problems (NINS), a think tank I am the president, had received information and other support from the National Intelligence Service, a South Korean intelligence agency. Still, NINS has never received support from any foreign government agency, including the National Intelligence Service.
MBC’s report is an act of defamation.
In addition, MBC broadcasted images and sounds from “Kotoron TV” in many places without permission to make such factless defamation.
Doesn’t the program have any understanding of the basics of journalism?
In this program, I, Mr. Tsutomu Nishioka, a leading researcher on the Korean issue, and the National Institute for Basic Research are called “extreme right,” but we are not extreme right.
The PD Notebook also reports that it is only with the intelligence and other support of the National Intelligence Service that we have built up the influence we have today, but this is laughable and a mere pretense to the power of South Korea and the National Intelligence Service (South Korea).
The ridiculous plot revolves around a story told by a masked man who claims to be a “former overseas agent of the National Intelligence Service.
He claims to have seen and heard about it while working for the National Intelligence Service and says as follows.
He says that the National Intelligence Service (South Korea) passes on valuable world-class information, including information on North Korea, to the public security authorities in Japan, who in turn pass on the information to the far-right forces.
As the “fact” that supports this “testimony,” the “PD Note” reported the experience of a person named Choi Jae-ik, the representative director of “Dokdo Shugo All United Nations Belt” that appears at the beginning of the program.
Choi described his experience during a visit to Shimane Prefecture in February 2015 as follows.
“As we were driving on the highway, a (Japanese) right-wing vehicle and ours passed each other back and forth, almost causing a catastrophe. When we stopped the car, they stood in front of us and covered (the windshield) with the Japanese flag. But when we got there, we found out that they were exactly ahead of us. The right-wingers.”
National Intelligence Service (South Korea), Public Security, Right Wing
The PD Notebook asked Choi how the right-wingers knew about his schedule.
“Choi replied, “Yes, that’s what I’m wondering, too.
By reporting such an episode, which has no connection to North Korean intelligence, the reporters are trying to give the impression that there is an exceptional flow of information between the National Intelligence Service (South Korea), public security, and the right-wing.
In this regard, it posted the following criticism of the PD Notebook by a member on the website of Mr. Cho Gab-je, who is well respected in Korean discourse circles.
On February 8, 2017, it reported this in the Korean media: To urge Japan to abolish “Takeshima Day,” a Korean Dokdo-related group (represented by Issei Jae-wing, 60) formed a protest delegation to leave for the Japanese site. As the “fact” that supports this “testimony,” the “PD Note” reported the experience of a person named Choi Jae-ik, the representative director of “Dokdo Shugo All United Nations Belt” that appears at the beginning of the program. They held a press conference in front of the Shimane Prefectural Government Building at 10 am on the 22nd to announce that Dokdo is a territory peculiar to South Korea, and at 11 am at the Prefectural Civic Center Square, a rally demanding the cancellation of the Japanese government’s robbery of Dokdo. They plan to open it.
There are four protesters, including Choi, Deputy Representative Seo Hyun-ryul (60), Press Secretary Yoo Hong-le (60), and one attendant.
The criticism continued.
“Long before the group left for Japan, they widely publicized it through the mass media. We know the date of arrival and the names and ages of all the participants. They introduced even the schedule of events (such as protest visits to Shimane Prefecture, the Prime Minister’s office, and the Ministry of Defense) in a very thoughtful way that allowed us to infer the flow of events in Japan fully. It is how they do it every year, with a lot of publicity before they leave for Japan.
Even if there is no route to provide information between the National Intelligence Service (South Korea), public security, and the right-wing, Choi’s plans are no widely known other than Choi and others are trying to inform them widely. I’m saying that.
Nevertheless, “PD Notebook” proceeds with the fiction that there is an unfair provision of information among the three right parties.
The PD Pocketbook side asks the masked man, “What do you think? -Did the National Intelligence Service (South Korea) support the far right in Japan?
“Yes, the Japanese right-wingers we supported are centered around Yoshiko Sakurai. That’s the National Institute for Basic Problems.
“The National Institute for Basic Research was initially founded by people who received support from the National Intelligence Council. In Japan, they need material when they do speech activities, publish articles, broadcast appearances, etc. The National Intelligence Service (South Korea) supported them.”
Eager to get closer to the North Korea
However, the masked man did not say anything about what kind of information he gave to the KSI, when and in what form.
Then the program has this narration.
“At the beginning of the 2000s, when Japanese society was in a state of excitement over the abduction issue, the National Intelligence Service (South Korea) connected the National Institute for Basic Studies with Kim Hyon-hui and other North Korean defectors. The National Intelligence Council joined the Institute for Basic National Problems with Kim Hyon Hee and other defectors from North Korea, which made their names known throughout Japan. The representative of this group is Tsutomu Nishioka.”
It’s ridiculous that I’ve come this far.
As a think tank, the National Institute for Basic National Problems has never specifically discussed Kim Hyun Hee, nor has it made any recommendations.
In the first place, the National Institute for Basic National Problems does not study only the situation on the Korean Peninsula.
It has analyzed a wide range of international affairs and has made many policy proposals to realize Japan’s national interests.
Nishioka met Kim Hyon-Hui in 2010 at the request of the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) government, which invited Kim Hyon-Hui to Japan.
The National Intelligence Service (South Korea) had nothing to do with it.
Mr. Nishioka, myself and the National Institute for Basic Research have come this far without having anything to do with the National Intelligence Service.
The claim that we are where we are today “thanks to the National Intelligence Service” is nothing but fiction.
The reports in the “PD Notebook” are nothing but baseless conjecture from one to ten.
The question is why they made such a program.
We suspect this is a slam on the National Intelligence Service, using the National Institute of Basic Research, Sakurai, and Nishioka as a pretext.
The National Intelligence Service has long been cracking down on the activities of North Korean agents in South Korea.
It is President Moon Jae-in, who is on a pro-North Korean path, who has been revising the law to kill the power of the National Intelligence Service.
The current director of the National Intelligence Service is Park Ji-won, who was appointed director at the request of Moon in July 2008.
Park is a close ally of North Korea’s spy agency, the United Front.
In their eagerness to get closer to North Korea, Moon and Park may be trying to destroy the National Intelligence Service.
The PD Notebook’s reporting is incredibly sloppy from a normal journalistic perspective.
It is why I suspect that this report is connected to the political struggle within South Korea.