The Danger of Chinese Penetration Under the Democratic Party Government: Media Control, Chongryon, and the “Triangle of Treason”
This passage discusses the “triangle of treason” linking Asahi Shimbun, VAWW-NET, and Chongryon, while also warning of the dangers of anti-Japan penetration that advanced under the Democratic Party government.
By connecting Chinese capital expansion, media control, ties between the Democratic Party government and the Chinese Communist Party, and even espionage suspicions surrounding a Chinese embassy first secretary, it accuses these forces of placing Japan’s national foundations in grave danger.
2019-04-15
First, through the advance of Chinese capital, pipelines are created here and there, and then they grow thicker.
Then the media are taken over, and after that, the rest is exactly as one would imagine.
In fact, under the Democratic Party government…
What follows is from a chapter I published about one year earlier.
What follows is a continuation of the previous chapter.
Furthermore, the first representative of VAWW-NET was Yayori Matsui, and in the “Women’s International War Crimes Tribunal,” she also served as the representative of the international executive committee.
And needless to say, she was a former reporter for Asahi Shimbun.
Furthermore, the Asahi Shimbun reporter who wrote the article claiming that an NHK program had been altered through political intervention was a junior colleague of Yayori Matsui and a person said to deeply admire her.
When one looks at it this way, surely for anyone the line connecting Asahi Shimbun, VAWW-NET, and Chongryon emerges with unmistakable clarity.
Mr. Takayuki Yasuda calls the connection among these three “a triangle of treason,” and it is indeed an entirely apt expression.
To be continued.
What follows is a continuation of the previous chapter.
Mr. Yasuda continued his investigation.
By tracing the address from VAWW-NET’s telephone number, which always went to voicemail, he went there in person.
It was a 13-story building facing Kasuga-dōri, bearing the sign “Korean Book Center,” guarded by a sharp-eyed man.
When he investigated it, he discovered something astonishing.
It was a building housing more than twenty subordinate organizations of Chongryon, as well as the Mindan.
VAWW-NET was also located in such a building.
Once this fact became known, there was no longer any room for doubt.
VAWW-NET, which was supposed to be a Japanese civic group, was under the strong influence of Chongryon, in other words North Korea, or rather, it was an organization one with Chongryon itself.
Once that becomes clear, everything comes into view.
The enormous cost for holding the “Women’s International War Crimes Tribunal” came from Chongryon.
In other words, the true substance of that event was part of an anti-Japan campaign organized by Chongryon at the will of North Korea.
Also, it was NHK Enterprise 21 that undertook from NHK the production of the program “War-Time Sexual Violence on Trial,” covering this “Women’s International War Crimes Tribunal,” and one of the producers at the company at the time was Eriko Ikeda.
She was one of the founders of VAWW-NET and also a steering committee member.
To be continued.
As I was searching the internet just now, I found the following article.
More and more, it would not be an exaggeration to say that truth now exists only on the internet.
https://www55.atwiki.jp/staff-officer/pages/168.html
I went to the Second Members’ Office Building of the House of Representatives to attend the hearing of the “Emergency Gathering of Japanese and Korean Women Not to Permit Insult and Slander Against the ‘Women’s International War Crimes Tribunal.’”
When I checked at the members’ office building, the venue arrangement had been handled by Democratic Party House member Eiko Ishige.
Lamenting, “Just how many feminist old crones does the Democratic Party keep, with Okazaki and the rest,” I entered the venue, (ry).
After signing my name and taking the seat I was shown to, a middle-aged woman from VAWW-NET asked several times, “What kind of people are you?”
Each time, I explained the circumstances.
She seemed satisfied.
But then came the problem.
A chubby man walked over to us.
“What qualifications do you people have for coming here?”
Without even offering a greeting, he questioned us in an intimidating manner that all but said exactly that.
“The gathering is open, but you will not be allowed to observe it.”
It was outrageous.
This despite the fact that TBS had been permitted to cover it.
In short, it was an “open” event to which those without prior approval could not be admitted.
What part of that is “open”?
The middle-aged VAWW-NET woman from earlier could do nothing but flounder beside the exchange.
VAWW-NET had no decision-making authority whatsoever.
In the balance of power between VAWW-NET and this man, it was obvious that the man was superior.
Regardless of the name of the nominal organizer, it is fair to say that the group to which this man belonged was, in substance, running the gathering.
Who was this man?
Yes, just as all of you have already guessed.
When we pressed him, the man boldly identified himself as “the Chongryon public relations officer.”
So that was indeed the case.
What follows is a continuation of the previous chapter.
Excerpt from Chapter 11, “A Treason Assortment.”
Introduction omitted.
All emphasis in the text other than headings is mine.
The Democratic Party and China.
As introduced several times in this book, China and the Chinese Communist Party are not merely matters of collusion at the personal level, but matters that connect to a level where the nation itself is sold away.
As introduced also in the chapter on former Democratic Party leader Okada, there are even cases in which a person holding an important post in the Chinese Communist Party, and possibly tasked with operations against Japan, was welcomed by the party as a whole and even provided with funds in the end.
If the Democratic Party government had continued as it was, what would have happened?
Most likely, or rather almost certainly, all of Japan would have become like Governor Onaga’s Okinawa, and dragon pillars might have been erected not in Naha but in Tokyo or Yokohama.
First, through the advance of Chinese capital, pipelines are created here and there, and then they grow thicker.
Then the media are taken over, and after that, the rest is exactly as one would imagine.
In fact, it was reported under the Democratic Party government that a Chinese first secretary, Mr. Li Chunguang, a special trainee of the Matsushita Institute of Government and Management, may have been engaged in espionage activities.
Chinese First Secretary Suspected of Spy Activity, Opened Bank Account Under False Identity.
It was learned through interviews with government sources that a first secretary (45) of the Chinese Embassy in Japan had come under strong suspicion of having used a foreign resident registration certificate improperly to open a bank account and engage in commercial activities prohibited under the Vienna Convention, and that the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department’s Public Security Bureau had, through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, requested that the Chinese Embassy produce the first secretary for questioning.
The first secretary temporarily returned to China.
He had come from the intelligence organization of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army, the “General Staff Department,” and the Public Security Bureau believed he had been engaged in espionage activities within Japan, proceeding to question in a sweep those with whom he had been in contact in order to clarify the true situation.
(From Yomiuri Shimbun, May 29, 2012.)
In the House of Representatives Budget Committee, Tomomi Inada questioned the Chinese spy issue.
When I learned this fact, I understood that this was why, after the Liberal Democratic Party returned to power and Tomomi Inada became Defense Minister, she was subjected to such outrageous bashing.
Allow me briefly to explain the case.
The ringleaders on the Japanese side were former Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Minister Kano, Vice Minister Tsutsui, and Mr. Kimio Tanaka.
Mr. Tanaka was a publicly funded secretary to a Democratic Party House member in the Kano group, and Minister Kano appointed him as an adviser to the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries while he was still an active public secretary, and he now serves as the representative of the council.
And it was Li Chunguang, the first secretary of the Chinese Embassy now being discussed under suspicion of espionage, who had led this project from the very beginning.
(From the 180th Diet, Budget Committee, No. 25, June 12, 2012.)
Mr. Shōji Nishida.
I am Nishida of the Liberal Democratic Party.
Prime Minister Noda, I was truly shocked to see your answer just now.
Do you still mean to say that this Agriculture Ministry incident poses no problem?
Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda.
You referred to it as the Agriculture Ministry incident, but with regard to each individual matter, the Ministry of Agriculture and others have each provided explanations, and as for the doubts, especially concerning issues of confidentiality, investigations are being conducted, and I think it will be fine if the facts are clarified afterward through questioning in the Diet.
Mr. Shōji Nishida.
I am asking whether there is a problem or not.
Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda.
I understand that questions are being raised.
Whether that is in fact true and whether it is a problem, I think that is a matter for discussion from here on.
(From the 180th Diet, Budget Committee, No. 21, June 13, 2012.)
