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Tōseiha

The Tōseiha or Control Faction (統制派) was an informal political faction in the Imperial Japanese Army active in the 1920s and 1930s. The term Tōseiha was not a self-designated name; it was a pejorative label coined by their rivals in the revolutionary Kōdōha to describe the generally conservative officers who opposed the Kōdōha spiritual radicalism and aggressive anti-modernization ideals, and instead favoring maintaining Japanese imperialism under the rule of military law and prioritizing military modernization and industrialization with the existing state bureaucracy and Zaibatsu to prepare for total war.

Background
The Empire of Japan had enjoyed economic growth during The First World War but this ended in the early 1920s with the Shōwa financial crisis. Social unrest increased with the growing polarization of society and inequalities, with the labor unions increasingly influenced by socialism, communism and anarchism, but the industrial and financial leaders of Japan continued to get wealthier through their inside connections with politicians and bureaucrats. The military was considered "clean" in terms of political corruption, and elements within the army were determined to take direct action to eliminate the perceived threats to Japan created by the weaknesses of liberal democracy and political corruption. The roots of the Tōseiha lie in the of 1921, where Tetsuzan Nagata, Yasuji Okamura, and agreed to modernize the army and end domain-based cliques. However, the coalition fractured over the strategy for Japan’s expansion. Toshiro Obata and his followers (the emerging Kōdōha) argued for the hokushin-ron ("Northern Expansion Doctrine") against the Soviet Union under the belief that Manchuria and Siberia was in Japan's sphere of interest, that communism posed a greater threat to the Shinto religion and the Emperor's divinity and believing that a conflict into southern China would drain the resources necessary for a pre-emptive strike against the northern enemy. Conversely, Tetsuzan Nagata and the Tōseiha argued that Japan must have a cautious defense expansion towards the south known as Nanshin-ron ("Southern Expansion Doctrine") to secure resources and industrial capacity of Manchuria and China and argued that the main obstacles to Japanese ambitions were the United States and the British Empire controlling the Pacific. The Tōseiha and Kōdōha both adopted ideas from totalitarian and fascist political philosophies, and shared the fundamental ideals that national defense must be strengthened through a reform of national politics and espoused a strong skepticism for political party politics and representative democracy. Although the factions shared key ideals, their differences was based on how to achieve them. The Kōdōha (Imperial Way) envisioned a return to an idealized pre-Industrialization, pre-Westernized Japan, while the Tōseiha favored industrialization and modernization at the time. == Institutional Realignment under Nagata (1929-1935) ==
Institutional Realignment under Nagata (1929-1935)
The Tōseiha was originally an effort by Tetsuzan Nagata to synthesize competing interests within the army into a professional, staff-led center. Nagata formed the in 1929 from the merger of the Futaba-kai and Mokuyō-kai. The ODM's central objective was the innovation of army personnel to dismantle the traditional dominance of the Chōshū clique, which Nagata viewed as a hindrance to modern total war mobilization. The Tōseiha was initially a non-regional coalition, as opposed to Araki's reintroduction of regional politics into army promotions and policy decisions. Many Tōseiha members were promising graduates of the Imperial Japanese Army Academy and Army Staff College, and were concerned about Araki's emphasis of the spiritual morale of the army instead of modernization and mechanization. Nagata acted as the linchpin who bridged the gap between the radical younger officers seeking state reform and the senior staff who prioritized institutional stability. He pooled the abilities of officers like Hitoshi Imamura, Hideki Tojo, and Yasuji Okamura to focus on long-term industrial planning rather than immediate spiritual revolution. Nagata established the consensus of the graduates of the War College, unified by a shared rationalist worldview and a commitment to bureaucratic process over ideological fanaticism. == Opposition ==
Opposition
The name Tōseiha was a pejorative exonym coined exclusively by Kōdōha members and their sympathizers. Officers assigned to this "faction" never characterized themselves as such, and it lacked any formal organization or self-identified membership. It was an institutional alignment of staff officers within the Ministry of War and the General Staff who adhered to bureaucratic procedures and modern military planning. Rather than the confrontational approach of the Kōdōha, which wanted to bring about the Showa Restoration through violence and revolution (a holy war), the Tōseiha sought reform by working within the existing system. The Tōseiha foresaw that a future war would be a total war, and to maximize Japan's industrial, technological and military capacity would require the cooperation of Japan's bureaucracy and the zaibatsu conglomerates to which the Kōdōha despised. In late 1931, the Manchurian Incident and the subsequent Japanese invasion of Manchuria saw the two factions struggle against each other for greater influence over the military's strategic direction. While the Kōdōha were initially dominant ue to General Sadao Araki's popularity, but their influence began to wane following Araki's resignation in 1934. As the Chief of the Military Affairs Bureau, Tetsuzan Nagata was viewed by radicals as the mastermind of a conspiracy whose institutional power stifled the Kōdōha. His role in the forced retirement of the Kōdōha leader General Jinzaburō Masaki led to Masaki himself encouraging the view that his dismissal was a conspiracy engineered by Nagata, a claim the rebels accepted as fact. This culminated in the Aizawa Incident in August 1935, when Lieutenant Colonel Saburō Aizawa assassinated Nagata in his office, claiming he was slaying a traitor who was corrupting the army. Aizawa's trial was transformed into a platform for supporters of the Kōdōha to justify his actions and further spread the myth of a Toseiha conspiracy. During the February 26 Incident in 1936, the Kōdōha junior officers targeted high-ranking statesmen and the moderate Navy Treaty Faction leadership in an attempt to trigger the Shōwa Restoration. General Watanabe Jōtarō was the only Tōseiha-aligned military target. The attempt to start a revolution failed; the Kōdōha was dissolved and its leadership was purged from the military. == Consolidation of National Defense State under Tōjō (1936-1941) ==
Consolidation of National Defense State under Tōjō (1936-1941)
, the Prime Minister of Japan during much of World War II, was the later leader of the Tōseiha. The transition from Nagata's structural organizational efforts to the Tōseiha as a faction occurred after Nagata's assassination in 1935. Hideki Tojo emerged as the senior figure of the "Control" officers. Unlike Nagata, who sought to balance various factions, Tojo capitalized on the institutional void to consolidate a personal power base. The Tōseiha capitalized on the February 26 incident; the assassination of liberal leaders like Saitō Makoto and Takahashi Korekiyo decapitated the state's moderate opposition, and the subsequent military suppression of the coup provided a pretext to purge the radical Kōdōha, alongside most other factions, permanently. == Legacy ==
Legacy
After Hideki Tojo solidified Tōseiha as the dominant influence in the Japanese military and became Prime Minister in 1941, the faction essentially completed its goals and lost most of its ''raison d'être'' and gradually disbanded. Today, some historical and academic perspectives have suggested that some aspects of the Tōseiha was inherited by the Liberal Democratic Party, as the bureaucratic, centralist and conservative philosophies that was championed by Tōseiha was embraced by the post-war conservative establishment, many of whom were pre-war elites who were reintegrated back into politics, forming the foundation of the LDP's iron triangle of bureaucrats, businesses and politicians. The Tōseiha vision of Japanese industrialization and modernization was also peacefully achieved with the post-war Japanese economic miracle. ==See also==
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