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) ==