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Public Security Intelligence Agency

The Public Security Intelligence Agency (公安調査庁, kōanchōsa-chō) is the national intelligence agency of Japan. It is administered by the Ministry of Justice in the government of Japan, and is tasked with internal security and espionage against threats to Japanese national security based on the Subversive Activities Prevention Act and the Act Regarding the Control of Organizations Which Committed Indiscriminate Mass Murder.[6][7] Any investigation conducted by the agency needs to go through the Public Security Examination Commission (PSEC) in order to determine if there is a justification to investigate and clamp down on an organization's activities.[8]

Public Security Intelligence Agency
公安調査庁
Kōanchōsa-chō
Agency overview
FormedJuly 21, 1952; 70 years ago (1952-07-21)
Preceding agencies
  • Investigation Bureau (IB), Home Ministry (1946)[1]
  • Internal Affairs Bureau (IAB), 2nd Office (1948)[1]
  • Special Investigation Board (SIB), Attorney General's Office (1948-1949)[4][5][a]
JurisdictionGovernment of Japan
HeadquartersChiyoda, Tokyo, Japan
Employees+/- 1,646 officers (As of 2019)[2]
Annual budget15,039,257,000 Yen (As of 2019)[3]
Minister responsible
Agency executive
  • Masaki Wada, Director-General
Parent agencyMinistry of Justice
WebsiteOfficial Site (in Japanese)

As the national agency with the role to collect intelligence information, the PSIA contributes to Japanese government policy by providing relevant organizations with necessary foreign and domestic data (collected through investigations and intelligence activities) on subversive organizations.[6] It is also known that the PSIA is responsible for conducting surveillance and intelligence-related work on Zainichi Koreans on Japanese soil.[6]

The PSIA's findings are released publicly through the annually-published Naigai Jousei no Kaiko to Tenbo (Situation in Public Security inside and outside Japan and their prospect) as well as regularly-published Kokusai Terrorism Youran (International Terrorism Report).[8]

History

 
PSIA officers make an inspection to a suspected Aum Shinrikyo building in 2012.

The Public Security Intelligence Agency was established with the enforcement of the Subversive Activities Prevention Law on 21 July 1952,[7] initially known as the Public Security Investigation Agency before it changed to its current name.[1] The PSIA took over the role of the SIB, which was established by the Allied Forces during the occupation.[5] Most of the recruits came from the disbanded Tokumu Kikan and led by officials from the pre-occupation Ministry of Justice.[5]

Initially focusing on threats from far left groups such as the Japanese Red Army during the days of the Cold War, it began to conduct intelligence work on the Aum Shinrikyo after the Sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway in 1995,[6] with criticism that the PSIA did not monitor the group, especially with their attempt to acquire and stockpile biological weapons on Japanese soil.[9] The PSIA had cooperated with the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department Public Security Bureau in investigating Aum Shinrikyo for a number of years. When asked about their investigation on the cult, a PSIA report had said "There has been no change in its dangerous nature. Strict surveillance is essential."[10]

The PSIA had investigated Aum Shinrikyo when it was revealed that the group had established software firms that could pose security risks to Japan.[11]

Chongryon has been under PSIA surveillance for a long time, suspecting it of supposedly performing espionage activities in Japanese soil.[12] The Ministry of Justice has sought ¥270 million to fund the PSIA on conducting intelligence against North Korean espionage activities.[13] Its facilities were also raided by the PSIA while sentencing for its leaders were underway in 2004.[14]

The PSIA had been supposed to be integrated with Naicho in order to reorient the agency to a post-Cold War and to enhance its resources, but the proposal was not adopted.[9]

An investigation into French Al-Qaeda terrorist Lionel Dumont had been the responsibility of the PSIA in 2004 based on rumors that he was supposed to establish a Japanese Al-Qaeda cell.[15] The PSIA raided the headquarters of Fumihiro Joyu's Hikari no Wa on May 10, 2007.[16] Despite insistence from Joyu that his group had ended ties with Aum Shinrikyo, PSIA officials have warned that his group has ties to Shoko Asahara after conducting raids.[17]

In the wake of Kim Jong-il's death in 2011, the PSIA reported that they are undertaking intelligence work on North Korea by conducting intelligence work towards Chongryon, as they had remitted money and gifts to North Korea before sanctions were imposed.[18]

In 2015, the PSIA offered university students a one-day immersion to work alongside veteran PSIA officers.[19]

On July 14, 2016, the PSIA sent officers to Sapporo to investigate Aleph's Shiroshi Ward facility under the Act on the Control of Organizations Which Have Committed Acts of Indiscriminate Mass Murder.[20]

In January 2017, Okinawa press reported that the PSIA has conducted investigation into pro-Okinawan independence and anti-USFJ bases activist groups for potential links to China.[21]

In December 2019, an anti-Aum Shinrikyo video was created by the agency in order to raise public awareness that the group is still a threat to public safety.[22]

In recent years, the PSIA is eyed as the basis for the creation of a new foreign intelligence agency should the prime minister go through with plans.[23]

Operations

While the PSIA is known to conduct its operations on domestic soil,[9] there are suggestions that they have conducted limited operations overseas.

In the 2000s, the PSIA was reported to have conducted undercover operations at the Chinese-North Korean border by distributing flyers to locals in obtaining information regarding Japanese nationals abducted by North Korea.[24]

In 2003, it was reported that the PSIA had a mole inside Aum Shinrikyo by the name of Kazumi Kitagawa, who joined the cult after the sarin gas attack in the Tokyo Metro; she later tried to seek asylum in North Korea.[25] She revealed to Aum about her work in the PSIA and her plans to cut ties with them after she accuses a PSIA officer of raping her.[25]

From 2005 to 2016, reports of Japanese nationals being arrested throughout China for taking photos of sensitive installations or conducting illegal activities under cover of legal occupations suggests that the PSIA has recruited expats working/living in China to conduct limited HUMINT ops.[21] These allegations have never been officially confirmed.[24] According to a National Police Agency official, the PSIA has done a bad job in China if reports do prove that the expats arrested were covertly recruited by the agency.[26]

Organization

The PSIA is formed with the current organization:[27]

  • Internal Departments
    • General Affairs Department
      • Trial Office
      • Planning and Coordination Office
      • Information Management Office
      • Public Relations and Communications Office
      • Human Resources Section
      • Work Promotion Office
    • First Intelligence Department (Domestic Intelligence, headed by career police officer)[8][28]
    • Second Intelligence Department (Foreign Intelligence, headed by career/non-career person)[8]
      • Section 1 (Japanese Red Army and international terrorism investigation)
      • Section 2 (Foreign intelligence investigation, including liaising with foreign agents stationed in Japan)
      • Third Division (North Korean investigation)
      • Fourth Division (China/Southeast Asia/Russia/Europe/United States investigation)
  • Institute
    • Training Institute (Located in Akishima)[29]
  • Regional Bureaus
    • Hokkaido (Hokkaido Bureau), Miyagi (Tohoku Bureau), Tokyo (Kanto Bureau), Aichi (Chubu Bureau), Osaka (Kinki Bureau), Hiroshima (Chugoku Bureau), Kagawa (Shikoku Bureau) and Fukuoka (Kyushu Bureau)
      • Public Security Intelligence Offices (Hokkaido, Iwate, Niigata, Saitama, Chiba, Kanagawa, Shizuoka, Nagano, Ishikawa, Kyoto, Hyogo, Okayama, Kumamoto and Okinawa.)

Foreign ties

The PSIA has ties to several foreign intelligence security agencies, including the CIA, FBI, Mossad, RAW and MI6, with several PSIA agents being invited to train with the CIA under its Intelligence Analysis Course.[6]

In October 2018, Chen Wenqiang, head of the Ministry of State Security, visited the PSIA in order to collaborate on antiterrorism activities prior to the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.[26]

Known Directors-General of PSIA

Criticism

The PSIA has faced criticism in the past for being ineffective, in part because it has little ability to act without approval from the PSEC, an ad hoc body that meets only when required. According to Philip H.J. Davies and Kristian Gustafson, the PSIA operates similarly to the British security agency MI5[32] since officers have no rights to arrest anyone during a law enforcement operation nor force anyone to be involved in an investigation.[8][5]

The criticism was especially made after public discovery that the agency did not move against Aum Shinrikyo.[9] Due to the strict legal framework surrounding the agency it had not been given permission to monitor the organization directly until 2000, despite having requested permission from the PSEC in 1996.[8]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The translation provided by the English website of the PSIA translates the English name of the SIB as Bureau of Special Investigation.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "History | 公安調査庁".
  2. ^ . May 20, 2019. Archived from the original on 2019-05-20.
  3. ^ (PDF). April 8, 2019 . Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-04-08. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  4. ^ Wildes 1953, p. 667.
  5. ^ a b c d . www.cia.gov. Archived from the original on March 12, 2008.
  6. ^ a b c d e Public Security Investigation Agency. Retrieved on January 5, 2008.
  7. ^ a b HISTORICAL BACKGROUND, Official PSIA Webpage. 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on January 5, 2008.
  8. ^ a b c d e f https://www.stimson.org/sites/default/files/file-attachments/Tatsumi_%20Japan%27s_Security_Policy_Infrastructure_Final_Version.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  9. ^ a b c d Japan's Growing Intelligence Capabilities, Andrew Oros. 2009-03-20 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on June 9, 2008.
  10. ^ . Archived from the original on May 9, 2008.
  11. ^ "Aum Shinri-kyo Updates (CESNUR) - April 10-17, 2000". www.cesnur.org.
  12. ^ Shimizu, Kaho (July 10, 2007). "Chongryun never gets out from under a cloud". Japan Times Online.
  13. ^ . University of Texas. 2007. Archived from the original on 2008-06-25. Retrieved 2007-10-06.
  14. ^ "Aum locations searched in runup to guru's verdict". Japan Times Online. February 17, 2004.
  15. ^ Al-Qaeda agent lived quiet life in Niigata | The Japan Times
  16. ^ Retrieved on May 10, 2007.
  17. ^ Hongo, Jun (November 22, 2011). "Last trial brings dark Aum era to end". Japan Times Online.
  18. ^ "Japan Raises Info-Gathering Activities in Response to Kim Jong-il's Death".
  19. ^ Osumi, Magdalena (July 1, 2015). "Japan's spy service offers students one-day immersion course in tradecraft". Japan Times Online.
  20. ^ "Aum successor group set up new facility in Sapporo: intelligence agency". Japan Times Online. July 14, 2016.
  21. ^ a b Samuels 2019, p. 219.
  22. ^ "Japan security agency creates video on Aum atrocities|Arab News Japan".
  23. ^ "Japan eyes MI6-style spy agency as it seeks to shed pacifist past". Reuters. March 6, 2015 – via www.reuters.com.
  24. ^ a b Samuels 2019, p. 218.
  25. ^ a b
  26. ^ a b Samuels 2019, p. 220.
  27. ^ . Archived from the original on September 27, 2007.
  28. ^ Dover, Goodman & Hillebrand 2014, p. 203.
  29. ^ . www.moj.go.jp. Archived from the original on 7 March 2019. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
  30. ^ Chongryun HQ sold to ex-intelligence head | The Japan Times
  31. ^ a b Chongryun Tokyo HQ sale seems set to fail | The Japan Times
  32. ^ Davis & Gustafson 2013, p. 185.

Bibliography

  • Davies, Philip H.J.; Gustafson, Kristian, eds. (2013). Intelligence Elsewhere: Spies and Espionage Outside the Anglosphere. Georgetown University Press. ISBN 978-1589019560.
  • Dover, Robert; Goodman, Michael S.; Hillebrand, Claudia, eds. (2014). Routledge Companion to Intelligence Studies. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-1589019560.
  • Samuels, Richard J. (2019). Special Duty: A History of the Japanese Intelligence Community. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-1501741586.
  • Wildes, Harry Emerson (1953). "The Postwar Japanese Police". The Journal of Criminal Law, Criminology, and Police Science. 43 (5): 655–671. doi:10.2307/1139663. JSTOR 1139663.

External links

  • Official Website (in Japanese)
  • Official Website (Current) (in English)
  • (in English)
  • Public Security Intelligence Agency on Twitter

public, security, intelligence, agency, 公安調査庁, kōanchōsa, chō, national, intelligence, agency, japan, administered, ministry, justice, government, japan, tasked, with, internal, security, espionage, against, threats, japanese, national, security, based, subver. The Public Security Intelligence Agency 公安調査庁 kōanchōsa chō is the national intelligence agency of Japan It is administered by the Ministry of Justice in the government of Japan and is tasked with internal security and espionage against threats to Japanese national security based on the Subversive Activities Prevention Act and the Act Regarding the Control of Organizations Which Committed Indiscriminate Mass Murder 6 7 Any investigation conducted by the agency needs to go through the Public Security Examination Commission PSEC in order to determine if there is a justification to investigate and clamp down on an organization s activities 8 Public Security Intelligence Agency公安調査庁Kōanchōsa chōAgency overviewFormedJuly 21 1952 70 years ago 1952 07 21 Preceding agenciesInvestigation Bureau IB Home Ministry 1946 1 Internal Affairs Bureau IAB 2nd Office 1948 1 Special Investigation Board SIB Attorney General s Office 1948 1949 4 5 a JurisdictionGovernment of JapanHeadquartersChiyoda Tokyo JapanEmployees 1 646 officers As of 2019 2 Annual budget15 039 257 000 Yen As of 2019 3 Minister responsibleYasuhiro Hanashi Minister of JusticeAgency executiveMasaki Wada Director GeneralParent agencyMinistry of JusticeWebsiteOfficial Site in Japanese As the national agency with the role to collect intelligence information the PSIA contributes to Japanese government policy by providing relevant organizations with necessary foreign and domestic data collected through investigations and intelligence activities on subversive organizations 6 It is also known that the PSIA is responsible for conducting surveillance and intelligence related work on Zainichi Koreans on Japanese soil 6 The PSIA s findings are released publicly through the annually published Naigai Jousei no Kaiko to Tenbo Situation in Public Security inside and outside Japan and their prospect as well as regularly published Kokusai Terrorism Youran International Terrorism Report 8 Contents 1 History 1 1 Operations 2 Organization 2 1 Foreign ties 3 Known Directors General of PSIA 4 Criticism 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksHistory Edit PSIA officers make an inspection to a suspected Aum Shinrikyo building in 2012 The Public Security Intelligence Agency was established with the enforcement of the Subversive Activities Prevention Law on 21 July 1952 7 initially known as the Public Security Investigation Agency before it changed to its current name 1 The PSIA took over the role of the SIB which was established by the Allied Forces during the occupation 5 Most of the recruits came from the disbanded Tokumu Kikan and led by officials from the pre occupation Ministry of Justice 5 Initially focusing on threats from far left groups such as the Japanese Red Army during the days of the Cold War it began to conduct intelligence work on the Aum Shinrikyo after the Sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway in 1995 6 with criticism that the PSIA did not monitor the group especially with their attempt to acquire and stockpile biological weapons on Japanese soil 9 The PSIA had cooperated with the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department Public Security Bureau in investigating Aum Shinrikyo for a number of years When asked about their investigation on the cult a PSIA report had said There has been no change in its dangerous nature Strict surveillance is essential 10 The PSIA had investigated Aum Shinrikyo when it was revealed that the group had established software firms that could pose security risks to Japan 11 Chongryon has been under PSIA surveillance for a long time suspecting it of supposedly performing espionage activities in Japanese soil 12 The Ministry of Justice has sought 270 million to fund the PSIA on conducting intelligence against North Korean espionage activities 13 Its facilities were also raided by the PSIA while sentencing for its leaders were underway in 2004 14 The PSIA had been supposed to be integrated with Naicho in order to reorient the agency to a post Cold War and to enhance its resources but the proposal was not adopted 9 An investigation into French Al Qaeda terrorist Lionel Dumont had been the responsibility of the PSIA in 2004 based on rumors that he was supposed to establish a Japanese Al Qaeda cell 15 The PSIA raided the headquarters of Fumihiro Joyu s Hikari no Wa on May 10 2007 16 Despite insistence from Joyu that his group had ended ties with Aum Shinrikyo PSIA officials have warned that his group has ties to Shoko Asahara after conducting raids 17 In the wake of Kim Jong il s death in 2011 the PSIA reported that they are undertaking intelligence work on North Korea by conducting intelligence work towards Chongryon as they had remitted money and gifts to North Korea before sanctions were imposed 18 In 2015 the PSIA offered university students a one day immersion to work alongside veteran PSIA officers 19 On July 14 2016 the PSIA sent officers to Sapporo to investigate Aleph s Shiroshi Ward facility under the Act on the Control of Organizations Which Have Committed Acts of Indiscriminate Mass Murder 20 In January 2017 Okinawa press reported that the PSIA has conducted investigation into pro Okinawan independence and anti USFJ bases activist groups for potential links to China 21 In December 2019 an anti Aum Shinrikyo video was created by the agency in order to raise public awareness that the group is still a threat to public safety 22 In recent years the PSIA is eyed as the basis for the creation of a new foreign intelligence agency should the prime minister go through with plans 23 Operations Edit While the PSIA is known to conduct its operations on domestic soil 9 there are suggestions that they have conducted limited operations overseas In the 2000s the PSIA was reported to have conducted undercover operations at the Chinese North Korean border by distributing flyers to locals in obtaining information regarding Japanese nationals abducted by North Korea 24 In 2003 it was reported that the PSIA had a mole inside Aum Shinrikyo by the name of Kazumi Kitagawa who joined the cult after the sarin gas attack in the Tokyo Metro she later tried to seek asylum in North Korea 25 She revealed to Aum about her work in the PSIA and her plans to cut ties with them after she accuses a PSIA officer of raping her 25 From 2005 to 2016 reports of Japanese nationals being arrested throughout China for taking photos of sensitive installations or conducting illegal activities under cover of legal occupations suggests that the PSIA has recruited expats working living in China to conduct limited HUMINT ops 21 These allegations have never been officially confirmed 24 According to a National Police Agency official the PSIA has done a bad job in China if reports do prove that the expats arrested were covertly recruited by the agency 26 Organization EditThe PSIA is formed with the current organization 27 Internal Departments General Affairs Department Trial Office Planning and Coordination Office Information Management Office Public Relations and Communications Office Human Resources Section Work Promotion Office First Intelligence Department Domestic Intelligence headed by career police officer 8 28 Section 1 Domestic security issues Citizen group s investigation electoral information Section 2 Kakurōkyō Revolutionary Communist League National Committee investigation Third Division Japanese Communist Party investigation Fourth Division Right Wing group s investigation Fifth Division Other domestic pro left group s investigations such as Japan Revolutionary Communist League Revolutionary Marxist Faction Aum Special Research Office Second Intelligence Department Foreign Intelligence headed by career non career person 8 Section 1 Japanese Red Army and international terrorism investigation Section 2 Foreign intelligence investigation including liaising with foreign agents stationed in Japan Third Division North Korean investigation Fourth Division China Southeast Asia Russia Europe United States investigation Institute Training Institute Located in Akishima 29 Regional Bureaus Hokkaido Hokkaido Bureau Miyagi Tohoku Bureau Tokyo Kanto Bureau Aichi Chubu Bureau Osaka Kinki Bureau Hiroshima Chugoku Bureau Kagawa Shikoku Bureau and Fukuoka Kyushu Bureau Public Security Intelligence Offices Hokkaido Iwate Niigata Saitama Chiba Kanagawa Shizuoka Nagano Ishikawa Kyoto Hyogo Okayama Kumamoto and Okinawa Foreign ties Edit The PSIA has ties to several foreign intelligence security agencies including the CIA FBI Mossad RAW and MI6 with several PSIA agents being invited to train with the CIA under its Intelligence Analysis Course 6 In October 2018 Chen Wenqiang head of the Ministry of State Security visited the PSIA in order to collaborate on antiterrorism activities prior to the 2020 Tokyo Olympics 26 Known Directors General of PSIA EditShigetake Ogata 1993 to 1997 head of Harvest investment group 30 31 Toshiro Yanagi 2006 to 2009 31 Criticism EditThe PSIA has faced criticism in the past for being ineffective in part because it has little ability to act without approval from the PSEC an ad hoc body that meets only when required According to Philip H J Davies and Kristian Gustafson the PSIA operates similarly to the British security agency MI5 32 since officers have no rights to arrest anyone during a law enforcement operation nor force anyone to be involved in an investigation 8 5 The criticism was especially made after public discovery that the agency did not move against Aum Shinrikyo 9 Due to the strict legal framework surrounding the agency it had not been given permission to monitor the organization directly until 2000 despite having requested permission from the PSEC in 1996 8 See also EditKenpeitaiNotes Edit The translation provided by the English website of the PSIA translates the English name of the SIB as Bureau of Special Investigation 1 References Edit a b c d History 公安調査庁 e Gov法令検索 May 20 2019 Archived from the original on 2019 05 20 PDF April 8 2019 https web archive org web 20190408051527 https www bb mof go jp server 2019 dlpdf DL201911001 pdf Archived from the original PDF on 2019 04 08 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Wildes 1953 p 667 a b c d Intelligence in the New Japan Central Intelligence Agency www cia gov Archived from the original on March 12 2008 a b c d e Public Security Investigation Agency Retrieved on January 5 2008 a b HISTORICAL BACKGROUND Official PSIA Webpage Archived 2007 09 27 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on January 5 2008 a b c d e f https www stimson org sites default files file attachments Tatsumi 20Japan 27s Security Policy Infrastructure Final Version pdf bare URL PDF a b c d Japan s Growing Intelligence Capabilities Andrew Oros Archived 2009 03 20 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on June 9 2008 JAPANESE OFFICIALS FEAR RESURGENCE OF AUM SHINRI KYO CULT Archived from the original on May 9 2008 Aum Shinri kyo Updates CESNUR April 10 17 2000 www cesnur org Shimizu Kaho July 10 2007 Chongryun never gets out from under a cloud Japan Times Online Japan Primer University of Texas 2007 Archived from the original on 2008 06 25 Retrieved 2007 10 06 Aum locations searched in runup to guru s verdict Japan Times Online February 17 2004 Al Qaeda agent lived quiet life in Niigata The Japan Times Cult group of former Aum official inspected by public safety agency Retrieved on May 10 2007 Hongo Jun November 22 2011 Last trial brings dark Aum era to end Japan Times Online Japan Raises Info Gathering Activities in Response to Kim Jong il s Death Osumi Magdalena July 1 2015 Japan s spy service offers students one day immersion course in tradecraft Japan Times Online Aum successor group set up new facility in Sapporo intelligence agency Japan Times Online July 14 2016 a b Samuels 2019 p 219 Japan security agency creates video on Aum atrocities Arab News Japan Japan eyes MI6 style spy agency as it seeks to shed pacifist past Reuters March 6 2015 via www reuters com a b Samuels 2019 p 218 a b https web archive org web 20211128231129 https www culteducation com group 826 aum sect shoko asahara 786 woman who fled to north korea was government mole in aum html a b Samuels 2019 p 220 ORGANIZATION Official PSIA Webpage Archived from the original on September 27 2007 Dover Goodman amp Hillebrand 2014 p 203 障害者選考試験第2次選考 採用面接 の御案内 公安調査庁 www moj go jp Archived from the original on 7 March 2019 Retrieved 12 January 2022 Chongryun HQ sold to ex intelligence head The Japan Times a b Chongryun Tokyo HQ sale seems set to fail The Japan Times Davis amp Gustafson 2013 p 185 sfn error no target CITEREFDavisGustafson2013 help Bibliography EditDavies Philip H J Gustafson Kristian eds 2013 Intelligence Elsewhere Spies and Espionage Outside the Anglosphere Georgetown University Press ISBN 978 1589019560 Dover Robert Goodman Michael S Hillebrand Claudia eds 2014 Routledge Companion to Intelligence Studies New York Routledge ISBN 978 1589019560 Samuels Richard J 2019 Special Duty A History of the Japanese Intelligence Community Cornell University Press ISBN 978 1501741586 Wildes Harry Emerson 1953 The Postwar Japanese Police The Journal of Criminal Law Criminology and Police Science 43 5 655 671 doi 10 2307 1139663 JSTOR 1139663 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Public Security Intelligence Agency Official Website in Japanese Official Website Current in English Official Website Archive in English Public Security Intelligence Agency on Twitter Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Public Security Intelligence Agency amp oldid 1125645808, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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