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Relations between Japanese Revolutionaries and the Comintern and the Soviet Union : ウィキペディア英語版 | Relations between Japanese Revolutionaries and the Comintern and the Soviet Union Relations between Japanese Revolutionaries and the Comintern and the Soviet Union have existed since the 1920s. ==First contact== The Comintern made its first attempt to establish contact with Japanese leftists in 1920. Its agents sent a Korean named Yi Ch'un-suk to meet Japanese bolsheviks and Anarcho-syndicalists. Hitoshi Yamakawa, and Osugi Sakae declined his invitation to attend the "Far Eastern revolutionaries" in Shanghai, because both of them were reluctant to trust Yi, and were also cautious of the police. However, Osugi accepted Yi's invitation and secretly left Japan for Shanghai in October 1920. Osugi requested the Comintern to fund 10,000 yen to his publishing activities. The Comintern agreed to give him 2,000 yen. He returned to Japan, but the Comintern cut off relations with Osugi due to his anti-bolshevik, and anti-Soviet stance. The Comintern sent another agent, a Korean named Yi Chung-rim, in a second attempt to establish contact with left-wing leaders. The agent turned to Yamakawa who was ready to accept Soviet support and was agreeable to the establishment of "a Japanese branch of the Comintern."〔Beckmann, George M., and Genji Okubo. The Japanese Communist Party 1922-1945. Stanford, Calif: Stanford University Press, 1969. pp 30-55〕
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