In 1939, East Tango Pluto saw the daughter's body was sent back in full, unusually excited, immediately pulled out the knife from the waist, cut off the daughter's belly, took out a blue pill, imagine the pill had exploded!
In the early spring of that year, in the basement of a spy training center in Hokkaido, the temperature was so low that breath could be condensed in the air, and the flames of kerosene lamps trembled on the iron frame, lengthening the shadow on Tojo Minglang's face.
He knelt in front of a tightly wrapped body, his fingers trembling, but not because of the cold. There was an almost fanatical light in his eyes.
He gently opened the body bag. When he saw the familiar yet unfamiliar face, a tear fell from the corner of his eye. His daughter, Tojo Branch, had finally returned.
For seven months, he had been waiting for this moment.
He drew out the military knife from his waist, and his movements were as neat as if he were completing an operation. He cut open the flesh of his daughter's abdomen. The blood had long dried up and his body temperature had disappeared.
He found the blue bullet — something he designed with his own hands — that wrapped Japanese submarine strategic secrets for the next three years.
He smiled and was about to take it out when the capsule exploded, turning the entire basement into a white light.
The explosion shook the whole training hall, and the clock on the wall stopped at 3:01 a.m. on March 7, 1939.
All of this is classified as a “technical accident” in military records, but the British military intelligence agency has its own statement, they call it “the end of the spy plan.”
The origins of this explosion date back to the autumn of 1938.
In October of that year, a British reconnaissance ship found a drifting motorboat on the high seas of southern Japan. The hull of the ship was badly damaged, and there was only a young girl on it, ragged and frightened.
She calls herself "Matsushima Nagaki" and is the daughter of Japanese anti-war activists. She fled all the way to the sea because she openly opposed the military being hunted down. She said that she stole the design drawing of Japan's latest submarine and wanted to go to Britain.
Her story was fuzzy, but surprisingly intriguing, full of emotions, logical clarity, especially the tearful eyes, made British officers hesitate.
They sent her to Portsmouth and handed her over to MI6. No one believed her at first, but she completely changed the situation with a technical demonstration.
She pointed out that the British submarine thrusters were designed incorrectly and made suggestions for improvement based on calculations and visual inspections. After the simulation experiment, the results were amazing. She was sent to the Military Research Institute and gradually gained trust.
She also talked about her ideals, and her words were deep in the heart of the young engineer Stewos.
They got engaged six months later, and in February 1939 they celebrated their wedding at St. Paul's Church in London.
The sun was shining, and Long Juan, dressed in white veil and smiling like an inexperienced maiden, suddenly collapsed to the ground near the end of the ceremony, breathless.
The autopsy report showed cardiac arrest, and her suicide note contained a request: she hoped to have her body transported back to Japan and buried with her father. The British side approved the request.
But just the night before the body was about to be delivered, Stewart said an unintentional word in the office of intelligence officer Potter: “She’s on her face... I remember being on the left.”
Porter, a quiet but paranoid old spy, was silent for ten seconds after he heard the words, and then called the intelligence department: "I want the body to be recovered and immediately obtained an autopsy."
The anatomy did not find the poison, but a small capsule was found in the back of the abdomen, tightly wrapped, with a special material.
MI6 quickly identified this as an extremely advanced information transmission device, and the sealed information inside could change the entire intelligence landscape.
Porter made a decision: replace it.
With the same shell, they put a high-sensitivity explosive device in which the explosion condition was set to explode immediately when the shell was broken.
No one knows if anyone will actually cut open the body, but Porter asserts: "If this is a plan, then no step is superfluous."
As it turns out, he was right.
Tojo Minglang is a senior consultant of the Japanese Army Intelligence Headquarters. He was once responsible for formulating the "Corpse Spy Plan". The core of the whole plan is not "Matsushima Nagaki", but his biological daughter, Tojo Eko.
The first step of the plan is to make her look like a long scroll in Matsushima, receive British education, language training, submarine technical memory training, and the most critical personality shaping.
She didn’t swim to the sea, she was precisely calculated and “saved” by a fixed point.
She wasn’t a great actress, but was trained from childhood to a perfect “false identity.”
She didn’t have a heart attack, but took a chronic poison, having an attack on time on the wedding day, making sure she died at the most “credible” moment.
She is not a body transported back to China for burial, she is a "container" used to pass on state secrets.
The plan was almost perfect until the “beautiful man who would move” broke the whole rhythm.
The death of Minglang Tojo is the end of the plan and the climax of irony.
He designed a play to make his daughter an object; he took a decade to build a “spy container” and at the last moment exploded it himself.
The kind of “grief added” he saw when he saw his daughter’s body was not love, but a joy of victory.
He once said, “War is not so simple as killing, war is to make your enemy believe you are a friend.”
This sentence also came true for himself. He believed in his plan and every detail of his design, but he did not realize that the real enemy had long infiltrated his "victory".
After the explosion, the Japanese side initially blocked the news, and later declared it an "explosive accident". However, internal documents showed that the death of Hiro Tojo permanently terminated the whole "corpse spy plan".
Because no one dares to believe that “people” can be used to convey messages like envelopes.
The “spy program” eventually became one of the most classic counterfeit cases in British intelligence history, and was included in the top-secret archives until 1978.
Source of information:
The Arkiv of Lake North: The non-return of the Japanese Spy East Branch.
Chinese military network - Japanese spy show "lease the body and soul" tricks finally punished by opponents
In the early spring of that year, in the basement of a spy training center in Hokkaido, the temperature was so low that breath could be condensed in the air, and the flames of kerosene lamps trembled on the iron frame, lengthening the shadow on Tojo Minglang's face.
He knelt in front of a tightly wrapped body, his fingers trembling, but not because of the cold. There was an almost fanatical light in his eyes.
He gently opened the body bag. When he saw the familiar yet unfamiliar face, a tear fell from the corner of his eye. His daughter, Tojo Branch, had finally returned.
For seven months, he had been waiting for this moment.
He drew out the military knife from his waist, and his movements were as neat as if he were completing an operation. He cut open the flesh of his daughter's abdomen. The blood had long dried up and his body temperature had disappeared.
He found the blue bullet — something he designed with his own hands — that wrapped Japanese submarine strategic secrets for the next three years.
He smiled and was about to take it out when the capsule exploded, turning the entire basement into a white light.
The explosion shook the whole training hall, and the clock on the wall stopped at 3:01 a.m. on March 7, 1939.
All of this is classified as a “technical accident” in military records, but the British military intelligence agency has its own statement, they call it “the end of the spy plan.”
The origins of this explosion date back to the autumn of 1938.
In October of that year, a British reconnaissance ship found a drifting motorboat on the high seas of southern Japan. The hull of the ship was badly damaged, and there was only a young girl on it, ragged and frightened.
She calls herself "Matsushima Nagaki" and is the daughter of Japanese anti-war activists. She fled all the way to the sea because she openly opposed the military being hunted down. She said that she stole the design drawing of Japan's latest submarine and wanted to go to Britain.
Her story was fuzzy, but surprisingly intriguing, full of emotions, logical clarity, especially the tearful eyes, made British officers hesitate.
They sent her to Portsmouth and handed her over to MI6. No one believed her at first, but she completely changed the situation with a technical demonstration.
She pointed out that the British submarine thrusters were designed incorrectly and made suggestions for improvement based on calculations and visual inspections. After the simulation experiment, the results were amazing. She was sent to the Military Research Institute and gradually gained trust.
She also talked about her ideals, and her words were deep in the heart of the young engineer Stewos.
They got engaged six months later, and in February 1939 they celebrated their wedding at St. Paul's Church in London.
The sun was shining, and Long Juan, dressed in white veil and smiling like an inexperienced maiden, suddenly collapsed to the ground near the end of the ceremony, breathless.
The autopsy report showed cardiac arrest, and her suicide note contained a request: she hoped to have her body transported back to Japan and buried with her father. The British side approved the request.
But just the night before the body was about to be delivered, Stewart said an unintentional word in the office of intelligence officer Potter: “She’s on her face... I remember being on the left.”
Porter, a quiet but paranoid old spy, was silent for ten seconds after he heard the words, and then called the intelligence department: "I want the body to be recovered and immediately obtained an autopsy."
The anatomy did not find the poison, but a small capsule was found in the back of the abdomen, tightly wrapped, with a special material.
MI6 quickly identified this as an extremely advanced information transmission device, and the sealed information inside could change the entire intelligence landscape.
Porter made a decision: replace it.
With the same shell, they put a high-sensitivity explosive device in which the explosion condition was set to explode immediately when the shell was broken.
No one knows if anyone will actually cut open the body, but Porter asserts: "If this is a plan, then no step is superfluous."
As it turns out, he was right.
Tojo Minglang is a senior consultant of the Japanese Army Intelligence Headquarters. He was once responsible for formulating the "Corpse Spy Plan". The core of the whole plan is not "Matsushima Nagaki", but his biological daughter, Tojo Eko.
The first step of the plan is to make her look like a long scroll in Matsushima, receive British education, language training, submarine technical memory training, and the most critical personality shaping.
She didn’t swim to the sea, she was precisely calculated and “saved” by a fixed point.
She wasn’t a great actress, but was trained from childhood to a perfect “false identity.”
She didn’t have a heart attack, but took a chronic poison, having an attack on time on the wedding day, making sure she died at the most “credible” moment.
She is not a body transported back to China for burial, she is a "container" used to pass on state secrets.
The plan was almost perfect until the “beautiful man who would move” broke the whole rhythm.
The death of Minglang Tojo is the end of the plan and the climax of irony.
He designed a play to make his daughter an object; he took a decade to build a “spy container” and at the last moment exploded it himself.
The kind of “grief added” he saw when he saw his daughter’s body was not love, but a joy of victory.
He once said, “War is not so simple as killing, war is to make your enemy believe you are a friend.”
This sentence also came true for himself. He believed in his plan and every detail of his design, but he did not realize that the real enemy had long infiltrated his "victory".
After the explosion, the Japanese side initially blocked the news, and later declared it an "explosive accident". However, internal documents showed that the death of Hiro Tojo permanently terminated the whole "corpse spy plan".
Because no one dares to believe that “people” can be used to convey messages like envelopes.
The “spy program” eventually became one of the most classic counterfeit cases in British intelligence history, and was included in the top-secret archives until 1978.
Source of information:
The Arkiv of Lake North: The non-return of the Japanese Spy East Branch.
Chinese military network - Japanese spy show "lease the body and soul" tricks finally punished by opponents