A Spy Right Under Imperial Japan's Nose

It was 1942, not long after the fall of the American stronghold of Corregidor that guarded Manila Bay in The Philippines.

 

U.S. Army Sgt. Richard Sakakida was in the hands of the dreaded Kempeitai, the Imperial Japanese military police. Sakakida was an undercover agent of the Corps of Intelligence Police, the forerunner of the Counter Intelligence Corps that oversaw the U.S. Army’s spy-hunters during World War II and the Cold War.

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