[1] The first president of the organization was Nobuhumi Ito, followed by Masayuki Tani, Eiji Amou, Taketora Ogata, Hiroshi Simomura, and Tatsuo Kawai.
[1] The Cabinet Intelligence Bureau had hierarchies consisting of four principal levels:[1] In total, thirty active military officers who belonged to the navy or army were assigned to each department.
[2] The Cabinet Intelligence Bureau was not successful in their mission to control the mass media, and sections of the country remained beyond their influence.
In one of its final acts the organization prohibited the release of every newspaper which posted photographs of the emperor of Japan meeting General MacArthur in September 1945.
For example, posters of national spiritual mobilization movement, anti-Japanese in China and the Soviet Union, a statement which was related to the policy of socialism and published by Gaku Sano and Sadachika Nabeyama, and a panorama titled "The second Sino-Japanese War and Ideological warfare".
[4] As one of the tools of enlightenment advertisement in The Cabinet Information Bureau, Photo Weekly Report was published in February 1938 after half a month of Sino-Japanese War and discontinued in July 1945.
The magazine avoided the difficult expression and used not only sentences but also pictures in order to make citizens understand the government propaganda more easily.