If "Ice Breakers" could make the journey, the best and quickest way by sea would be north going between Alaska and Russia thru the Bering Sea and skirting the coastline along the continent of Eurasia thru the Arctic Ocean to England. Otherwise, it's the route taken by the Russian Battleships under the command of Admiral Rozhestvensky in 1904 (although this is in reverse order): Southwest down the Pacific Ocean thru Singapore into the Indian Ocean continuing southwestward towards the island of Madagascar along the east African coast, rounding the southern tip of Africa (Cape of Good Hope), entering the Atlantic and moving northward along the continent of the west African coast line. OR taking a short cut, also taken by some of Rozhestvensky's battleships in 1904; instead of heading towards Madagascar, turning north into the Red Sea and going thru the Suez Canal, entering the Mediterranian Sea, then exiting thru the straites of Gibralter into the Atlantic Ocean.
Japan
it is the sea of japan witch leads into the pacific answer
The Sea of Japan is between Japan and North Korea.
It is the Sea of Japan.
If you are referring to seas, the Japan sea and the Pacific ocean are on either side of Japan. If you mean the body of water between Hokkaido and Honshu it is called the Tsugaru Strait.
The Times called the sea between Korea and Japan the 'Sea of Japan' instead of the 'East Sea'.
Japan is in the sea
Japan is separated from mainland East Asia by the Korean Strait and Sea of Japan.
Called the sea of Japan, and a slight part of Japan has a sea called Sea of Okhotsk above it
Japan sea.
The Sea of Japan.
The Sea of Japan is the only sea that borders Japan.