This will give you a clear explanation of Japan's reasons for invading other countries.
CHAPTER 23
WORLD WAR II: THE WAR AGAINST JAPAN
byROBERT W. COAKLEYReprinted fromAMERICAN MILITARY HISTORYARMY HISTORICAL SERIESOFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF MILITARY HISTORYUNITED STATES ARMY
CHAPTER 23World War II: The War Against Japan
In World War II, for the first time, the United States had to fight a war on two fronts. Though the central strategic principle governing allocation of resources to the two fronts provided for concentrating first on the defeat of the European Axis, on the American side this principle was liberally interpreted, permitting conduct of an offensive war against Japan as well as against Germany in the years 1943-45. The U.S. Fleet, expanding after its initial setback at Pearl Harbor much as the Army had, provided the main sinews for an offensive strategy in the Pacific, although the Army devoted at least one-third of its resources to the Pacific war, even at the height of war in Europe. In sum, the United States proved capable, once its resources were fully mobilized, of successfully waging offensives on two fronts simultaneously�a development the Japanese had not anticipated when they launched their attack on Pearl Harbor.
Japan's Strategy
Japan entered World War II with limited aims and with the intention of fighting a limited war. Its principal objectives were to secure the resources of Southeast Asia and much of China and to establish a "Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere" under Japanese hegemony. In 1895 and in 1905 Japan had gained important objectives without completely defeating China or Russia and in 1941 Japan sought to achieve its hegemony over East Asia in similar fashion. The operational strategy the Japanese adopted to start war, however, doomed their hopes of limiting the conflict. Japan believed it necessary to destroy or neutralize American striking power in the Pacific�the U.S. Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbor and the U.S. Far East Air Force in the Philippines�before moving southward and eastward to occupy Malaya, the Netherlands Indies, the Philippines, Wake Island, Guam, the Gilbert Islands, Thailand, and Burma. Once in control of these areas, the Japanese intended to establish a defensive perimeter stretching from the Kurile Islands south through Wake, the Marianas, the Carolines, and the Marshalls and Gilberts to Rabaul on New Britain. From
It was a blatant attempt to obtain China's resources.
because no tenian remedio
he really invaded Poland Hungary and other neighboring places but he did not invade the USA
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The primary three reasons that countries colonized other countries were to gain land, to become more powerful, and to be able to mine gold and collect other natural resources.
1. Australia trades with other countries to import products Australians need but can't obtain in Australia. Further more another reason for Australia trading with other countries is to improve the relationship they have with that country e.g. If Japan have a new technology and Zimbabwe have the same technology, Australia would trade with Japan to improve the ralationship bonds.
Technology, and trade.
Some reasons why other countries invade others is to widen their territory.
They wanted their oil and other resources that were not on the Japan islands. They also wanted to be the rulers of the Asian world.
For the same reasons it exports to other countries. For profit.
UMM, it would be easier to answer what countries they DID invade. But they didnt invade North America, Europe, Africa, South America at all. But China, French Indo-China, The Phillipines, and many other pacific islands were invaded.
well i think japan is very cruel to invade other countries and they don't think before they invade their just plainly cruel
Yes
It does not invade other countries.
he really invaded Poland Hungary and other neighboring places but he did not invade the USA
Invade other countries.
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not to let other countries invade China
Japan is just one country, it does not contain any other countries.