Want this question answered?
The Japanese were primarily interested in the Philippines because of the
No, it was by Japanese.
the Japanese occupation
Douglas MacArthur vowed to return after he had to leave the Philippines due to the Japanese invasion.
Filipino are natives of the Philippines while Japanese people are hailing from Japan. Their culture and languages are also different.
The Philippines had untapped raw materials that Japan needed, including oil, rubber, and metal ores. It also had the potential to become a major defensive position for fleets and air power (however, Japan was unable to complete this during the war).
Its location. The Philippines is located astride the merchant shipping route from Japan to the Dutch East Indies & British Malaysia & Singapore. The Japanese were afraid that American military bases & American naval units could interfere with Japanese shipments of stolen resources from the south to Japan.
the Americans figth the Japanese
countries such as Thailand and parts of Philippines but very few islands supported the Japanese rule
There are several Japanese companies in the Philippines. The top Japanese companies in the Philippines are i-BRIDGE, JGC Philippines, and Fujitsu.
japanese occupation in the Philippines
The Japanese civilization got into the Philippines because they want to dominate the Philippines.
The Axis powers of Nazi Germany and Italy supported their ally Japan in its expansion. This expansion was supported because it threatened the power of Great Britain and France in Southeast Asia. The expansion also eliminated the occupation of the Philippines by the USA.
The Japanese were primarily interested in the Philippines because of the
to stop Japanese expansion
the Japanese expansion of the 1930s was to expand out of Korea and into manchuria which it annexed and call manchukou
The question as written makes no sense. Japanese-Americans did not perform imperial expansion. The Japanese and the Americans both engaged in imperial expansion individually and for different motives.