to gain more islands as their base and use it to attack the u.s throughout the island which is basically the u.s bases that the japanese took over during World War 2
Japanese expansion in the early to mid-20th century was driven by a desire to secure Natural Resources and raw materials to support industrialization, as well as a quest for geopolitical influence and power in the region. It was also fueled by a belief in Japanese racial superiority and a desire to establish a Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere under Japanese control.
The Japanese resorted to isolation, specifically the policy of sakoku, in response to European expansion to protect their culture, prevent foreign influence, and maintain political stability. They were concerned about the spread of Christianity and potential threats to their traditional way of life.
The expansion of the company led to an increase in the length of their product line.
"Riku" (γͺγ―) in Japanese could come from the kanji ηδΉ , meaning "reason" or "eternity," or from other combinations of kanji characters with different meanings. It can also be used as a name for boys or girls, depending on the kanji used.
Yes, that's correct. Buddhism is one of the major religions practiced in Japan, alongside Shinto. Many Japanese people incorporate elements of Buddhist teachings and practices into their cultural and spiritual beliefs, even if they do not identify as devout practitioners.
The Sanskrit word for 'joyful expansion' is Ananda-vardhana.
their reason is to take over the island to expand their military population and use the islands as their own place to attack the u.s.
Japan thought the U.S.A was trying to stop their expansion.
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.
to stop Japanese expansion
Japanese expansion into material rich regions.
The Axis Powers (:
Russian & Japanese expansion plans in that region, led to a clash.
Japanese expansion into Eastern Asia began with the invasion of Manchuria in 1931. It also created a separate puppet state in Inner Mongolia. The Chinese Nationalist capital of Nanking also surrendered to the Japanese in 1937. The Japanese killed as many of 300,000 Chinese in the Massacre of Nanking.
The Japanese expansion policy was motivated by a lack of natural resources.
Two answers to this (both are correct):1. To Destroy ships and planes that threatened their expansion efforts.2.The attacks was to prevent Americans from mounting a strong resistance to Japanese expansion.