El Nino
The English word typhoon originated from the Japanese word 'taifu'.
Tsunami's, Earthquakes and Typhoons (Hurricanes).
Kami Kaze. Literally 'God's wind" They reused the word in WWII
The Japanese staged an explosion at a railroad yard and blamed it on the Chinese. -- NovaNet answer
The Japanese Version - 1991 was released on: USA: 1 February 1991
Yes, the Japanese blamed the Chinese and used it as an excuse to invade Manchuria.
The Japanese staged an explosion at a railroad yard and blamed it on the Chinese. -- NovaNet answer
The Japanese staged an explosion at a railroad yard and blamed it on the Chinese. -- NovaNet answer
Part of a Japanese railroad near Mukden was blown; the Japanese blamed the Chinese for it, and used the incident as justification for invading Manchuria in 1931.
Part of a Japanese railroad near Mukden was blown; the Japanese blamed the Chinese for it, and used the incident as justification for invading Manchuria in 1931.
The Japanese staged an explosion at a railroad yard and blamed it on the Chinese. -- NovaNet answer
Because they surrendered to a much smaller Japanese invasion force.