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 Version - 1991 was released on: USA: 1 February 1991
The Japanese staged an explosion at a railroad yard and blamed it on the Chinese. -- NovaNet answer
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.