Commodore Mathew Perry
No, but we should be kind to foreigners and we should be willing to help them when they ask!
There was definitely a battle in Tokyo Bay July 22, 1945. My dad was in that battle. Apparently there was talk of a medal being struck for participants but this never came to be. Is strange that this battle is largely unknown. Google it and read the battle's fascinating particulars. It happened right after midnight and was a quite tense situation. There was no battle in Tokyo Bay in 1945. There was a surrender ceremony, where the Japanese formally signed the documents of surrender aboard the USS Missouri. This was about three weeks after the second A Bomb had been dropped on Japan. Several days after that bombing the Japanese agreed to surrender. What happened in Tokyo Bay was the formal conclusion of that agreement. US ships sailed unopposed into Tokyo Bay. The Japanese had been instructed to have a white flag hanging from the muzzle of each of their shore guns. The Japanese delegation was brought out to the Missouri by boat. US Army General Douglas MacArthur presided for all the Allied nations. Generals of several Allied nations were present. Admiral William Halsey was the commander of the US Navy Task Force, of which the Missouri was a part.
The Japanese word for soul force or the force of soul is Kami.
a large percentage of the labor force was japanese.!
a large percentage of the labor force was japanese.!
The Tokota Air Base is located at Fussa, Tokyo, Japan. It is a United States Air Force base and has 14000 personnel. The facility was originally used by the Japanese Imperial Army. After 1945, it became a US Air Force base.
After several petitions from congress, Pres. Millard Fillmore decided to force japan to trade with the united states. Under the command of Matthew C. Perry (commodore) four american warships entered Edo bay( today known as Tokyo Bay). The display of american technology impressed the Japanese; by the way they have never before seen a steamship! So mesmerized Japanese agreed to sign the treaty of Kanagawa. That is basically "how" they forced the Japanese to trade with them.
Force or threaten the Japanese-People
Imperial Japanese Army Air Force Academy ended in 1945.
The Navy Task Force carrying the Doolittle Raiders was forced to launch the Army Air Force B-25 Mitchell bombers approximately 650nm from Japan (170nm short of their intended launch point) due to being spotted by a Japanese picket boat.
it's obvious.
General Jimmy Doolittle received a Medal of Honor for leading the first raid on Tokyo from an aircraft carrier.