answersLogoWhite

0

In 1944, the region that lay outside the western limits of the Japanese Empire was India. During World War II, Japan had expanded its territories across various parts of Southeast Asia and the Pacific, but India remained a British colony and was not under Japanese control. The western expansion of the Japanese Empire primarily included areas such as the Philippines, Malaya, and parts of China, but did not reach India.

User Avatar

AnswerBot

1w ago

What else can I help you with?

Related Questions

What describes the central purpose of Monroe doctrine?

limits European influence in the Western Hemisphere


To be outside the city limits and in the countryside?

Yes it is.


How did the streetcar affect life in the big city?

Middle class people now could afford to live just outside the city limits


What has the author Peter Flora written?

Peter Flora has written: 'Growth to Limits' 'Growth to Limits the Western European Welfare States Since World War Ii. Appendix (Growth to Limits)' 'Growth to Limits: The Western European Welfare States Since World War II'


Why is N form required for export from locations outside mumbai limits?

Why is N form required for export from locations outside mumbai limits?Read more: Why_is_N_form_required_for_export_from_locations_outside_mumbai_limits


Is Montgomery village in gaithersburg?

It is outside Gaithersburg city limits.


In Minnesota can an officer pull you over outside of his or her city limits?

yes they can.


Can a city's code of ordinances be enforced outside the city's city limits?

No.


What does the word outlying mean?

Outside certain limits, distant or remote


What describes the purpose of Monroe doctrine?

limits European influence in the Western Hemisphere


What is outside battery limits?

A process area of a refinery, chemical plant or mining operation is referred to in the context of "battery limits". On a drawing, the battery limits is the area of interest.


What was the First Triumvirate agenda?

The First Triumvirate was a political alliance between Gaius Julius Caesar, Marcus Crassus, and Gnaeus Magnus. Its agenda involved specifically controlling the Roman Empire by working juts outside the government's limits.