Japan
Japan
Japan
Because Japan invaded French Indochina
In an effort to cut off military supplies to China, Japan invaded French Indochina in 1940. After days of combat, the French Vichy government reached an agreement with Japan that allowed them to occupy Tonkin Bay. The Japanese military had a continued presence in Indochina throughout the war.
Yes. Japan's surrender during WWII, also resulted in Japan's departure from occupied territories, of which Vietnam was one. Which resulted in the return of the French, which resulted in a confrontation-which was the French Indochina War 1946-1954.
French Indochina, Thialand, China, and Manchuria.
When the Japanese ventured into French Indochina in 1940, the US halted several major exports to Japan. Then in 1941 when France fell to Germany and the Japanese took over French Indochina, the US stopped all oil exports to Japan.
He cut off the oil supply and doing so, it led to and attack
Brazil was not part of French Indochina before world war 2.
The French returned to Indo-China, and the French Indochina War commenced in 1946-1954.
French Indochina, now known as Vietnam