History, asked by somaallhit, 10 months ago

explain the japanese threat over lndia... ​

Answers

Answered by BAAZ7466
6

♡HEY DEAR *----*

YOUR ANSWER IS :-

✧༺♥༻✧✧༺♥༻✧✧༺♥༻✧

Japan entered the war in 1941 on the side of the Axis powers and quickly conquered British territories in Southeast Asia towards India: in February 1942, the British fortress of Singapore fell. In March, the Japanese took Rangoon in British Burma, which posed a serious threat to India.

✧༺♥༻✧✧༺♥༻✧✧༺♥༻✧

MARK ME AS BRAINLIEST♡

■baazHere

■FollowMe

■Thanks~

Answered by Anonymous
3

Answer:

.Here is ur answer dear

In December 1941, nearly a decade before the start of the Korean War, the Japanese invaded Burma with a well armed, well supplied, and well equipped contingent of 35,000 troops backed up by basically unfettered air support. They advanced northward into the interior almost unimpeded, with the capitol, Rangoon, falling March 6-7, 1942. They were also successful in shutting down the Allies' life-line into China, the Burma Road. During that period, on December 7, 1941, Japanese forces attacked Pearl Harbor opening the door for the U.S. entry into World War II. Two days later, December 9, 1941, China declared war on Japan.

China, had however, been in a full-scale war with Japan since at least July 1937 when the Japanese claimed they were fired upon by Chinese troops at the Marco Polo Bridge near Beijing. From that the Japanese retaliated by launching an invasion from Manchuria. By November 1937 Shanghai, China's most important sea port fell followed by Nanking, Chiang Kai-shek's capital, in December 1937.

The Japanese concern with any invasion was to advance in their favor what they called the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere. Anybody who didn't agree with their thesis or appeared to stand in their way were subject to Japanese will enforced militarily. In an offside way that is how the United States. was viewed. The U.S. had their own plans, albeit not as focused, for the greater East Asia area and Japan played little or no role in it. Both countries figured wrong. Japan should have acted sooner against America but didn't.

On Sunday, November 7, 1937, a major west coast newspaper, at least at the time it was major, the Los Angeles Examiner, had a full page color map of the Earth's northern hemisphere depicting most of the Pacific Ocean from roughly the edge of China's eastern coastline and Japan to about the mid west of the United States, concentrating on Hawaii in the center and down the Alaskan coast, along Canada, the U.S. and Mexico's Baja peninsula. The theme of the article and map was to show that long before the December 7, 1941 Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, as early as 1937, all the plans and legwork was being laid down for an attack, and still we were caught off guard. For more, including a huge expandable version of the full color Examiner map click either of the following graphics:

Hope it helps u dear❤❤

Similar questions