History, asked by ShrutiAdagale, 1 year ago

how did Japan turn imperialist


srp31: Because Japan was hungry for markets.

You saw Japan’s rapid industrialization right? Meiji era? Definitely yes.

But like a nature of an empire (as Alex Nikovhad answered already), colonies was their last wills for it.

In Japan, conquering colonies was their must-target mission. If they couldn’t conquer, then who would regard them as an empire?

Any empires needed colonies. And that’s their imperial nature.

Answers

Answered by bhoutik
0
Japan needed the resources necessary to build a modern state and military, to keep up with the other powers. Japan chose to obtain those resources through conquest, of which FDR disapproved. The USA cut off Japan’s access to petroleum and scrap metal to protect the Chinese from further aggression, which pushed Japan into taking violent action in December of 1941 against the UK, the Dutch and the USA.
Answered by Theusos
7
Hi friend here is your answer

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Some of the reasons due to which Japan turned imperialist are as follows

1) To resist from the western powers
i. e their rule

2) They needed their own empire to survive

3)They were influenced by the western nations

4)Growing imperialism 5)Colonialism 6)Governments often used conquests to display their muscle. 7)Imperialism was also often the flipside of nationalism.

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Hope it helps you..........!!
#The Usos
Down since
One day ish
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