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  2. Japanese militarism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_militarism

    Japanese militarism (日本軍国主義, Nihon gunkoku shugi) was the ideology in the Empire of Japan which advocated the belief that militarism should dominate the political and social life of the nation, and the belief that the strength of the military is equal to the strength of a nation.

  3. Military history of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_history_of_Japan

    Japan was influenced by Western imperialism in Asia which caused Japan to participate as a colonial power. Japan was the last major power to enter the race for global colonization. It expanded rapidly, with colonial acquisitions, from 1895 till 1942. The Empire of Japan was one of the largest in history. It included colonies in Manchuria, China ...

  4. Empire of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empire_of_Japan

    The rise of Japan to a world power during the past 80 years is the greatest miracle in world history. The mighty empires of antiquity, the major political institutions of the Middle Ages and the early modern era, the Spanish Empire, the British Empire, all needed centuries to achieve their full strength. Japan's rise has been meteoric.

  5. Political dissidence in the Empire of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_dissidence_in...

    Kaji Wataru was a Japanese proletarian writer who lived in Shanghai. His wife, Yuki Ikeda, suffered through torture at the hands of the Imperial Japanese. She fled Japan when she was very young, working as a ballroom dancer in Shanghai to earn a living. They were friends with Chinese cultural leader Guo Moruo. Kaji and Yuki would escape ...

  6. Imperial Japanese Army - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperial_Japanese_Army

    The Imperial Japanese Army [a] (IJA) was the principal ground force of the Empire of Japan.Forming one of the military branches of the Imperial Japanese Armed Forces (IJAF), it was controlled by the Imperial Japanese Army General Staff Office and the Army Ministry, both of which were nominally subordinate to the Emperor of Japan, the supreme commander of IJAF.

  7. Imperial Japanese Army General Staff Office - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imperial_Japanese_Army...

    Kogun: The Japanese Army in the Pacific War. Quantico, Virginia: The Marine Corps Association. Shin'ichi Kitaoka, "Army as Bureaucracy: Japanese Militarism Revisited", Journal of Military History, special issue 57 (October 1993): 67–83. Edgerton, Robert B. (1999). Warriors of the Rising Sun: A History of the Japanese Military. Westview Press.

  8. Kishida vows to push rules-based order as Japan's defense ...

    www.aol.com/news/kishida-vows-push-rules-based...

    Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida vowed to step up his country’s effort to defend a rules-based international order in a peace pledge made Thursday on the 79th anniversary of Japan's defeat ...

  9. Japan during World War I - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japan_during_World_War_I

    Although Japan's light industry had secured a share of the world market, Japan returned to debtor-nation status soon after the end of the war. The ease of Japan's victory, the negative impact of the Shōwa recession in 1926, and internal political instabilities helped contribute to the rise of Japanese militarism in the late 1920s to 1930s.