Answer: Lack of Power, Expansion, and Natural Resources.
Explanation: 1. Lack of power. Japan wasn’t as powerful as the U.S. so they had to fight with speed. By attacking Pearl Harbor the Japanese planned on halting the U.S.’s ability to fight against the Japanese by decreasing their power. Unfortunately for the Japanese, they failed to destroy the repair yards and refueling stations so the Pacific fleet was back up in no time. 2. Restriction of natural resources. Japan wanted to expand primarily to gain natural resources that the island of Japan did not naturally have. When the U.S. Congress restricted Japan’s access to oil and other natural resources vital to any war effort Japan was forced to act quickly to not be halted by an oil shortage. 3. Expansion. Japan wanted to expand its sphere of influence and garner those sweet sweet natural resources. The war in China had been costly and as a result, Japan began looking elsewhere to replenish its dwindling natural resources. One fun fact about WW2 is while the Holocaust is the primary topic in WW2 discussions those who know a little about the Japanese history will acknowledge the Rapé of Nanking as a brutal sacking of China’s then capital Nanking. Hope this helps!
India was one of the most treasured British colonies.
it was;
<span>as both a market and a source of raw materials
</span>
<span>as the "Brightest Jewel" in the crown of its empire
</span>
<span>as a market and testing ground for new economic principals</span>
Slavery among Native Americans in the United States<span> includes slavery </span>by<span> Native Americans as well as slavery </span>of<span> Native Americans roughly within the present-day United States. Tribal territories and the slave trade ranged over present-day borders. Some </span>Native American tribes<span> held war captives as slaves prior to and during </span>European colonization<span>, some Native Americans were captured and sold by others into slavery to Europeans, and a small number of tribes, in the late eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, adopted the practice of holding slaves as </span>chattel<span> property and held increasing numbers of </span>African-American<span> slaves.</span>