US Military Personnel (1939-1945)
<span><span>
1939Army: 189,839
Navy: 125,202
Marines: 19,432
Total: 334,473
<span>
1940<span>Army: 269,023</span>
Navy: 160,997
Marines: 28,345
Total: 458,365
<span>
1941Army: 1,462,315
Navy: 284,427
Marines: 54,359
Total: 1,801,101
<span>
1942Army: 3,075,608
Navy: 640,570
Marines: 142,613
Coast Guard: 56,716
Total: 3,915,507
<span>
1943Army: 6,994,472
Navy: 1,741,750
Marines: 308,523
Coast Guard: 151,167
Total:9,195,912
1944Army: 7,994,750
Navy: 2,981,365
Marines: 475,604
Coast Guard: 171,749
Total: 11,623,468
1945Army: 8,267,958
Navy: 3,380,817
Marines: 474,680
<span>Coast Guard: 85,783</span>
Total: 12,209,238
</span></span></span></span></span></span>
I’m not positive but i think the us treasury issue securities
The correct answer is more prosperous and less democratic
Japanese conquests led to a wave of euphoria and enthusiasm in Japan, which, coupled with extensive indoctrination, developed a strong nationalism that defended imperialist ambitions. Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, there was an extreme right-wing authoritarian regime in Japan that fueled nationalist militarism and Japanese imperialism.
This nationalist and imperialist discourse in Japan claimed that the mission in China was unique and exclusively civilizing, but it is known that Japanese interests were motivated by economic issues. During the 1930s, two incidents led to the Japanese invasion of Manchuria (northeastern China) and, finally, the start of the war.
Increase in efficiency of farming and also resulting in fewer and also got large farms.