In WW1, the Japanese army only had to clean up what it could get from the German colonial possessions. Tsingtao was its biggest engagement and went well. It had not cost the lives of countless Japanese soldiers.
Contrast that to WW2, where you have an army that has been fighting in China since 1931 and then was thrust into the jungles of southeast Asia and the Pacific in a bitter fight for survival against the British and Americans. When you have spilled your blood, you are less predisposed to the gallantries of "civilized" fighting.
<span>And then you have the precedent of these exact same foes having turned down Japan's </span>Racial Equality Proposal<span> in 1920. The Japanese understood that the westerners were still looking at them as inferior. That resentment had time to fester in the intervening 20 years, among the ranks of the Japanese army officers.</span>
<span>Last but not least, in the interwar years the entire world saw a slide to totalitarianism, with Japan being no exception
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Answer:
They didn't want their children to go to school with a black child. Ruby showed bravery by walking to school with federal marshals who were there to keep her safe. She showed bravery by going to school each day even though many white parents didn't want her there.
Explanation:
They resisted slavery by escaping, rebelling or sabotaging work
Answer: A. North and South Korea were still divided along the 38th parallel.
Explanation: North Korea was founded on October 3rd, 1945. Almost immediately after World War 2 ended: The Korean War had started on June 25th, 1950, and ended on July 27th, 1953. It did not result in the reunification of the Korean peninsula, but rather it “ensured a complete cessation of hostilities and of all acts of armed force in Korea until a final peaceful settlement is achieved.”
Answer:
We don't <u>HAVE A CHANCE</u> to <u>WIN TODAY</u> unless we <u>FIND SOME WAY</u> to <u>STAND OUT</u>.
Explanation:
answers are bolded and underlined