Aside from history, from a military point of view, what are Japan s famous generals and famous battl

Updated on military 2024-02-09
21 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    In 1928, after returning from the United States, Yamamoto went to London twice a year to attend naval disarmament conferences, serving as captain of the cruiser "Isuzu" and the aircraft carrier "Akagi," chief of the technical division of the Naval Aviation Department, and commander of the First Air Force. In 1934, he was promoted to lieutenant general and became Minister of Aviation. During this period, Yamamoto was most interested in aircraft, and he trumpeted "air force doctrine" and "offensive warfare based on aircraft carriers".

    Seishiro Itagaki was born on January 21, 1885 in Iwate Prefecture, Japan. One of Japan's Class-A war criminals, the mastermind of the "18 September" incident, the mastermind of concocting the puppet "Manchukuo," and a fierce general of the Japanese Army, he was loyal to the aggression and expansion of Japanese militarism, and his hands were stained with the blood of the Chinese people. Okamura Ninji was one of the most famous generals in the Japanese fascist army.

    In January 1932, the "128 Incident" broke out in Shanghai. In February, he was appointed deputy chief of staff of Japan's "Shanghai Dispatch Army"; In April, he was promoted to major general; In August, he was transferred to Northeast China as Deputy Chief of Staff of the Kwantung Army. In January 1933, he commanded the Kwantung Army to attack Rehe and other places.

    In May, on behalf of Japan, the Tanggu Agreement was signed.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    The 19th Route Army of the National Revolutionary Army is counted as one, and the Battle of Songhu and the Japanese devils are desperate.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Ye Ting's New Fourth Army is known as the "Iron Army."

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Communist Army: Eighth Route Army, New Fourth Army, Railway Guerrillas, Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army.

    Kuomintang troops: Indo-Burma Expeditionary Force, Flying Tigers (commanded by Chennault) Japanese Army: Unit 731, Kwantung Army.

    If it can be traced back to after 918, there are also the Anti-Japanese Democratic Alliance Army (commanded by Ji Hongchang) and the 19th Route Army.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    When the Pacific War broke out on December 7, 1941, the Kwantung Army had 730,000 troops and China sent 620,000 troops, totaling 1.35 million troops.

    When the Japanese surrendered. The "Chinese Dispatch Army" was 1.05 million, and the Kwantung Army surrendered 680,000 to the Soviet Army, totaling 1.73 million people.

    The Japanese Army had 17 divisions and regiments before the "77 Incident", and 156 divisions (excluding tank divisions and anti-aircraft divisions) were formed during the war (including reorganization and reorganization, such as the first division), with a total of 173 divisions and regiments.

    Among them, the 1st General Army and the 2nd General Army stationed on the mainland have 53 divisions and regiments, 62 divisions and regiments (including the 56th Division) before and after the battlefield in China's Guannai, and 58 divisions before and after the Kwantung Army. In total, 120 divisions entered the Chinese battlefield.

    Based on the average of 10,000 people in one Japanese full-strength division at that time, the number of troops that Japan invested in the Chinese battlefield before and after was 4.2 million.

    At the time of the surrender, the total number of Japanese troops reached 7.2 million. Among them, 1.05 million were "Chinese troops", accounting for 15%; The Kwantung Army surrendered 680,000 to the Soviet army, accounting for 9%. The total number of Southern Army and "Domestic Army" that surrendered to the Allied forces led by the United States in the Pacific Theater was about 5.5 million, accounting for 76%.

    At the end of the war, 1.05 million of the "Chinese Dispatch Army" surrendered, and about 550,000 Japanese troops were wiped out during the war. Nearly 1 million wounded were also repatriated, so the total number of troops that Japan committed to China during World War II was more than 2.6 million.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Do you mean heads-up or leading?

    And that's a bit of a big problem.

    There are too many people at the level of generals, and those who participate in the war are not necessarily the most powerful, and they also score troops and war zones.

    Just like Rommel, who is powerful in the desert of North Africa, *** famous, is a guerrilla tactic, to say that there are more detailed conditions, it is okay.

    Anyway, everyone is familiar with the Tokyo trial of those Class A war criminals.

    A well-known general of the army and navy.

    Japanese Army General Okamura Ninji (Commander-in-Chief of the Army, who only took office in 44 years), and Japanese Army General Hideki Tojo (nicknamed Razor, known for his harsh and brutal methods, later served as Prime Minister of Japan).

    Japanese Army General Yamashita Fumimi (led the Japanese army in an attack on the Malay Peninsula and suddenly appeared from the rear of the British army. Forced the British army, several times its size, to surrender. Called the "Malay Tigers".

    Japanese Army General Kenji Dohihara (Spy King Chugokutong), Japanese Army General Seishiro Itagaki.

    Japanese Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto (the first to use aircraft carrier formations to attack targets at a distance of 10,000 miles).

    Japanese Admiral Nagano Hidesui.

    Japanese Admiral Tadaichi Nagumo.

  7. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Yamamoto fifty-six, planned Pearl Harbor, the grand prize before his death, the marshal after his death, and the other awards are basically juniors, the ultimate boss of Japan in the early stage

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    In fact, it should be said here that the most ambitious Navy is Yamamoto Fifty-six, and the Army is more Okamura, and the soil is fertile.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    The first recommendation is Yamamoto Fifty-six.

    The only strategist in the Japanese Army, Ishihara Waner, the only man with strategic vision in the Japanese Army, single-handedly planned 918. However, he rarely led troops to fight, and he was in the minority in the army, so he was always unwilling.

    There are too many other Banheng, Tu Fei and the like, and there is also Yamashita Fengwen, who is known as the Malay Tiger, who swept through Southeast Asia in the early days of World War II, and the British and American troops were defeated by him, and MacArthur has always been obsessed with him, so that he had to be hanged in the end.

    Tojo was a first-class and second-class soldier (Ishihara's evaluation of him), and he was just frustrated.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    Japanese General Okamura Ninji of World War II.

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    The navy is best known as Yamamoto Isoroku, but he is actually good at government affairs rather than war.

    There is also Nagumo Tadaichi, who cooperates with Yamamoto Fifty-six, and his official position is not small, and he is a torpedo expert, the advantage is cautious, and the disadvantage is that he is too cautious.

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    Categories: Culture Art >> historical topics.

    Problem description: As the question, know how much to say.

    For example, the Battle of Songhu and the Battle of Changsha.

    Analysis: Battle of Songhu - The Battle of the People's ** to defend the capital.

    The Battle of Taierzhuang - the battle of the great catastrophe of the national **.

    Battle of Hunan-Guizhou - In the later stage of the Anti-Japanese War, the great retreat of the people.

    The great victory of Pingxingguan - the first battle of the Eighth Route Army.

    The Battle of the Hundred Regiments - a huge railway raid battle.

    The Battle of Niangzi Pass - The flower of the famous general withered at the foot of Taihang Mountain.

    That's all I can think of, the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression ** undertook the frontal battlefield, but there were not many victories, and there were not many opportunities for us to understand it. * The victories of the Eighth Route Army were all small victories into big victories. Except for the Battle of the Hundred Regiments, there were almost no battles in which more than 10,000 enemies were annihilated.

    This one is the same as the War of Liberation.

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    During World War II, Japan's military tactical thinking was somewhat backward in some respects compared to other countries. The Japanese army mainly used melee combat** and light **, often seeing soldiers as a substitute and counting on sacrificing themselves to win. This makes them poor in some large-scale operations, but it also causes them to show high survivability and adaptability in various harsh environments, such as fighting in dense forests and jungles.

    In addition, in the field of navigation and submarines, Japan is relatively advanced in tactics and technology. The Japanese Navy, dominated by large battleships with fast maneuverability and long-range firepower, achieved a series of stunning victories on the side of the liquid. Japan's submarine technology is also very advanced, and the submarines of his leaders attacked a large number of allied boats during the Pacific War, and became an important tool of Japan's aggressive actions.

    In general, Japan's tactical thinking may be a little behind in some respects compared to other countries, but very advanced in others. Japan's defeat in the war was partly due to its strategic and political failures, rather than purely tactical and technical reasons.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    Japan's tactics are less backward than its helplessness due to its lack of technical weapons.

    The tactical core of the Japanese Army was small in-depth penetration and outflanking of infantry and limited air support. If you replace infantry infiltration with tank outflanking, plus elevated air support, it's a standard blitzkrieg. However, Japan lacked both tanks and aircraft.

    In fact, many of the regular warfare experiences of relieving the starvation and releasing the army were learned from the Japanese army. For example, in the Korean War, the Volunteer Army showed excellent penetration capabilities.

    However, on the other hand, in the middle and late stages of World War II, the offensive tactics of the armies of various countries in Jianlu were developing in the direction of large-depth penetration and wave attacks, but the Japanese army was on the defensive at that time and was unable to organize large-scale offensives, so there was no experience in large-depth offensives. This square limb Sun said that the Japanese army's tactical thinking was backward.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    After the Meiji Restoration, Japan's social development has gradually become faster, so they have a lot of money to develop **, and their military ** are all developed and produced by themselves.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-22

    During the Opium War, China cleared the land and paid the reparations, and Japan got the reparations, which developed rapidly and vigorously purchased military products.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-21

    The European powers fought in the dark of World War I, and Japan took the opportunity to expand its power. With the support of the United Kingdom, Japan became a relatively strong region in the Far East.

  18. Anonymous users2024-01-20

    Because Japan's national strength increased after the Meiji Restoration, its military ** was obtained through the invasion of the Korean Peninsula.

  19. Anonymous users2024-01-19

    This topic is not good, and now we should not underestimate Japan, Germany, Italy, and even less Japan during World War II.

  20. Anonymous users2024-01-18

    At first, it was borrowed, and then it began to develop independently.

  21. Anonymous users2024-01-17

    By plunder, by expansion colonization.

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