What does Japanese kamikaze have to do with Genghis Khan?

Updated on culture 2024-03-27
32 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    It didn't matter much, both Mongol attacks on Japan failed due to typhoons, which the Japanese called kamikaze, but neither of these attacks was during the time of Genghis Khan, but two wars fought by his descendants. The Japanese were spared because of the help of these two "kamikazes", and they have great respect for the "kamikaze".

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    The kamikaze is the Japanese commando, Genghis Khan, who pursues a strong army and imitates the Japanese kamikaze commando. A steel sword is used, modeled after the armor of a Japanese samurai. Building an iron army was well reflected in Genghis Khan's extermination of the country and the invasion of the southwest, making Genghis Khan a strongman in war.

    In the end, he seized China by force, but unfortunately he was too old to achieve it.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    The kamikaze special attack team, abbreviated as the kamikaze special attack team (Japanese: special attack team), initiated by Japanese Vice Admiral Takakijiro Onishi, was a special attack team that carried out suicide attacks on US ship formations, landing forces, and fixed cluster targets in accordance with the requirements of "one man, one plane, and one bomb" after Japan's defeat at Midway Island at the end of World War II, in order to resist the powerful superiority of the US Air Force and save its defeat. However, the Japanese army has long had a similar concept that applies to suicide submarines, suicide torpedoes, "Huitian" and other suicide war equipment operated by personnel.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    One is a kamikaze, the other is a horseman, and the wind ox and horse are not compatible.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    When the Mongolian Navy invaded Japan, there happened to be a typhoon, which was named "kamikaze" by the Japanese, and later in the latter part of World War II, Japan used suicide attacks to attack and was named "kamikaze"!

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    It doesn't matter, Kublai Khan, the ancestor of the Yuan dynasty, sent troops to attack Japan twice, but they encountered typhoons at sea, and the fleet suffered heavy losses, resulting in the failure of the attack, and Japan was spared because of the typhoon, and since then it has been called a kamikaze. Later, in World War II, Japan was defeated by the U.S. military in the Pacific Ocean, formed kamikaze death squads, and attacked U.S. ships with suicidal attacks, in order to die and struggle, in a vain attempt to save Japan with a miracle like a kamikaze.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Long and single-minded, what is it called without what you said, Genghis Khan, the pursuit of a strong army, imitating the Japanese kamikaze commando. Both Mongol attacks on Japan failed due to typhoons, which the Japanese called kamikaze, but neither of these attacks was fought by Genghis Khan's descendants. The Japanese were spared because of the help of these two "kamikazes", and they have great respect for the "kamikaze".

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    It doesn't matter at all because Genghis Khan died for many years in Japan before it happened kamikaze.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    Genghis Khan's descendants made 3 expeditions to Japan, but all of them failed because of hurricanes over the coast of Japan. In Japan, this wind is called a kamikaze.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    One is a kamikaze, the other is a horseman, and the wind ox and horse are not compatible.

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    The kamikaze special attack team is a lethal force.

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    Worship is one of the deities of the Eastern Secret God of War Mori Zhi Tian is in charge of invisibility, and it is also the wind god of the Second Russo-Japanese War, the emperor ordered the Japanese monks to practice the Mori Zhi Heavenly Law.

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    All are aggressors, executioners who killed countless Chinese. It's just that Genghis Khan succeeded, "greatly promoted national integration", and was regarded as a hero by some Chinese. The invading Japanese army failed, so it became a heinous invader.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    History is like this, as long as the value you create is far greater than the value you destroy, you are a great man!!

    Genghis Khan's life was actually great. One person unified Mongolia. It also expanded to the surrounding areas, destroying Jin, destroying Western Liao, and destroying Western Xia......It laid the foundation for the unification of China by future generations.

    He also organized people to create Mongolian scripts, etc., so that Mongolia moved from barbarism to civilization. The most important thing is that he was almost undefeated in his life, leaving a wonderful mark on the history of world wars.

    As for little Japan, the reason why China is bullying is so miserable is not because of their excellent tactics. Because Japan still used the method used by Mongolia to destroy the Southern Song Dynasty when it attacked China. Rather, it relied on the quality of the equipment and soldiers, as well as the internal strife in China at that time.

    Therefore, there is no comparison between one is heaven and the other is earth.

    If the landlord is not entangled in the slaughter of the city. I would like to ask you to look through the history of China, which dynasty did not kill and slaughter cities? The history of mankind is inherently a history with dark overtones.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    The winner is king, and the loser is like a coward, but the nature of abuse cannot be changed no matter what you say.

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    There is no difference, they are all cruel invaders.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-22

    No, the Mongols were going to attack Japan by boat, but when the ship sank in a storm, the Mongols gave up attacking Japan.

  18. Anonymous users2024-01-21

    Definitely not, that's all little Japan's own boasting!

  19. Anonymous users2024-01-20

    This is just nonsense? Kamikaze is right.

    Cheng Khan only unified the Mongolian steppe, destroyed Khorezmo, destroyed the Western Liao, the Jin State was still there, and the Western Xia did not officially perish, he died, and he never saw the Southern Song Dynasty border in his life. How could he go and fight India, Japan?

    The heyday of the Mongol Empire was the foundation for the development of his descendants.

    The Mongol Yuan Empire attacked Japan, and on two expeditions, the fleet was engulfed by a typhoon, so Japan called the typhoon a kamikaze, and the name "kamikaze" came from this.

    If the deeds of the descendants of Cheng Khan can also be counted on the head of Cheng Khan, then the Mughal dynasty in India is an empire established by the descendants of the Mongols.

  20. Anonymous users2024-01-19

    Monopolizing half the world? Dreamed?

  21. Anonymous users2024-01-18

    Genghis Khan did have the idea of crossing the sea to expedition to Japan, but he gave up due to various reasons such as kamikaze, so Genghis Khan never landed in Japan. The Japanese commented on Genghis Khan a little interestingly, and the Japanese commented:"He is the only person in the world who has influenced the whole world with his genes"。

    And they are said to be related to Genghis Khan, which means relatives.

  22. Anonymous users2024-01-17

    In ancient times, it was very difficult to fight across the sea, after all, the conditions at that time were limited, in fact, at the beginning, Genghis Khan had launched two wars against Japan, but both times ended in fiasco, Genghis Khan based on the conditions at the time, and then decisively gave up the war against Japan.

  23. Anonymous users2024-01-16

    Genghis Khan did not have a decent sailor, and the sea conditions were complicated at that time, and the expedition to Japan did not outweigh the losses.

  24. Anonymous users2024-01-15

    I feel that Japan is a dwarf country, and my face is not bright after conquering it.

  25. Anonymous users2024-01-14

    Because of the typhoon near the Sea of Japan, Genghis Khan's fleet was wiped out several times, and Japan's land area was not large, so it was not interesting to conquer, so it was abandoned.

  26. Anonymous users2024-01-13

    At that time, the conditions were limited, and the war against the sea was not sound enough, so we did not conquer Japan.

  27. Anonymous users2024-01-12

    At that time, there was no strong navy, no good shipbuilding technology, and it was impossible to transport the brave Mongol army to Japan, otherwise with his character, he might have wiped out Japan when he conquered Japan.

  28. Anonymous users2024-01-11

    If you want to cross the sea, not the plains, you will be in the world immediately.

  29. Anonymous users2024-01-10

    Because he fought a few times and failed, and finally stopped fighting.

  30. Anonymous users2024-01-09

    Genghis Khan, the greatest Khan of the Mongols, led the Mongol cavalry across Eurasia and established the powerful Mongol Empire. Although he had planned to conquer Japan, the Mongols had long been known as a people on horseback, and fighting on horseback was their forte. Japan was far away from China and needed to be reached by steamer, which happened to be the shortcomings of the Mongols, coupled with the high winds and waves at sea, the Mongols were at a loss for what to do, and finally had to abandon this great plan!

  31. Anonymous users2024-01-08

    He died of illness on the way to the second Western Xia, and there was no time to make an expedition to Japan.

  32. Anonymous users2024-01-07

    In 1274 A.D., Kublai Khan's first expedition to Japan was hit by a typhoon, and the Japanese claimed that it was the "kamikaze" that saved them. According to historical records, in 1274 A.D., the Mongol Khan Kublai Khan ordered Fengzhou to envoy Xindu and Goryeo military and civilian governor Hong Chali to expedition to Japan with 900 warships and 10,000 soldiers. The Yuan army achieved many brilliant results at the beginning of the war.

    Yasushi Inoue recorded that the Mongols occupied the islands of Tsushima and Iki in early October 1274, and then invaded Hizen Matsuura Prefecture......The Japanese army was at a disadvantage and had to temporarily retreat to the vicinity of Dazaifu. Although the Yuan army drove away the Japanese army, they did not camp on land and returned to the ships at night.

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