Why did Japan lose ww2?

It was determined that submarine blockade of the Japanese islands had brought economic defeat by preventing exploitation of Japan's new colonies, sinking merchant tonnage, and convincing Japanese leaders of the hopelessness of the war. Bombing brought the consciousness of defeat to the people.
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Why did Japan lose the Pacific?

The war culminated in massive Allied air raids over Japan, and the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, accompanied by the Soviet Union's declaration of war and invasion of Manchuria and other territories on 9 August 1945, causing the Japanese to announce an intent to surrender on 15 August 1945.
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What ended World War II in Japan?

Soviets Declare War, Japan Surrenders

On September 2, World War II ended when U.S. General Douglas MacArthur accepted Japan's formal surrender aboard the U.S. battleship Missouri, anchored in Tokyo Bay along with a flotilla of more than 250 Allied warships.
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Why did Japan not surrender after Hiroshima?

America believed the shock and awe of the devastating power of the new bombs would force Japan into surrender, but experts say inside Japan it was viewed differently. The Americans had already destroyed 66 Japanese cities with a massive fire bombing campaign. In just one night, 100,000 civilians were killed in Tokyo.
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Did Japan surrender because of the atomic bomb?

Nuclear weapons shocked Japan into surrendering at the end of World War II—except they didn't. Japan surrendered because the Soviet Union entered the war. Japanese leaders said the bomb forced them to surrender because it was less embarrassing to say they had been defeated by a miracle weapon.
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Why did Japan lose World War 2? (Japan's WW2 Strategy...or lack thereof)



Could Japan have won ww2?

Key point: Japan could never have crushed U.S. maritime forces in the Pacific and imposed terms on Washington. That doesn't mean it couldn't have won World War II. Let's face it. Imperial Japan stood next to no chance of winning a fight to the finish against the United States.
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Why did the Allies capture so few Japanese?

Why did the Allies capture so few Japanese soldiers when they attacked Iwo Jima? The Japanese had planned for no surviving prisoners. was the first major Allied offensive against Japanese forces. denied the Japanese the chance to launch a direct attack on Australia.
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Was fighting in the Pacific worse than Europe?

The Pacific Theater of World War II was, as one historian put it, "hands down the war's most hated theater in which to fight." And as the hundreds of thousands of American men who had just enlisted were about to learn, it was going to be more brutal than anything they would see in Europe.
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Why is the Pacific war forgotten?

The New Yorker magazine critic Nancy Franklin, like Hanks a child of a Pacific veteran, believes that the unwillingness of veterans of the Pacific to pass on their memories of combat, in the way those who fought in Europe did, and the unfamiliarity of its locations, contributed to the gradual forgetting.
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Which front was worse in ww2?

The Eastern Front of World War II was a brutal place. Fighting officially began there June 22, 1941, 75 years ago Wednesday. Central to the Holocaust, more than 30 million of the war's 70 million deaths occurred in the Eastern Front, where most extermination camps were located, and many death marches took place.
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How many US soldiers died in ww2 against Japan?

Total U.S. combat casualties in the war against Japan were thus 111,606 dead or missing and another 253,142 wounded. Japanese military casualties from 1937-1945 have been estimated at 1,834,000, of which 1,740,000 were killed or missing.
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Why did Japan strongly defend Iwo Jima?

Iwo Jima was considered strategically important since it provided an air base for Japanese fighter planes to intercept long-range B-29 Superfortress bombers. In addition, it was used by the Japanese to stage nuisance air attacks on the Mariana Islands from November 1944 to January 1945.
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Which country did Allied leaders make larger?

At the Potsdam Conference, which country did Allied leaders make larger? the United Nations. Following World War II, how did the world's leaders promote peace and reduce poverty? At the Yalta Conference, what did Allied leaders decide to do with Germany?
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Which Allied nation dropped the atomic bomb on Japan?

In 1945, the United States dropped two atomic bombs on Japan, ending World War II.
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Could the US beat Japan?

Bottom line, no likely masterstroke -- no single stratagem or killing blow -- would have defeated the United States. Rather, Japanese commanders should have thought and acted less tactically and more strategically. In so doing they would have improved Japan's chances. Which brings us to Five Ways Japan Could Have Won.
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Did Japan think they could beat the US?

And although the Japanese government never believed it could defeat the United States, it did intend to negotiate an end to the war on favorable terms. It hoped that by attacking the fleet at Pearl Harbor it could delay American intervention, gaining time to solidify its Asian empire.
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Was Russia an ally in ww1?

The major Allied powers in World War I were Great Britain (and the British Empire), France, and the Russian Empire, formally linked by the Treaty of London of September 5, 1914.
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Who won ww2 USA or Russia?

While Westerners tend to see the war through the lens of events such as D-Day or the Battle of Britain, it was a conflict largely won by the Soviet Union. An incredible eight out of 10 German war casualties occurred on the Eastern Front.
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Which country is not involved in the Central Powers of the First World War?

Despite having nominally joined the Triple Alliance before, Italy did not take part in World War I on the side of the Central Powers.
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Why did President Truman decide to drop the atomic bombs on Japan Select the two correct answers?

Truman did not seek to destroy Japanese culture or people; the goal was to destroy Japan's ability to make war. So, on the morning of August 6, 1945, the American B-29 bomber, the Enola Gay, dropped the world's first atom bomb over the city of Hiroshima.
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Who owns the island of Iwo Jima?

After the war, the United States retained possession of Iwo Jima and Okinawa (where another 20,000 Americans died) along with a number of other islands in the Central Pacific.
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Why did the US win the battle of Iwo Jima?

Taking the island meant more than a symbolic capture of the Japanese homeland. It meant the U.S. could launch bombing runs from Iwo Jima's strategic airfields, as the tiny island was directly under the flight path of B-29 Superfortresses from Guam, Saipan and the Mariana Islands.
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Why was Okinawa so bloody?

Some were caught in the cross-fire, killed by American artillery or air attacks, which utilised napalm. Others died of starvation as the Japanese occupying forces stockpiled the island's food supplies. Locals were also pressed into service by the Japanese; used as human shields or suicide attackers.
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Why did the U.S. invade Okinawa?

Taking Okinawa would provide Allied forces an airbase from which bombers could strike Japan and an advanced anchorage for Allied fleets. From Okinawa, US forces could increase air strikes against Japan and blockade important logistical routes, denying the home islands of vital commodities.
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