Negotiations for a German-Japanese alliance began in 1937 with the onset of hostilities between Japan and China. On September 27, 1940, the
Tripartite Pact was signed, creating the
Rome-Tokyo-Berlin Axis. The alliance was shallow, with very little coordination or mutual help until the last two years of the war, when it was too late to make much difference. By 1938, the United States increasingly was committed to supporting China and, with the cooperation of Britain and the Netherlands,
threatening to restrict the supply of vital materials to the Japanese war machine, especially oil, steel and money. The Japanese army,
after sharp defeats by the Russians in Mongolia, wanted to avoid war with the Soviet Union, even though it would have aided the
German war against the USSR. The Emperor became fatalistic about going to war, as the military assumed more and more control. Prime Minister
Fumimaro Konoe was replaced by the war cabinet of General
Hideki Tojo (1884–1948), who demanded war. Tōjō had his way and the attack was made on Pearl Harbor in December 1941, as well as British and Dutch strong points. The main American battle fleet was disabled, and in the next 90 days Japan made remarkable advances including the Dutch East Indies, the Philippines, Malaya and Singapore. The quagmire in China did not stall imperial ambitions for the creation of a
Greater East Asian Co-Prosperity Sphere. Indeed, the Second Sino-Japanese War fueled the need for oil that could be found in the
Dutch East Indies. After the
Imperial General Headquarters refused to remove its troops from China (excluding
Manchukuo) and
French Indochina, U.S. President
Franklin D. Roosevelt announced in July 1941 an
oil embargo on Japan. The
Imperial Japanese Navy, increasingly threatened by the loss of its oil supplies, insisted on a decision, warning the alternatives were a high risk war, that Japan might lose, or a certain descent into third class status and a loss of China and Manchuria. Officially the Emperor made the decision, but he was told by a key civilian official on 5 November 1941: it is impossible, from the standpoint of our domestic political situation and of our self-preservation, to accept all of the American demands. ...we cannot let the present situation continue. If we miss the present opportunity to go to war, we will have to submit to American dictation. Therefore, I recognize that it is inevitable that we must decide to start a war against the United States. I will put my trust in what I have been told: namely, that things will go well in the early part of the war; and that although we will experience increasing difficulties as the war progresses, there is some prospect of success. With the Emperor's approval,
Imperial General Headquarters launched the
Greater East Asia War. It began with a
surprise attack on the
U.S. naval base in
Hawaii at
Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941. Japan declared war to the United States, Dutch and British. This marked the start of the
Pacific War theatre of
World War II. For the next six months, the Japanese had the initiative and went on the offensive.
Hong Kong was overrun on December 8, 1941. By the summer of 1942, the Japanese had conquered
Burma,
Siam, the
Dutch East Indies, and the
Philippines. The
Empire of Japan was one of the largest in history. In 1942 the Empire of Japan was at its greatest extent with colonies in Manchuria, China,
Indonesia, the Philippines,
Malaysia,
Papua New Guinea,
French Indochina, Burma and many
Pacific islands. (right) and
Nobusuke Kishi, October 1943 The decisive naval/aerial
Battle of Midway took place in early June 1942. That changed the momentum of the war. Japan was put on the defensive as the Americans pursued their policy of
island hopping.
Tokyo was repeatedly firebombed in 1945 and in the early spring and summer of 1945,
Iwo Jima and
Okinawa were seized by the Americans. Finally, the death agony of the
Empire of Japan came in August 1945. On August 6, an
atomic bomb was dropped on
Hiroshima, instantly killing approximately 70,000 people when the attack took place (plus another estimated 130,000 by 1960 due to after-effects). On August 8, the
Soviet invasion of Manchuria began. The following day, a second atomic bomb
was dropped on
Nagasaki, killing approximately 40,000 people. These attacks with the new atomic weapons were a surprise. Japan lacked any atomic bomb technology and could not counter it. The government of the Empire of Japan (Prime Minister
Kantarō Suzuki)
surrendered on August 14. The official surrender ceremony was held on September 2. Total Japanese military fatalities between 1937 and 1945 were 2.1 million; most came in the last year of the war. Starvation or malnutrition-related illness accounted for roughly 80 percent of Japanese military deaths in the Philippines, and 50 percent of military fatalities in China. The
aerial bombing of a total of 69 Japanese cities appears to have taken a minimum of 400,000 and possibly closer to 600,000 civilian lives (over 100,000 in Tokyo alone, over 200,000 in Hiroshima and Nagasaki combined, and 80,000–150,000 civilian deaths in the battle of Okinawa). Civilian deaths among settlers who died attempting to return to Japan from Manchuria in the winter of 1945 were probably around 100,000.
Imperial rule Japan launched multiple attacks in East Asia. In 1937, the Japanese Army invaded and captured most of the coastal Chinese cities such as Shanghai. On 22 September 1940, the
Japanese invasion of French Indochina began. Japan took over
French Indochina (
Vietnam,
Laos and
Cambodia),
British Malaya (
Brunei,
Malaysia and
Singapore) as well as the
Dutch East Indies (
Indonesia).
Thailand managed to stay independent by becoming a satellite state of Japan. On 13 April 1941, the
Soviet–Japanese Neutrality Pact was signed. In December 1941 to May 1942, Japan sank major elements of the American, British and Dutch fleets, captured Hong Kong, Singapore, the Philippines and the Dutch East Indies, and reached the borders of India and Australia. Japan suddenly had achieved its goal of ruling the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere. The ideology of Japan's colonial empire, as it expanded dramatically during the war, contained two somewhat contradictory impulses. On the one hand, it preached the unity of the
Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere, a Pan-Asian coalition of Asian nations, led by Japan, against
Western imperialism in Asia. This approach celebrated the spiritual values of the East in opposition to the "crass" materialism of the West. In practice, however, the Japanese installed organizationally-minded bureaucrats and engineers to run their annexed territories, and they believed in ideals of efficiency, modernization, and engineering solutions to social problems. It was fascism based on technology and rejected Western norms of democracy. After 1945, the engineers and bureaucrats took over and turned the wartime
techno-fascism into entrepreneurial management skills. The Japanese government established puppet regimes in Manchuria and China; they were dismantled at the end of the war. The Army operated ruthless governments in most of the conquered areas but paid more favorable attention to the Dutch East Indies. The main goal was to obtain oil. The Dutch sabotaged their oil wells but the Japanese were able to reopen them. However most of the tankers taking oil to Japan were sunk by American submarines, so Japan's oil shortage became increasingly acute. Japan sponsored an Indonesian nationalist movement under
Sukarno. Sukarno finally came to power in the late 1940s after several years of battling the Dutch. ==Defeat and Allied occupation==