BESIDES THE BOMBING OF PEARL HARBOR WHAT OTHER CONFLICT HAPPENED BETWEEN AMERICA AND JAPAN??
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Japan wanted to conquer China but it couldn't because the Americans would stop that from happening. The 1930s saw a steadily increasing campaign of Japanese aggression in China, beginning with the invasion of Manchuria in 1931 and culminating in the outbreak of full-scale war between the two powers in 1937. Each instance of aggression resulted in denunciations from the United States, but the administrations of the time—that of Herbert Hoover until 1933, and of Franklin D. Roosevelt thereafter-understood that there was no will on the part of the American public to fight a war in East Asia. Therefore U.S. policy by the late 1930s consisted of nothing more than a refusal to recognize Japanese conquests, limited economic sanctions against Japan, and equally limited military and economic assistance for China (Website1). General Tojo of Japan ordered his soldiers to bomb Pearl Harbor in Hawaii. America declared war on the Japanese and Germans. On August 9, 1945 America bombed Hiroshima and three days later dropped a second nuclear bomb on Nagasaki. The Japanese surrendered to America on August 14, 1945. This was the end of World War II. Hiroshima was a communications department for Japan. They crippled our navy so we crippled their communications. Hiroshima was a minor supply and logistics base for the Japanese military, but it also had large stockpiles of military supplies. The city was a communications center, a key port for shipping and an assembly area for troops (Website 2). This was a devastation to the Japanese. WE are the only country to use a atomic bomb on another country. Thousands of people died, and Hiroshima was left in poverty. There were 90,000 buildings in Hiroshima before the bomb was dropped; only 28,000 remained after the bombing. Of the city's 200 doctors before the explosion; only 20 were left alive or capable of working. There were 1,780 nurses before—only 150 remained who were able to tend to the sick and dying (WEBSITE 3).