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For instance, their planes were pretty much outdated by 1944-45, and the United States was blasting them out of the sky.
The Japanese also couldn't replace their losses, and it got to the point where they thought kamikaze attacks on American ships would be more effective than trying to engage them by conventional means (torpedoes, dive bombers, etc.)
In my opinion, Pearl Harbor was a psychological attack and on this aspect it was a success.
Interesting point of view.
I propose another: the Japanese won the war. They turned their defeat, after two atomic bombs, into a fruitful partnership with the United States. In this region, those who have really lost are the Koreans, subjected to the same partition as Germany... While they were the invadeds and not the invaders.
The Zero Fighter was was very manoeuvrable, and the Nakajima Ki-84 competed with his American counterparts.
That is another war, the Cold War, who dictated it. And they're still denying a good number of war crimes in the way.
Interesting point of view.I propose another: the Japanese won the war. They turned their defeat, after two atomic bombs, into a fruitful partnership with the United States. In this region, those who have really lost are the Koreans, subjected to the same partition as Germany... While they were the invadeds and not the invaders.
I was mostly thinking about the war reparations and forced disarmament that caused bad feelings between the countries.