How Did Western Imperialism Affect Japan

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Long range positioning. The Japanese were both far-sighted and thorough in their preparations for war. The Western imperialist impact on Japan set in motion a series of events: Japanese nationalism, Japanese economic and military power, Japan’s pursuit for an empire, and Japanese emigration to America and elsewhere. The Western reaction to Japan’s series of events, eventually led to Pearl Harbor.
Western impact and influence in Japan started in the 1850s with Commodore Matthew Perry forcing Japan open to trade. When Commodore Perry arrived with his modern warships, the Japanese senior leadership was aware of the technological superiority of the West, and feared military action. Japan’s fear and inexperience lead to the eventual signing …show more content…

The attack on Pearl Harbor was a tremendous gamble — and though the short-term battle was successful, the long-range war was lost because the Japanese were wrong about the American reaction. Before Pearl Harbor there was another, earlier miscalculation. Ever since Commodore Perry's fleet opened Japan in 1853, in an era of great colonial expansion, the Japanese had watched the European powers dominate East Asia and establish colonies and trading privileges. China was carved up by Western powers establishing their spheres of influence on Chinese territory. Japan was quickly able to develop the economic and military strength to join this competition for dominance of the Asian mainland. When Japan defeated China in 1895 and Russia in 1905, in battles over Korea, then later joined the allies against Germany, Japan’s optic was framed for dominance in the region. The Japanese nation and its military, which controlled the government by the 1930s, felt that it then could, and should, control all of East Asia by military force. Domestic politics, ideology and racism also played a role in Japan’s prewar preparation. Since the interdiction of Western powers in 1853, the Japanese were treated like second citizens. The suppression and inequality throughout caused nationalism to rise up, giving Japan their voice. The Japanese were proud of their many accomplishments

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