When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Battles of Khalkhin Gol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battles_of_Khalkhin_Gol

    Japanese tank Type 95 Ha-Go captured by Soviet troops after the battle of Khalkhin Gol Captured Japanese guns. Japanese military records reported approximately 20,000 battle and non-battle casualties, 162 aircraft lost in combat, and 42 tanks disabled (of which 29 were later repaired and redeployed).

  3. Soviet–Japanese border conflicts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet–Japanese_border...

    The Soviet–Japanese border conflicts, [1] also known as the Soviet-Japanese Border War, the First Soviet-Japanese War, the Russo-Mongolian-Japanese Border Wars or the Soviet-Mongolian-Japanese Border Wars, were a series of minor and major conflicts fought between the Soviet Union (led by Joseph Stalin), Mongolia (led by Khorloogiin Choibalsan) and Japan (led by Hirohito) in Northeast Asia ...

  4. Russo-Japanese War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russo-Japanese_War

    The Japanese were on the offensive for most of the war and used massed infantry assaults against defensive positions, which would later become the standard of all European armies during World War I. The battles of the Russo-Japanese War, in which machine guns and artillery took a heavy toll on Russian and Japanese troops, were a precursor to ...

  5. Battle of Lake Khasan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Lake_Khasan

    The Battle of Lake Khasan (29 July – 11 August 1938), also known as the Changkufeng Incident (Russian: Хасанские бои, Chinese and Japanese: 張鼓峰事件; Chinese pinyin: Zhānggǔfēng Shìjiàn; Japanese romaji: Chōkohō Jiken) in China and Japan, was an attempted military incursion by Manchukuo, a Japanese puppet state, into the territory claimed and controlled by the ...

  6. Soviet–Japanese War - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet–Japanese_War

    The Soviet–Japanese War [e] was a campaign of the Second World War that began with the Soviet invasion of Manchuria following the Soviet declaration of war against Japan on 8 August 1945. The Soviet Union and Mongolian People's Republic toppled the Japanese puppet states of Manchukuo in Manchuria and Mengjiang in Inner Mongolia , as well as ...

  7. Third Army (Japan) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third_Army_(Japan)

    It was disbanded at the end of the war. The Japanese 3rd Army was raised again on January 13, 1938, in Manchukuo as a garrison force to guard the eastern borders against possible incursions by the Soviet Red Army. It afterwards came under the command of the Japanese First Area Army in July 1942. As the war situation deteriorated for the ...

  8. Grand Duke Kirill Vladimirovich of Russia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Duke_Kirill_Vladimir...

    With the start of the Russo-Japanese War, he was assigned to serve as First Officer on the battleship Petropavlovsk, but the ship was blown up by a Japanese mine at Port Arthur in April 1904. [13] Kirill barely escaped with his life, and was invalided out of the service suffering from burns, back injuries and shell shock.

  9. Kantokuen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kantokuen

    The roots of anti-Soviet sentiment in Imperial Japan existed before the foundation of the Soviet Union itself. Eager to limit tsarist influence in East Asia after the Russo-Japanese War (1904–1905) and then to contain the spread of Bolshevism during the Russian Civil War, the Japanese deployed some 70,000 troops into Siberia from 1918 to 1922 as part of their intervention on the side of the ...