<p><strong>Winner: Society for Military History Distinguished Book Award</strong></p><p>Popular impressions of the imperial Japanese army still promote images of suicidal banzai charges and fanatical leaders blindly devoted to their emperor. Edward Drea looks well past those stereotypes to unfold the more complex story of how that army came to power and extended its influence at home and abroad to become one of the world's dominant fighting forces.</p><p>This first comprehensive English-language history of the Japanese army traces its origins evolution and impact as an engine of the country's regional and global ambitions and as a catalyst for the militarization of the Japanese homeland from mid-nineteenth-century incursions through the end of World War II. Demonstrating his mastery of Japanese-language sources Drea explains how the Japanese style of warfare burnished by samurai legends shaped the army narrowed its options influenced its decisions and made it the institution that conquered most of Asia. He also tells how the army's intellectual foundations shifted as it reinvented itself to fulfill the changing imperatives of Japanese society--and how the army in turn decisively shaped the nation's political social cultural and strategic course.</p><p>Drea recounts how Japan devoted an inordinate amount of its treasury toward modernizing professionalizing and training its army--which grew larger more powerful and politically more influential with each passing decade. Along the way it produced an efficient military schooling system a well-organized active duty and reserve force a professional officer corps that thought in terms of regional threat and well-trained soldiers armed with appropriate weapons.</p><p>Encompassing doctrine strategy weaponry and civil-military relations Drea's expert study also captures the dominant personalities who shaped the imperial army from Yamagata Aritomo an incisive geopolitical strategist to Anami Korechika who exhorted the troops to fight to the death during the final days of World War II. Summing up Drea also suggests that an army that places itself above its nation's interests is doomed to failure.</p>
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