Imperial Overlord

: Where is one hundred and thirty-six

"Mr. Prime Minister, if the battlefield cannot be ended immediately, then the situation of the Great Japanese Empire on the Pacific front will be very worrying." An aide knelt on the tatami and said to Hideki Tojo across the low table.

For the current severe situation facing Japan, this aide has been a rather tactful reminder.

As long as you are not blind, you can see that the current Japanese economy is completely supported by Kaya Koshino alone, and it is not functioning well at all.

This is very similar to Germany's early military expansion. The economy depends entirely on the method of Schacht, a genius who came up with Mifuku coupons.

Economically passive and materially deficient. Since Japan launched the war, iron ore has relied on plundering, oil has relied on plundering, and coal mines have relied on plundering, but it has rarely been used to feed back the domestic economy.

Most of these strategic materials that Japan can transport back to Japan under the interference of American submarines are also invested in the "Greater East Asia Jihad".

In fact, it is also easy to understand why Japan and Germany are currently in very different situations when they are expanding abroad.

The German occupation area is the essence of Europe, and the poorest part is also a relatively good area such as Poland. Even if you count the Soviet-occupied areas, railways, roads, and even industry are relatively basic.

The Japanese occupation area is different. Except for the Northeast, which Japan has been operating privately, other occupation areas require a lot of infrastructure investment to start producing benefits.

If you want to get rich, build roads first. The road conditions in China in 1940 were much worse than those in Europe, so there is no need to introduce them in detail.

Under such a gap, the role that the occupation area can play is very obvious: if the German occupation area can have an attribute +10, the Japanese occupation area can only be regarded as an attribute +3 at most.

"What you said is right, but there is no good solution." Hideki Tojo bowed his head slightly and complained: "I have tried my best, but I still can't think of a solution."

It's not that he didn't come up with countermeasures, but his countermeasures are not better than others', so it doesn't matter whether he says it or not.

The collective consensus at the base camp is that it is best to find a way to end a local battlefield first, so that more troops can be drawn and deployed to other battlefields, forming a virtuous circle.

It is precisely because of this consensus that the Army can throw out such a huge plan.

In fact, the army's thinking is also very normal: your navy can't get out of the way to deal with the US fleet, then to solve the problem, you can only rely on our army, right?

The navy is helpless here: they are pinned down by the increasingly powerful U.S. Navy, dragged down by submarine warfare, and can only work hard in the Pacific Ocean, unable to deal with the powerful United States in a short time.

Since the navy can't walk away, and can't settle the rival United States in a short time, it can only make an idea on the army.

However, when the situation was good, the army itself started to quarrel again: it is no problem for the army to be the main force next, but it is uncertain which side to fight first.

The chief officials in East China hope that the Chongqing government will be resolved first, and China will be defeated, and then they can have both sides.

The Kwantung Army factions in the Northeast felt that they could take the opportunity to stab the Soviet Union in the back, carve up Siberia with Germany, and then free the Kwantung Army to go south and finish the Chinese battlefield.

"Mr. Prime Minister, if the battlefield cannot be ended immediately, then the situation of the Great Japanese Empire on the Pacific front will be very worrying." An aide knelt on the tatami and said to Hideki Tojo across the low table.

For the current severe situation facing Japan, this aide has been a rather tactful reminder.

As long as you are not blind, you can see that the current Japanese economy is completely supported by Kaya Koshino alone, and it is not functioning well at all.

This is very similar to Germany's early military expansion. The economy depends entirely on the method of Schacht, a genius who came up with Mifuku coupons.

Economically passive and materially deficient. Since Japan launched the war, iron ore has relied on plundering, oil has relied on plundering, and coal mines have relied on plundering, but it has rarely been used to feed back the domestic economy.

Most of these strategic materials that Japan can transport back to Japan under the interference of American submarines are also invested in the "Greater East Asia Jihad".

In fact, it is also easy to understand why Japan and Germany are currently in very different situations when they are expanding abroad.

The German occupation area is the essence of Europe, and the poorest part is also a relatively good area such as Poland. Even if you count the Soviet-occupied areas, railways, roads, and even industry are relatively basic.

The Japanese occupation area is different. Except for the Northeast, which Japan has been operating privately, other occupation areas require a lot of infrastructure investment to start producing benefits.

If you want to get rich, build roads first. The road conditions in China in 1940 were much worse than those in Europe, so there is no need to introduce them in detail.

Under such a gap, the role that the occupied area can play is very obvious: if the German occupied area can have an attribute +10, the Japanese occupied area can only be regarded as an attribute +3 at most.

"What you said is right, but there is no good solution." Hideki Tojo bowed his head slightly and complained: "I have tried my best, but I still can't think of a solution."

It's not that he didn't come up with countermeasures, but his countermeasures are not better than others', so it doesn't matter whether he says it or not.

The collective consensus at the base camp is that it is best to find a way to end a local battlefield first, so that more troops can be drawn and deployed to other battlefields, forming a virtuous circle.

It is precisely because of this consensus that the Army can throw out such a huge plan.

In fact, the army's thinking is also very normal: your navy can't get out of the way to deal with the US fleet, then to solve the problem, you can only rely on our army, right?

The navy is helpless here: they are pinned down by the increasingly powerful U.S. Navy, dragged down by submarine warfare, and can only work hard in the Pacific Ocean, unable to deal with the powerful United States in a short time.

Since the navy can't walk away, and can't settle the rival United States in a short time, it can only make an idea on the army.

However, when the situation was good, the army itself started to quarrel again: it is no problem for the army to be the main force next, but it is uncertain which side to fight first.

The chief officials in East China hope that the Chongqing government will be resolved first, and China will be defeated, and then they can have both sides.

The Kwantung Army factions in the Northeast felt that they could take the opportunity to stab the Soviet Union in the back, carve up Siberia with Germany, and then free the Kwantung Army to go south and finish the Chinese battlefield.

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