Difference between revisions of "Mukden Incident"
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[[File:11.jpg|thumb|300px|right|Japanese armored vehicle invades Shenyang.]] | [[File:11.jpg|thumb|300px|right|Japanese armored vehicle invades Shenyang.]] | ||
− | On the eve of [[CIIC:Selected anniversaries/September 18, 2009|September 18]], [[1931]], the Guandong Army, a Japanese force stationed in [[China]], detonated explosives that destroyed a section of the railroad close to the Liutiao Lake near the northern suburbs of [[Shenyang]]. They placed the blame on the Chinese troops of Beidayang and subsequently proceeded to attack them and the nearby city of Shenyang itself. The ensuing invasion by the Japanese army soon encompassed over 20 cities and their surrounding regions, shocking the world and leading the event to be named the "Mukden Incident," otherwise known as "9/18." | + | On the eve of [[CIIC:Selected anniversaries/September 18, 2009|September 18]], [[1931]], the Guandong Army, a Japanese force stationed in [[China]], detonated explosives that destroyed a section of the railroad close to the Liutiao Lake near the northern suburbs of [[Shenyang]]. They placed the blame on the Chinese troops of Beidayang and subsequently proceeded to attack them and the nearby city of Shenyang itself. The ensuing invasion by the Japanese army soon encompassed over 20 cities and their surrounding regions, shocking the world and leading the event to be named the "'''Mukden Incident'''," otherwise known as "9/18." |
[[Category:History]][[Category:Anti-Japanese War]][[Category:Wars]] | [[Category:History]][[Category:Anti-Japanese War]][[Category:Wars]] |
Revision as of 07:48, 18 September 2009
On the eve of September 18, 1931, the Guandong Army, a Japanese force stationed in China, detonated explosives that destroyed a section of the railroad close to the Liutiao Lake near the northern suburbs of Shenyang. They placed the blame on the Chinese troops of Beidayang and subsequently proceeded to attack them and the nearby city of Shenyang itself. The ensuing invasion by the Japanese army soon encompassed over 20 cities and their surrounding regions, shocking the world and leading the event to be named the "Mukden Incident," otherwise known as "9/18."