Invasion of French Indochina

Invasion Of French Indochina

Second Sino-Japanese War
  • Major engagements in bold
Began in 1931–1937
  • Mukden
  • Manchuria
    • Jiangqiao
    • Nenjiang Bridge
    • Chinchow
    • Harbin
  • Shanghai (1932)
  • Pacification of Manchukuo
  • Rehe
  • Great Wall
  • Inner Mongolia
    • Suiyuan
Began in 1937–1939
  • Marco Polo Bridge
  • Beiping-Tianjin
  • Chahar
  • Shanghai (1937)
    • Sihang Warehouse
  • Beiping-Hankou Railway
  • Tianjin-Pukou Railway
  • Taiyuan
    • Pingxingguan
  • Xinkou
  • Nanjing
  • Xuzhou
  • Taierzhuang
  • N.-E.Henan
    • Lanfeng
  • Amoy
  • Chongqing
  • Wuhan
    • Wanjialing
  • Canton
    • Hainan
  • Nanchang
    • Xiushui River
  • Suixian-Zaoyang
    • Swatow
  • 1st Changsha
  • S.Guangxi
    • Kunlun Pass
  • Winter Offensive
    • West Suiyuan
    • Wuyuan
Began in 1940–1942
  • Zaoyang-Yichang
  • Hundred Regiments
  • N. Vietnam
  • C. Hubei
  • S.Henan
  • W. Hebei
  • Shanggao
  • S.Shanxi
  • 2nd Changsha
  • 3rd Changsha
  • Yunnan-Burma Road
    • Tachiao
    • Oktwin
    • Toungoo
    • Yenangyaung
  • Zhejiang-Jiangxi
  • Sichuan invasion
Began in 1943–1945
  • W.Hubei
  • N.Burma-W.Yunnan
  • Changde
  • Ichi-Go
  • C.Henan
  • 4th Changsha
    • Hengyang
  • Guilin-Liuzhou
  • W.Henan-N.Hubei
  • W.Hunan
  • 2nd Guangxi
Others
  • Aerial engagements

The Japanese Invasion of French Indochina (仏印進駐, Futsu-in shinchū?), also known as the Vietnam Expedition, was a move by the Empire of Japan in September 1940, during the Second Sino-Japanese War, to prevent China from importing arms and fuel through French Indochina, via the Sino-Vietnamese Railway from the port of Haiphong through Hanoi to Kunming in Yunnan. Japan occupied northern Indochina, which tightened the blockade of China, and made continuation of the drawn out Battle of South Guangxi unnecessary.

Read more about Invasion Of French Indochina:  Background, Fighting Breaks Out

Famous quotes containing the words invasion of, invasion and/or french:

    An invasion of armies can be resisted, but not the invasion of ideas.
    Victor Hugo (1802–1885)

    Every collectivist revolution rides in on a Trojan horse of “Emergency”. It was a tactic of Lenin, Hitler and Mussolini.... The invasion of New Deal Collectivism was introduced by this same Trojan horse.
    Herbert Hoover (1874–1964)

    The French Revolution gave birth to no artists but only to a great journalist, Desmoulins, and to an under-the-counter writer, Sade. The only poet of the times was the guillotine.
    Albert Camus (1913–1960)