During
the first half of the 20th century, Czarist Russia and then the
successor Soviet Union, fought a series of undeclared wars against the
Empire of Japan in the Far East. The Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905 was
fought over rival imperial ambitions in Manchuria and Korea and ended
in a Japanese victory that would leave the Imperial Japanese Army with a
sense of self-importance, a belief that the offensive spirit could
overcome all obstacles and a strong conviction that the ends would
justify the means.
As the century continued, Japanese forces
expanded into China and created the puppet state of Manchukuo that would
become a vital resource for further imperial ambition. This expansion
inevitably brought the empires of the Rising Sun and the Red Star ever
closer on the ground, and in 1938 the two armies clashed at Lake Khasan,
the first of a number of battles that would have far reaching
consequences for the course of the world war to come.
Volume 1 of the Red Star Versus Rising Sun
mini-series examines the origins of the rapidly modernizing Imperial
Japanese Army and its expansion, largely unfettered by civilian
political constraints, into mainland Asia from the late 19th century up
until 1938. It examines the culture, structure and equipment of the IJA
and its campaigns in warlord-era China, along with an overview of the
purge-ravaged Red Army of the same period. This volume culminates in a
detailed description of the major clash of the Soviet and Japanese
armies at Lake Khasan in 1938. Volume 1 includes a range of specially
commissioned color illustrations of the men, AFVs, artillery pieces, and
aircraft that fought at Lake Khasan in 1938.