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Japanese history (Part 2), The Japanese army had great respect for the…
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The Japanese army had great respect for the Germans, as they based their army doctrine on Prussia.
To help in the industrialization, Japan created the Zaibatsu, industrial and financial conglomerates that would receive benefits from the government.
In 1871, the Iwakura embassy, composed by leading statesmen and scholars of the period, was sent to the United States and Europe.
The Japanese had a hard time adapting to the western idea of secularism, as religious rituals were simply part of daily life. Thus, Shinto practices would continue to be enforced by the state.
The Shinto directive abolished state support of Shinto, seeing it as a radical source of militarist beliefs.