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Japan's Position before the Outbreak of the European War in September 1939

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2008

Kyozo Sato
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge

Extract

In the years leading up to the outbreak of war in Europe in early September 1939 Japan had been busy tackling the commitments she had made in North China at first and then in the whole of China. Although war was not declared, Japan had been at war with China since July 1937. It was a war of attrition; both Japan and China claimed to be winning, yet neither could, on any occasion, see any prospect of a final and definite victory. So long as Japan's military operations were confined to the area of North China, the war was named the ‘North China Incident.’ It was called the ‘China Incident’ after her successive and more or less successful operations had spread to Central and South China. And when a war broke out in the Pacific in December 1941 the Sino-Japanese war became an inseparable part of the ‘Greater East Asia War’ (Dai-tōa sensō), a name rarely heard by now, since it soon gave way to the ‘Pacific War’ (Taiheiyō sensō) in the sense of Japan waging the war of the Ocean, or to the ‘Second World War’ in the global sense.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1980

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References

1 By far the best account of the background of the ‘Twenty-One Demands’ and its negotiating processes is found in Takeo, Horikawa, Kyokutō kokusai seiji josetsu: nijūikka-jō no kenkyū [An Introduction to the History of International Politics in the Far East: A Study of the Twenty-One Demands] (Tokyo: Yūhikaku, 1958).Google Scholar On Britain's response to this, see Nish, Ian H., Alliance in Decline: A Study of Anglo-Japanese Relations, 1908–1923 (London: Athlone, 1972), pp. 153–8;Google Scholar and Thorne, Christopher, The Limits of Foreign Policy: The West, the League and the Far Eastern Crisis of 1931–1933 (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1972), pp. 22–4.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

2 Talking with some elder Japanese, including my father, who experienced the rejection by the United States and Britain of these Japanese demands (they cannot name any other country), it is rather surprising to learn that they all consider it the very beginning of the road to the Pacific war.Google Scholar

3 These were the four-power treaty, signed by Japan, Britain, France and the United States; the five-power treaty between Japan, Britain, France, Italy and the United States; and the nine-power treaty, in which Belgium, China, Holland and Portugal participated, as well as the parties to the five-power treaty. The four-power treaty, by which an end was made to the Anglo-Japanese alliance existing since 1902, dealt with Pacific questions, agreeing to respect each other's rights in the area. The five-power treaty was concerned with naval armaments, consenting that capital ships and aircraft carriers should be at the ratio of 5:5:3:1.75:1.75 between the United States, Britain, Japan, France and Italy respectively. The nine-power treaty reaffirmed China's sovereignty over her own land and comprised a promise not to interfere in China's domestic affairs.Google Scholar

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9 The fourteen were: Kijūrō, Shidehara (April–December. 1931);Google ScholarTakeshi, Inukai (December 1931–January 1932);Google ScholarKenkichi, Yoshizawa (January–May 1932);Google ScholarMakoto, Saitō (May–July 1932);Google ScholarYasuya, Uchida (July 1932–September 1933);Google ScholarSenjūrō, Hirota Hayashi (February–March 1937);Google ScholarNaotake, Satō (March–May 1937);Google ScholarKōki, Hirota (June 1937–May 1938);Google ScholarKazushige, Ugaki (May–September 1938);Google ScholarFumimaro, Konoye (September–October 1938);Google ScholarHachirō, Arita (October 1938– August 1939);Google Scholarand Nobuyuki, Abe (August 1939–). Of the above, Inukai, Saitō, Hirota (March–April 1936), Hayashi and Abe were concurrently prime ministers. As for Hirota's exceptionally long tenure of office (September 1933–April 1936), he continued to hold the post under three successive governments.Google Scholar

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22 The Japanese started groping for a resumption of negotiations just a few days after the outbreak of war in Europe; and the long-awaited agreement was finally reached and emerged as the Tripartite pact between Japan, Germany and Italy on 27 September 1940.Google Scholar

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