Aggression, 1931
It
was in 1931 that the Japanese again became active in China. They found a
pretext for action when a short section of the track of the Southern
Manchurian Railway was destroyed by Chinese Nationalist forces. The
situation was complicated: although Manchuria was within Chinese
territory, the railway was owned by the Japanese who had treaty rights
concerning it, including the right to police the line and its immediate
vicinity. They chose to interpret this as giving them authority to
retaliate when their railway was damaged. They seized the Chinese garrison
and arsenal at near-by Mukden, and then proceeded to overrun Manchuria
with Japanese troops.
China
appealed to the League of Nations of which she was a member, as was also
Japan. The League acted promptly, sending out a body of observers, the
Lytton Commission, which issued the Lytton Report accusing Japan of
violating treaties and the League of Nations' Covenant. Japan had a short
answer: she resigned from the League in March 1933 by which time she had
achieved most of her objectives. In particular, she had formed a nominally
independent State in Manchuria, calling it Manchukuo and setting up the
former Manchu Emperor of China, Pu-yi, as its puppet king.
There
have always been differing views about how the League ought to have
countered Japanese defiance - perhaps a trade boycott, or even military
action. Whatever it ought to have done, in fact it did nothing. Before
condemning the League outright, we must remember the circumstances of the
period. The United States was not a member of the League and was therefore
unlikely to support either military action or trading restrictions. The
years 1932-33 were those of the rise of Hitler and the Nazi Party to power
in Germany: the western Powers were thus much more acutely aware of the
dangers to peace in their midst than of the danger in far away Manchuria.
Moreover these were years of the deepest economic depression when every western
country needed all its resources to keep its economic life stable: it could not
afford either to spend money on military adventures on the other side of the
world against so powerful a nation as Japan or to restrict its trade still
further.
Nonetheless,
whatever reasons the League and its individual members may have had for
inaction, the results of it were deplorable. Japan's attack on a friendly
Power and a fellow-member of the League, and her open defiance of world
opinion, not only enabled her to keep her conquests but encouraged all
other would-be aggressors to adopt similar methods. Hence, as we saw in
the opening paragraphs of this chapter, this violation of the League's
Covenant was the prelude to the long and fatal series culminating in the
Second World War of 1939.
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