The Conference for the Reduction and Limitation of Armaments of 1932–1934 (sometimes World Disarmament Conference or Geneva Disarmament Conference) was a failed effort by member states of the League of Nations, together with the United States, to actualize the ideology of disarmament. It took place in the Swiss city of Geneva, 1932 to 1934.[1]
Background[]
The first effort at international arms limitation was made at the Hague Conferences of 1901 and 1907, which had failed in their primary objective. Although many contemporary commentators (and Article 231 of the Treaty of Versailles) had blamed the outbreak of the First World War on the war guilt of Germany, historians writing in the 1930s began to emphasize the quick arms race preceding 1914. Further, all the major powers except the US had committed themselves to disarmament in both the Treaty of Versailles and the Covenant of the League of Nations. A substantial international non-governmental campaign to promote disarmament also developed in the 1920s and early 1930s.
A preparatory commission was initiated by the League in 1925; by 1931, there was sufficient support to hold a conference, which duly began under the chairmanship of former British Foreign Secretary Arthur Henderson. The motivation behind the talks can be summed up by an extract from the message President Franklin D. Roosevelt sent to the conference: "If all nations will agree wholly to eliminate from possession and use the weapons which make possible a successful attack, defences automatically will become impregnable and the frontiers and independence of every nation will become secure."[2]
Negotiations[]
The talks were beset by a number of difficulties from the outset. Germany immediately demanded to be allowed 'military equality' or it would leave. The French, for their part, were equally insistent that German military inferiority was their only insurance from future conflict as serious as they had endured in the First World War. Britain and the U.S. were unprepared to offer the additional security commitments that France requested in exchange for limitation of French armaments. After 10 months of negotiations, France, Britain and Italy announced, Germany and the other States disarmed by the Versailles Treaty should be insured equality in a system which gives security to all nations."[3] The parties could not agree on what constituted "offensive" and "defensive" weapons. The talks broke down and Hitler withdrew Germany from both the Conference and the League of Nations in October[Clarification needed] 1933. The 1930s had proved far too self-interested an international period to accommodate multilateral action in favour of pacifism.[Clarification needed]
References[]
Citations[]
Bibliography[]
- Davies, Thomas. "France and the World Disarmament Conference of 1932–34." Diplomacy and Statecraft 15.4 (2004): 765-780. online
- Noel-Baker, Philip John. First World Disarmament Conference and Why It Failed (1979)
Further reading[]
- Temperley, A.C. The Whispering Gallery Of Europe (1938), highly influential account online
- Buckley, Thomas, The United States and the Washington Conference, 1921-1922, The University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville, 1970.
- Fanning, Richard Ward, Peace and Disarmament, Naval Rivalry and Arms Control, 1922-1933, The University Press of Kentucky, Lexington, 1995.
- Gooch, John, Mussolini and his generals : the armed forces and fascist foreign policy, 1922-1940, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge / New York, 2007.
- Kitching, Carolyn, Britain and the Geneva Disarmament Conference, Palgrave MacMillan, Houndmills, New York, 2003
- O’Neill, Robert John, The German Army and the Nazi Party, 1933-1939, Cassel, London, 1966.
- Peden, George, British rearmament and the treasury : 1932-1939, Scottish Academic Press, Edinburgh, 1979.
External links[]
- "Arms Control and Disarmament - Between the world wars, 1919–1939" American Foreign Relations website (accessed 2018-12-27)
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The original article can be found at World Disarmament Conference and the edit history here.