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War reparations

War reparations are compensation payments made after a war by one side to the other. They are intended to cover damage or injury inflicted during a war.

The USCGC Eagle was built in 1936 as Horst Wessel for the German Navy. It was taken by the United States as reparations in 1946.

History Edit

Making one party pay a war indemnity is a common practice with a long history.

Rome imposed large indemnities on Carthage after the First (Treaty of Lutatius) and Second Punic Wars.[1]

Some war reparations induced changes in monetary policy. For example, the French payment following the Franco-Prussian war played a major role in Germany's decision to adopt the gold standard;[citation needed] the 230 million silver taels in reparations imposed on defeated China after the First Sino-Japanese War led Japan to a similar decision.[2]

There have been attempts to codify reparations both in the Statutes of the International Criminal Court and the UN Basic Principles on the Right to a Remedy and Reparation for Victims, and some scholars have argued that individuals should have a right to seek compensation for wrongs they sustained during warfare through tort law.[3][4]

Europe Edit

Napoleonic War Edit

Following Napoleon's final loss at the Battle of Waterloo, under the Treaty of Paris (1815), defeated France was ordered to pay 700 million francs in indemnities. France was also to pay additional money to cover the cost of providing additional defensive fortifications to be built by neighbouring Coalition countries. It was the most expensive war reparation ever paid by a country (in proportion to its GDP).[5]

Franco-Prussian War Edit

After the Franco-Prussian War, according to conditions of Treaty of Frankfurt (May 10, 1871), France was obliged to pay a war indemnity of 5 billion gold francs in 5 years. The indemnity was proportioned, according to population, to be the exact equivalent to the indemnity imposed by Napoleon on Prussia in 1807.[6] German troops remained in parts of France until the last installment of the indemnity was paid in September 1873, ahead of schedule.[7]

Greco-Turkish War of 1897 Edit

Following the Greco-Turkish War (1897), defeated Greece was forced to pay a large war indemnity to Turkey (£4 million). Greece, which was already in default,[clarification needed] was compelled to permit oversight of its public finances by an international financial commission.[8]

World War I Edit

Russians agreed to pay reparations to the Central Powers when Russia exited the war in the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk (which was repudiated by the Bolshevik government eight months later). Bulgaria paid reparations of 2.25 billion gold francs (90 million pounds) to the Entente, according to the Treaty of Neuilly.

Germany agreed to pay reparations of 132 billion gold marks to the Triple Entente in the Treaty of Versailles, which were then cancelled in 1932 with Germany only having paid a part of the sum. This still left Germany with debts it had incurred in order to finance the reparations, and these were revised by the Agreement on German External Debts in 1953. After another pause pending the reunification of Germany, the last installment of these debt repayments was paid on 3 October 2010.[9]

World War II Germany Edit

During World War II, Germany extracted payments from occupied countries, compelled loans, stole or destroyed property. In addition, countries were obliged to provide resources, and forced labour.

After World War II, according to the Potsdam conference held between July 17 and August 2, 1945, Germany was to pay the Allies US$23 billion mainly in machinery and manufacturing plants. Dismantling in the West stopped in 1950. Reparations to the Soviet Union stopped in 1953 (only paid by the GDR).

Beginning before the German surrender and continuing for the next two years, the United States pursued a vigorous program of harvesting technological and scientific know-how as well as patents and many leading scientists in Germany (known as Operation Paperclip). Historian John Gimbel, in his book Science Technology and Reparations: Exploitation and Plunder in Postwar Germany, states that the "intellectual reparations" (referring to German scientists) taken by the Allies amounted to close to $10 billion.[10] German reparations were partly to be in the form of forced labor. By 1947, approximately 4,000,000 German POWs and civilians were used as forced labor (under various headings, such as "reparations labor" or "enforced labor") in Europe, Canada and the United States after the end of the Second World War.[11] This last reference refers to forced labor reparations in Southeast Asia - specifically Cambodia after The Vietnam war, not Germany after WW2.

World War II Italy Edit

According to the Treaty of Peace with Italy, 1947, Italy agreed to pay reparations of about US$125 million to Yugoslavia, US$105 million to Greece, US$100 million to the Soviet Union, US$25 million to Ethiopia, and US$5 million to Albania.[citation needed]

World War II Hungary Edit

Hungary agreed to pay reparations of US$200 million to the Soviet Union, and US$100 million apiece to Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia.[citation needed]

World War II Romania Edit

Romania agreed to pay reparations of US$300 million to the Soviet Union. Romanian economists estimated that by February 1947 the Romanian economy had suffered further losses due to returning seized goods (US$320 million), restoring properties to the United Nations and their nationals (US$200 million), renouncing German debts (US$200 million), irregular requisitioning (US$150 million) and maintenance of the Soviet Army unit on its territory (US$75 million).[12] Romania paid $5.6 million in 1945[13] and, in the assessment of Digi24, it was coerced to pay through SovRom $2 billion.[14]

World War II Finland Edit

Finland could only negotiate an interim peace deal with Soviet Union by agreeing to extensive reparations, and was eventually the only country to pay settled war reparations in full. The total amount of reparations rose to US$500 million, at the value of the dollar in 1953.[15]

Japan Edit

Sino-Japanese War of 1895 Edit

The Treaty of Shimonoseki, signed on April 17, 1895, obliged China to pay an indemnity of 200 million silver taels (¥3.61 billion) to Japan; and to open the ports of Shashi, Chongqing, Suzhou and Hangzhou to Japanese trade.[citation needed]

World War II Japan Edit

According to Article 14 of the Treaty of San Francisco (1951):

It is recognized that Japan should pay reparations to the Allied Powers for the damage and suffering caused by it during the war....Japan will promptly enter into negotiations with Allied Powers so desiring, whose present territories were occupied by Japanese forces and damaged by Japan, with a view to assisting to compensate those countries for the cost of repairing the damage done, by making available the services of the Japanese people in production, salvaging and other work for the Allied Powers in question.

War reparations made pursuant to the San Francisco Peace Treaty with Japan (1951) include: reparations amounting to US$550 million (198 billion yen 1956) were made to the Philippines, and US$39 million (14.04 billion yen 1959) to South Vietnam; payment to the International Committee of the Red Cross to compensate prisoners of war (POW) of 4.5 million pounds sterling (4.54109 billion yen) was made; and Japan relinquished all overseas assets, approximately US$23.681 billion (379.499 billion yen).

Japan signed the peace treaty with 49 nations in 1952 and concluded 54 bilateral agreements that included those with Burma (US$20 million 1954, 1963), South Korea (US$300 million 1965), Indonesia (US$223.08 million 1958), the Philippines (US$525 million/52.94 billion yen 1967), Malaysia (25 million Malaysian dollars/2.94 billion yen 1967), Thailand (5.4 billion yen 1955), Micronesia (1969), Laos (1958), Cambodia (1959), Mongolia (1977), Spain ($5.5 million 1957), Switzerland, the Netherlands ($10 million 1956), Sweden and Denmark. Payments of reparations started in 1955, lasted for 23 years and ended in 1977. For countries that renounced any reparations from Japan, it agreed to pay an indemnity and/or grants in accordance with bilateral agreements. In the Joint Communiqué of the Government of Japan and the Government of the People's Republic of China (1972), the People's Republic of China renounced its demand for war reparations from Japan. In the Soviet–Japanese Joint Declaration of 1956, the Soviet Union waived its rights to reparations from Japan, and both Japan and the Soviet Union waived all reparations claims arising from war. Additionally, Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), under President J. R. Jayewardene, declined war reparations from Japan.[16]

Iraq Edit

Invasion of Kuwait Edit

After the Gulf War, Iraq accepted United Nations Security Council Resolution 687, which declared Iraq's financial liability for damage caused in its invasion of Kuwait.[17] The United Nations Compensation Commission (UNCC) was established, and US$350 billion in claims were filed by governments, corporations, and individuals. UNCC accepted and awarded compensions claims for $52.4 billion to approximately 1.5 million successful claimants; as of July 2019, $48.7 billion has been paid and only $3.7 billion was left to be paid to Kuwait on behalf of the Kuwait Petroleum Corporation.[18] The UNCC says that its prioritization of claims by natural people, ahead of claims by governments and entities or corporations (legal persons), "marked a significant step in the evolution of international claims practice". Funds for these payments were to come from a 30% share of Iraq's oil revenues from the oil for food program.

Invasion by the United States Edit

Certain groups in Iraq and the United States have campaigned for reparations by the United States for the devastation and health effects suffered by Iraqi citizens during the overthrow of Saddam Hussein in the Iraq War. There has been little international support. [19][20]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Livy. Ab urbe condita (The Early History of Rome, books I–V, and The History of Rome from its Foundation, books XXI–XXX: The War with Hannibal), London; Penguin Classics, 2002 and 1976.
  2. ^ Metzler, M. 2006. Lever of Empire: The International Gold Standard and the Crisis of Liberalism in Prewar Japan. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.
  3. ^ Abraham, Haim (2019-12-01). "Tort Liability for Belligerent Wrongs". Oxford Journal of Legal Studies. 39 (4): 808–833. doi:10.1093/ojls/gqz025. ISSN 0143-6503.
  4. ^ Crootof, Rebecca (2016-01-01). "War Torts: Accountability for Autonomous Weapons". University of Pennsylvania Law Review. 164 (6): 1347.
  5. ^ E. N. White (2001). "Making the French pay: the cost and consequences of the Napoleonic reparations" (PDF). European Review of Economic History. 5 (5): 337–65. doi:10.1017/S1361491601000132. hdl:10419/94257..
  6. ^ A. J. P. Taylor, Bismarck: The Man and the Statesman, without taking in account the Napoleonic War reparation (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1955), p. 133.
  7. ^ Brown, Frederick (2010). For the Soul of France : culture wars in the age of Dreyfus (1st ed.). New York: Alfred A. Knopf. p. 88. ISBN 978-0307279217. OCLC 419798763.
  8. ^ Wynne William H., (1951), State insolvency and foreign bondholders, New Haven, Yale University Press, vol. 2.
  9. ^ "Germany makes final payment for WWI reparations". The Jerusalem Post - JPost.com. from the original on 24 October 2012. Retrieved 3 February 2016.
  10. ^ Norman M. Naimark The Russians in Germany ISBN 0-674-78405-7 pg. 206
  11. ^ Noam Chomsky, Edward S. Herman, "After the Cataclysm: Postwar Indochina and the Reconstruction of Imperial Ideology" (1979) pp. 35–37
  12. ^ "Spolierea României la Tratatul de Pace de la Paris". Historia. from the original on 3 February 2016. Retrieved 3 February 2016.
  13. ^ "România sărăcită. Jaful, politică de stat a URSS faţă de cei învinşi". 23 August 2013. from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 3 February 2016.
  14. ^ Stephen D. Roper, Romania: The Unfinished Revolution, Routledge, London, 2000, p. 18
  15. ^ "60 years after the war reparations". valtioneuvosto.fi.
  16. ^ migration (8 September 2014). "Japan PM Abe ends Sri Lanka trip with visit to temple". straitstimes.com. from the original on 23 March 2018. Retrieved 30 April 2018.
  17. ^ "RESOLUTION 687 (1991)" (PDF). U.S. Department of the Treasury. 9 April 1991. (PDF) from the original on 2017-05-05. Retrieved 23 August 2017.
  18. ^ "PRESS RELEASE UNITED NATIONS COMPENSATION COMMISSION PAYS OUT US$270 MILLION" (PDF). United Nations Compensation Commission. 23 July 2019. Retrieved 6 August 2019.
  19. ^ "US reparations for Iraq are long overdue". america.aljazeera.com. Retrieved 2021-11-12.
  20. ^ Hawa, Kaleem (2021-09-01). "Reparations for Iraq". nymag.com. Retrieved 2021-11-12.

References Edit

  • Wheeler-Bennett, Sir John "The Wreck of Reparations, being the political background of the Lausanne Agreement, 1932", New York, H. Fertig, 1972.
  • Ilaria Bottigliero "Redress for Victims of Crimes under International Law", Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, The Hague (2004).
  • Livy. Ab urbe condita (The Early History of Rome, books I–V, and The History of Rome from its Foundation, books XXI–XXX: The War with Hannibal), London; Penguin Classics, 2002 and 1976.
  • Mantoux, E. 1946. The Carthaginian Peace or The Economic Consequences of Mr. Keynes. London: Oxford University Press.
  • Morrison, R. J. 1992. Gulf war reparations: Iraq, OPEC, and the transfer problem. American Journal of Economics and Sociology 51, 385–99.
  • Occhino, F., Oosterlinck, K. and White, E. 2008. How much can a victor force the vanquished to pay? Journal of Economic History 68, 1–45.
  • Ohlin, B. 1929. The reparation problem: a discussion. Economic Journal 39, 172–82.
  • Oosterlinck, Kim (2009). "Reparations". In Durlauf, Steven N.; Blume, Lawrence E. (eds.). The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics (Online ed.). Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 1–5. doi:10.1057/9780230226203.1920. ISBN 9780333786765.
  • Schuker, S. A. 1988. ‘American reparations’ to Germany, 1919–33.: implications for the third-world debt crisis. Princeton Studies in International Finance no. 61.
  • White, E. N. 2001. Making the French pay: the cost and consequences of the Napoleonic reparations. European Review of Economic History 5, 337–65.

External links Edit

  • Treaty of Peace with Japan Signed at San Francisco on 8 September 1951 29 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  • The United Nations Compensation Commission 2008-09-14 at the Wayback Machine
  • Reparations for the gross violations of human rights during the regime of Democratic Kampuchea (the Khmer Rouge) in Cambodia 2011-07-08 at the Wayback Machine
  • Treaty of Peace Between Japan and India (1952) 2018-05-24 at the Wayback Machine
  • Treaty of Peace Between Japan and the Union of Burma (1954) 2016-03-23 at the Wayback Machine
  • Agreement Between Japan and Thailand Concerning Settlement of "Special Yen Problem" (1955) 2018-05-24 at the Wayback Machine
  • Reparations Agreement Between Japan and the Republic of the Philippines (1956) 2016-10-13 at the Wayback Machine
  • Treaty of Peace Between Japan and the Republic of Indonesia (1958) 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine
  • Reparations Agreement Between Japan and the Republic of Vietnam (1959) 2015-09-24 at the Wayback Machine
  • Agreement of 21st September, 1967, Between Japan and the Republic of Singapore 2016-03-23 at the Wayback Machine
  • Agreement of 21st September, 1967, Between Japan and Malaysia 2016-03-21 at the Wayback Machine
  • Joint Communique of the Government of Japan and the Government of the People's Republic of China (1972)
  • Japan's Records on War Reparations, The Association for Advancement of Unbiased View of History
  • War Responsibility, Postwar Compensation, and Peace Movements and Education in Japan
  • Petra Schmidt, "Disabled Colonial Veterans of the Imperial Japanese Forces and the Right to Receive Social Welfare Benefits from Japan" Sydney Law Review, vol. 21(1999) pp. 231-259

reparations, compensation, payments, made, after, side, other, they, intended, cover, damage, injury, inflicted, during, uscgc, eagle, built, 1936, horst, wessel, german, navy, taken, united, states, reparations, 1946, contents, history, europe, napoleonic, fr. War reparations are compensation payments made after a war by one side to the other They are intended to cover damage or injury inflicted during a war The USCGC Eagle was built in 1936 as Horst Wessel for the German Navy It was taken by the United States as reparations in 1946 Contents 1 History 1 1 Europe 1 1 1 Napoleonic War 1 1 2 Franco Prussian War 1 1 3 Greco Turkish War of 1897 1 1 4 World War I 1 1 5 World War II Germany 1 1 6 World War II Italy 1 1 7 World War II Hungary 1 1 8 World War II Romania 1 1 9 World War II Finland 1 2 Japan 1 2 1 Sino Japanese War of 1895 1 2 2 World War II Japan 1 3 Iraq 1 3 1 Invasion of Kuwait 1 3 2 Invasion by the United States 2 See also 3 Notes 4 References 5 External linksHistory EditMaking one party pay a war indemnity is a common practice with a long history Rome imposed large indemnities on Carthage after the First Treaty of Lutatius and Second Punic Wars 1 Some war reparations induced changes in monetary policy For example the French payment following the Franco Prussian war played a major role in Germany s decision to adopt the gold standard citation needed the 230 million silver taels in reparations imposed on defeated China after the First Sino Japanese War led Japan to a similar decision 2 There have been attempts to codify reparations both in the Statutes of the International Criminal Court and the UN Basic Principles on the Right to a Remedy and Reparation for Victims and some scholars have argued that individuals should have a right to seek compensation for wrongs they sustained during warfare through tort law 3 4 Europe Edit Napoleonic War Edit Following Napoleon s final loss at the Battle of Waterloo under the Treaty of Paris 1815 defeated France was ordered to pay 700 million francs in indemnities France was also to pay additional money to cover the cost of providing additional defensive fortifications to be built by neighbouring Coalition countries It was the most expensive war reparation ever paid by a country in proportion to its GDP 5 Franco Prussian War Edit After the Franco Prussian War according to conditions of Treaty of Frankfurt May 10 1871 France was obliged to pay a war indemnity of 5 billion gold francs in 5 years The indemnity was proportioned according to population to be the exact equivalent to the indemnity imposed by Napoleon on Prussia in 1807 6 German troops remained in parts of France until the last installment of the indemnity was paid in September 1873 ahead of schedule 7 Greco Turkish War of 1897 Edit Following the Greco Turkish War 1897 defeated Greece was forced to pay a large war indemnity to Turkey 4 million Greece which was already in default clarification needed was compelled to permit oversight of its public finances by an international financial commission 8 World War I Edit Main article World War I reparations Russians agreed to pay reparations to the Central Powers when Russia exited the war in the Treaty of Brest Litovsk which was repudiated by the Bolshevik government eight months later Bulgaria paid reparations of 2 25 billion gold francs 90 million pounds to the Entente according to the Treaty of Neuilly Germany agreed to pay reparations of 132 billion gold marks to the Triple Entente in the Treaty of Versailles which were then cancelled in 1932 with Germany only having paid a part of the sum This still left Germany with debts it had incurred in order to finance the reparations and these were revised by the Agreement on German External Debts in 1953 After another pause pending the reunification of Germany the last installment of these debt repayments was paid on 3 October 2010 9 World War II Germany Edit Further information German reparations for World War II See also Forced labor of Germans in the Soviet Union POW labor in the Soviet Union and World War II reparations towards Yugoslavia During World War II Germany extracted payments from occupied countries compelled loans stole or destroyed property In addition countries were obliged to provide resources and forced labour After World War II according to the Potsdam conference held between July 17 and August 2 1945 Germany was to pay the Allies US 23 billion mainly in machinery and manufacturing plants Dismantling in the West stopped in 1950 Reparations to the Soviet Union stopped in 1953 only paid by the GDR Beginning before the German surrender and continuing for the next two years the United States pursued a vigorous program of harvesting technological and scientific know how as well as patents and many leading scientists in Germany known as Operation Paperclip Historian John Gimbel in his book Science Technology and Reparations Exploitation and Plunder in Postwar Germany states that the intellectual reparations referring to German scientists taken by the Allies amounted to close to 10 billion 10 German reparations were partly to be in the form of forced labor By 1947 approximately 4 000 000 German POWs and civilians were used as forced labor under various headings such as reparations labor or enforced labor in Europe Canada and the United States after the end of the Second World War 11 This last reference refers to forced labor reparations in Southeast Asia specifically Cambodia after The Vietnam war not Germany after WW2 World War II Italy Edit According to the Treaty of Peace with Italy 1947 Italy agreed to pay reparations of about US 125 million to Yugoslavia US 105 million to Greece US 100 million to the Soviet Union US 25 million to Ethiopia and US 5 million to Albania citation needed World War II Hungary Edit Hungary agreed to pay reparations of US 200 million to the Soviet Union and US 100 million apiece to Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia citation needed World War II Romania Edit Romania agreed to pay reparations of US 300 million to the Soviet Union Romanian economists estimated that by February 1947 the Romanian economy had suffered further losses due to returning seized goods US 320 million restoring properties to the United Nations and their nationals US 200 million renouncing German debts US 200 million irregular requisitioning US 150 million and maintenance of the Soviet Army unit on its territory US 75 million 12 Romania paid 5 6 million in 1945 13 and in the assessment of Digi24 it was coerced to pay through SovRom 2 billion 14 World War II Finland Edit Main article Finnish war reparations to the Soviet Union Finland could only negotiate an interim peace deal with Soviet Union by agreeing to extensive reparations and was eventually the only country to pay settled war reparations in full The total amount of reparations rose to US 500 million at the value of the dollar in 1953 15 Japan Edit Sino Japanese War of 1895 Edit The Treaty of Shimonoseki signed on April 17 1895 obliged China to pay an indemnity of 200 million silver taels 3 61 billion to Japan and to open the ports of Shashi Chongqing Suzhou and Hangzhou to Japanese trade citation needed World War II Japan Edit According to Article 14 of the Treaty of San Francisco 1951 It is recognized that Japan should pay reparations to the Allied Powers for the damage and suffering caused by it during the war Japan will promptly enter into negotiations with Allied Powers so desiring whose present territories were occupied by Japanese forces and damaged by Japan with a view to assisting to compensate those countries for the cost of repairing the damage done by making available the services of the Japanese people in production salvaging and other work for the Allied Powers in question War reparations made pursuant to the San Francisco Peace Treaty with Japan 1951 include reparations amounting to US 550 million 198 billion yen 1956 were made to the Philippines and US 39 million 14 04 billion yen 1959 to South Vietnam payment to the International Committee of the Red Cross to compensate prisoners of war POW of 4 5 million pounds sterling 4 54109 billion yen was made and Japan relinquished all overseas assets approximately US 23 681 billion 379 499 billion yen Japan signed the peace treaty with 49 nations in 1952 and concluded 54 bilateral agreements that included those with Burma US 20 million 1954 1963 South Korea US 300 million 1965 Indonesia US 223 08 million 1958 the Philippines US 525 million 52 94 billion yen 1967 Malaysia 25 million Malaysian dollars 2 94 billion yen 1967 Thailand 5 4 billion yen 1955 Micronesia 1969 Laos 1958 Cambodia 1959 Mongolia 1977 Spain 5 5 million 1957 Switzerland the Netherlands 10 million 1956 Sweden and Denmark Payments of reparations started in 1955 lasted for 23 years and ended in 1977 For countries that renounced any reparations from Japan it agreed to pay an indemnity and or grants in accordance with bilateral agreements In the Joint Communique of the Government of Japan and the Government of the People s Republic of China 1972 the People s Republic of China renounced its demand for war reparations from Japan In the Soviet Japanese Joint Declaration of 1956 the Soviet Union waived its rights to reparations from Japan and both Japan and the Soviet Union waived all reparations claims arising from war Additionally Ceylon now Sri Lanka under President J R Jayewardene declined war reparations from Japan 16 Iraq Edit Invasion of Kuwait Edit After the Gulf War Iraq accepted United Nations Security Council Resolution 687 which declared Iraq s financial liability for damage caused in its invasion of Kuwait 17 The United Nations Compensation Commission UNCC was established and US 350 billion in claims were filed by governments corporations and individuals UNCC accepted and awarded compensions claims for 52 4 billion to approximately 1 5 million successful claimants as of July 2019 48 7 billion has been paid and only 3 7 billion was left to be paid to Kuwait on behalf of the Kuwait Petroleum Corporation 18 The UNCC says that its prioritization of claims by natural people ahead of claims by governments and entities or corporations legal persons marked a significant step in the evolution of international claims practice Funds for these payments were to come from a 30 share of Iraq s oil revenues from the oil for food program Invasion by the United States Edit Certain groups in Iraq and the United States have campaigned for reparations by the United States for the devastation and health effects suffered by Iraqi citizens during the overthrow of Saddam Hussein in the Iraq War There has been little international support 19 20 See also EditBoxer Protocol Haiti indemnity controversy Legal remedy Reparation legal Reparations Agreement between Israel and West Germany Holocaust reparations Reparations transitional justice Restitution Treaty on Basic Relations between Japan and the Republic of Korea 1965 Treaty of Frankfurt 1871 Treaty of San Francisco 1951 Treaty of Versailles Potsdam Conference Yalta Conference World War I reparations made from Germany due to the signing of the Treaty of VersaillesNotes Edit Livy Ab urbe condita The Early History of Rome books I V and The History of Rome from its Foundation books XXI XXX The War with Hannibal London Penguin Classics 2002 and 1976 Metzler M 2006 Lever of Empire The International Gold Standard and the Crisis of Liberalism in Prewar Japan Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press Abraham Haim 2019 12 01 Tort Liability for Belligerent Wrongs Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 39 4 808 833 doi 10 1093 ojls gqz025 ISSN 0143 6503 Crootof Rebecca 2016 01 01 War Torts Accountability for Autonomous Weapons University of Pennsylvania Law Review 164 6 1347 E N White 2001 Making the French pay the cost and consequences of the Napoleonic reparations PDF European Review of Economic History 5 5 337 65 doi 10 1017 S1361491601000132 hdl 10419 94257 A J P Taylor Bismarck The Man and the Statesman without taking in account the Napoleonic War reparation London Hamish Hamilton 1955 p 133 Brown Frederick 2010 For the Soul of France culture wars in the age of Dreyfus 1st ed New York Alfred A Knopf p 88 ISBN 978 0307279217 OCLC 419798763 Wynne William H 1951 State insolvency and foreign bondholders New Haven Yale University Press vol 2 Germany makes final payment for WWI reparations The Jerusalem Post JPost com Archived from the original on 24 October 2012 Retrieved 3 February 2016 Norman M Naimark The Russians in Germany ISBN 0 674 78405 7 pg 206 Noam Chomsky Edward S Herman After the Cataclysm Postwar Indochina and the Reconstruction of Imperial Ideology 1979 pp 35 37 Spolierea Romaniei la Tratatul de Pace de la Paris Historia Archived from the original on 3 February 2016 Retrieved 3 February 2016 Romania sărăcită Jaful politică de stat a URSS faţă de cei invinsi 23 August 2013 Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 3 February 2016 Stephen D Roper Romania The Unfinished Revolution Routledge London 2000 p 18 60 years after the war reparations valtioneuvosto fi migration 8 September 2014 Japan PM Abe ends Sri Lanka trip with visit to temple straitstimes com Archived from the original on 23 March 2018 Retrieved 30 April 2018 RESOLUTION 687 1991 PDF U S Department of the Treasury 9 April 1991 Archived PDF from the original on 2017 05 05 Retrieved 23 August 2017 PRESS RELEASE UNITED NATIONS COMPENSATION COMMISSION PAYS OUT US 270 MILLION PDF United Nations Compensation Commission 23 July 2019 Retrieved 6 August 2019 US reparations for Iraq are long overdue america aljazeera com Retrieved 2021 11 12 Hawa Kaleem 2021 09 01 Reparations for Iraq nymag com Retrieved 2021 11 12 References EditWheeler Bennett Sir John The Wreck of Reparations being the political background of the Lausanne Agreement 1932 New York H Fertig 1972 Ilaria Bottigliero Redress for Victims of Crimes under International Law Martinus Nijhoff Publishers The Hague 2004 Livy Ab urbe condita The Early History of Rome books I V and The History of Rome from its Foundation books XXI XXX The War with Hannibal London Penguin Classics 2002 and 1976 Mantoux E 1946 The Carthaginian Peace or The Economic Consequences of Mr Keynes London Oxford University Press Morrison R J 1992 Gulf war reparations Iraq OPEC and the transfer problem American Journal of Economics and Sociology 51 385 99 Occhino F Oosterlinck K and White E 2008 How much can a victor force the vanquished to pay Journal of Economic History 68 1 45 Ohlin B 1929 The reparation problem a discussion Economic Journal 39 172 82 Oosterlinck Kim 2009 Reparations In Durlauf Steven N Blume Lawrence E eds The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics Online ed Palgrave Macmillan pp 1 5 doi 10 1057 9780230226203 1920 ISBN 9780333786765 Schuker S A 1988 American reparations to Germany 1919 33 implications for the third world debt crisis Princeton Studies in International Finance no 61 White E N 2001 Making the French pay the cost and consequences of the Napoleonic reparations European Review of Economic History 5 337 65 External links EditTreaty of Peace with Japan Signed at San Francisco on 8 September 1951 Archived 29 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine The United Nations Compensation Commission Archived 2008 09 14 at the Wayback Machine Reparations for the gross violations of human rights during the regime of Democratic Kampuchea the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia Archived 2011 07 08 at the Wayback Machine Treaty of Peace Between Japan and India 1952 Archived 2018 05 24 at the Wayback Machine Treaty of Peace Between Japan and the Union of Burma 1954 Archived 2016 03 23 at the Wayback Machine Agreement Between Japan and Thailand Concerning Settlement of Special Yen Problem 1955 Archived 2018 05 24 at the Wayback Machine Reparations Agreement Between Japan and the Republic of the Philippines 1956 Archived 2016 10 13 at the Wayback Machine Treaty of Peace Between Japan and the Republic of Indonesia 1958 Archived 2015 09 24 at the Wayback Machine Reparations Agreement Between Japan and the Republic of Vietnam 1959 Archived 2015 09 24 at the Wayback Machine Agreement of 21st September 1967 Between Japan and the Republic of Singapore Archived 2016 03 23 at the Wayback Machine Agreement of 21st September 1967 Between Japan and Malaysia Archived 2016 03 21 at the Wayback Machine Joint Communique of the Government of Japan and the Government of the People s Republic of China 1972 Japan s Records on War Reparations The Association for Advancement of Unbiased View of History War Responsibility Postwar Compensation and Peace Movements and Education in Japan Petra Schmidt Disabled Colonial Veterans of the Imperial Japanese Forces and the Right to Receive Social Welfare Benefits from Japan Sydney Law Review vol 21 1999 pp 231 259 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title War reparations amp oldid 1174129040, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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