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Washington Naval Treaty

The Washington Naval Treaty, also known as the Five-Power Treaty, was a treaty signed during 1922 among the major Allies of World War I, which agreed to prevent an arms race by limiting naval construction. It was negotiated at the Washington Naval Conference, held in Washington, D.C., from November 1921 to February 1922, and it was signed by the governments of the United Kingdom, United States, France, Italy, and Japan. It limited the construction of battleships, battlecruisers and aircraft carriers by the signatories. The numbers of other categories of warships, including cruisers, destroyers, and submarines, were not limited by the treaty, but those ships were limited to 10,000 tons displacement each.

Washington Naval Treaty
Limitation of Naval Armament
Signing of the Washington Naval Treaty.
TypeArms control
ContextWorld War I
SignedFebruary 6, 1922 (1922-02-06)
LocationMemorial Continental Hall, Washington, D.C.
EffectiveAugust 17, 1923 (1923-08-17)
ExpirationDecember 31, 1936 (1936-12-31)
Negotiators
Signatories
Parties
LanguageEnglish
Full text
Washington Naval Treaty, 1922 at Wikisource

The treaty was concluded on February 6, 1922. Ratifications of that treaty were exchanged in Washington on August 17, 1923, and it was registered in the League of Nations Treaty Series on April 16, 1924.[1]

Later naval arms limitation conferences sought additional limitations of warship building. The terms of the Washington Naval Treaty were modified by the London Naval Treaty of 1930 and the Second London Naval Treaty of 1936. By the mid-1930s, Japan and Italy renounced the treaties, while Germany renounced the Treaty of Versailles which had limited its navy. Naval arms limitation became increasingly difficult for the other signatories.

Background

Immediately after World War I, Britain still had the world's largest and most powerful navy, followed by the United States and more distantly by Japan, France and Italy. The British Royal Navy had interned the defeated German High Seas Fleet. The Allies had differing opinions concerning the final disposition of the Imperial German Navy, with the French and Italians wanting the German fleet divided between the victorious powers and the Americans and British wanting the ships destroyed. The negotiations became mostly moot after the German crews had scuttled most of their ships.

News of the scuttling angered the French and the Italians, with the French particularly unimpressed with British explanations that the fleet guarding the Germans had then been away on exercises. Nevertheless, the British joined their allies in condemning the German actions, and no credible evidence emerged to suggest that the British had collaborated actively with the Germans with respect to the scuttling. The Treaty of Versailles, signed soon after the scuttling of the German High Seas Fleet, imposed strict limits on the size and the number of warships that the newly-installed German government was allowed to build and maintain.[citation needed]

The Americans, the British, the French, the Italians, and the Japanese had been allies during World War I, but with the German threat seemingly finished, a naval arms race between the erstwhile allies seemed likely for the next few years.[2] US President Woodrow Wilson's administration had already announced successive plans for the expansion of the US Navy from 1916 to 1919 that would have resulted in a massive fleet of 50 modern battleships.[3]

In response, the Japanese Diet finally authorised construction of warships to enable the Japanese Navy to attain its goal of an "eight-eight" fleet programme, with eight modern battleships and eight battlecruisers. The Japanese started work on four battleships and four battlecruisers, all of which were much larger and more powerful than those of the classes that they were replacing.[4]

The 1921 British Naval Estimates planned four battleships and four battlecruisers, with another four battleships to follow the subsequent year.[2]

The new arms race was unwelcome to the American public. The US Congress disapproved of Wilson's 1919 naval expansion plan, and the 1920 presidential election campaign caused politics to resume the non-interventionalism of the prewar era, with little enthusiasm for continued naval expansion.[5] Britain also could ill afford any resumption of battleship construction, given the exorbitant cost.[6]

In late 1921, the US became aware that Britain was planning a conference to discuss the strategic situation in the Pacific and Far East regions. To forestall the conference and to satisfy domestic demands for a global disarmament conference, Warren Harding's administration called the Washington Naval Conference in November 1921.[7]

The Conference agreed to the Five-Power Naval Treaty as well as a Four-Power Treaty on Japan and a Nine-Power Treaty on China.[8]

Negotiations

At the first plenary session held November 21, 1921, US Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes presented his country's proposals. Hughes provided a dramatic beginning for the conference by stating with resolve: "The way to disarm is to disarm".[9] The ambitious slogan received enthusiastic public endorsement and likely abbreviated the conference while helping ensure his proposals were largely adopted. He subsequently proposed the following:

  • A ten-year pause or "holiday" of the construction of capital ships (battleships and battlecruisers), including the immediate suspension of all building of capital ships.
  • The scrapping of existing or planned capital ships to give a 5:5:3:1.67:1.67 ratio of tonnage with respect to Britain, the United States, Japan, France and Italy respectively.
  • Ongoing limits of both capital ship tonnage and the tonnage of secondary vessels with the 5:5:3 ratio.

Capital ships

The proposals for capital ships were largely accepted by the British delegation. However, they were controversial with the British public. Britain could no longer have adequate fleets in the North Sea, the Mediterranean and the Far East simultaneously, which provoked outrage from parts of the Royal Navy.[citation needed]

Nevertheless, there was huge demand for the British to agree to the limits and reductions: the risk of war with the Americans was increasingly regarded as merely theoretical as there were very few policy differences between the two Anglophone powers; continued naval spending was unpopular in Britain throughout the empire; and Britain was implementing major budget reductions due to the post–World War I recession.[10]

The Japanese delegation was divided. Japanese naval doctrine required the maintenance of a fleet 70% the size of that of the United States, which was felt to be the minimum necessary to defeat the Americans in any subsequent war. The Japanese envisaged two separate engagements, first with the U.S. Pacific Fleet and then with the U.S. Atlantic Fleet. It calculated that a 7:5 ratio in the first battle would produce enough of a margin of victory to be able to win the subsequent engagement and so a 3:5 ratio was unacceptable because a 3:5 total fleet size ratio would imply a 6:5 ratio in the first battle. Nevertheless, the director of the delegation, Katō Tomosaburō, preferred to accept the latter to the prospect of an arms race with the United States, as the relative industrial strength of the two nations would cause Japan to lose such an arms race and possibly suffer an economic crisis. At the beginning of the negotiations, the Japanese had only 55% of the capital ships and 18% of the GDP of the Americans.[citation needed]

 
Akagi (Japanese ship originally planned as a battlecruiser but converted during construction to an aircraft carrier) in April 1925.

His opinion was opposed strongly by Katō Kanji, the president of the Naval Staff College, who acted as his chief naval aide at the delegation and represented the influential "big navy" opinion that Japan had to prepare as thoroughly as possible for an inevitable conflict against the United States, which could build indefinitely more warships because of its huge industrial power.[citation needed]

Katō Tomosaburō was finally able to persuade the Japanese high command to accept the Hughes proposals, but the treaty was for years a source of controversy in the navy.[11]

The French delegation initially responded negatively to the idea of reducing their capital ships' tonnage to 175,000 tons and demanded 350,000, slightly above the Japanese limit. In the end, concessions regarding cruisers and submarines helped persuade the French to agree to the limit on capital ships.[12]

Another issue that was considered critical by the French representatives was the Italian request of substantial parity, which was considered to be unsubstantiated; however, pressure from the American and the British delegations caused the French to accept it. That was considered a great success by the Italian government, but parity would never actually be attained.[13]

There was much discussion about the inclusion or exclusion of individual warships. In particular, the Japanese delegation was keen to retain their newest battleship Mutsu, which had been funded with great public enthusiasm, including donations from schoolchildren.[14] That resulted in provisions to allow the Americans and the British to construct equivalent ships.[citation needed]

Cruisers and destroyers

 
HMS Hawkins, lead ship for her class of heavy cruisers alongside a quay, probably during the interwar period

Hughes proposed to limit secondary ships (cruisers and destroyers) in the same proportions as capital ships. However, that was unacceptable to both the British and the French. The British counterproposal, in which the British would be entitled to 450,000 tons of cruisers in consideration of its imperial commitments but the United States and Japan to only 300,000 and 250,000 respectively, proved equally contentious. Thus, the idea of limiting total cruiser tonnage or numbers was rejected entirely.[12]

Instead, the British suggested a qualitative limit of future cruiser construction. The limit proposed, of a 10,000 ton maximum displacement and 8-inch calibre guns, was intended to allow the British to retain the Hawkins class, then being constructed. That coincided with the American requirements for cruisers for Pacific Ocean operations and also with Japanese plans for the Furutaka class. The suggestion was adopted with little debate.[12]

Submarines

A major British demand during the negotiations was the complete abolition of the submarine, which had proved so effective against them in the war. That proved impossible, particularly as a result of French opposition, which demanded an allowance of 90,000 tons of submarines,[15] and the conference ended without an agreement to restrict submarines.[16]

Pacific bases

Article XIX of the treaty also prohibited the British, the Japanese and the Americans from constructing any new fortifications or naval bases in the Pacific Ocean region. Existing fortifications in Singapore, the Philippines and Hawaii could remain. That was a significant victory for Japan, as newly-fortified British or American bases would be a serious problem for the Japanese in the event of any future war. That provision of the treaty essentially guaranteed that Japan would be the dominant power in the Western Pacific Ocean and was crucial in gaining Japanese acceptance of the limits on capital ship construction.[17]

Terms

Tonnage limitations
Country Capital ships Aircraft carriers
British Empire 525,000 tons
(533,000 tonnes)
135,000 tons
(137,000 tonnes)
United States 525,000 tons
(533,000 tonnes)
135,000 tons
(137,000 tonnes)
Empire of Japan 315,000 tons
(320,000 tonnes)
81,000 tons
(82,000 tonnes)
France 175,000 tons
(178,000 tonnes)
60,000 tons
(61,000 tonnes)
Italy 175,000 tons
(178,000 tonnes)
60,000 tons
(61,000 tonnes)

The treaty strictly limited both the tonnage and construction of capital ships and aircraft carriers and included limits of the size of individual ships.

The tonnage limits defined by Articles IV and VII (tabulated) gave a strength ratio of approximately 5:5:3:1.75:1.75 for the UK, the United States, Japan, Italy, and France, respectively.[18]

The qualitative limits of each type of ship were as follows:

  • Capital ships (battleships and battlecruisers) were limited to 35,000 tons standard displacement and guns of no larger than 16-inch calibre. (Articles V and VI)
  • Aircraft carriers were limited to 27,000 tons and could carry no more than 10 heavy guns, of a maximum calibre of 8 inches. However, each signatory was allowed to use two existing capital ship hulls for aircraft carriers, with a displacement limit of 33,000 tons each (Articles IX and X). For the purposes of the treaty, an aircraft carrier was defined as a warship displacing more than 10,000 tons constructed exclusively for launching and landing aircraft. Carriers lighter than 10,000 tons, therefore, did not count towards the tonnage limits (Article XX, part 4). Moreover, all aircraft carriers then in service or building (Argus, Eagle, Furious, Hermes, Langley and Hōshō) were declared "experimental" and not counted (Article VIII).
  • All other warships were limited to a maximum displacement of 10,000 tons and a maximum gun calibre of 8 inches (Articles XI and XII).

The treaty also detailed by Chapter II the individual ships to be retained by each navy, including the allowance for the United States to complete two further ships of the Colorado class and for the UK to complete two new ships in accordance with the treaty limits.

Chapter II, part 2, detailed what was to be done to render a ship ineffective for military use. In addition to sinking or scrapping, a limited number of ships could be converted as target ships or training vessels if their armament, armour and other combat-essential parts were removed completely. Some could also be converted into aircraft carriers.

Part 3, Section II specified the ships to be scrapped to comply with the treaty and when the remaining ships could be replaced. In all, the United States had to scrap 30 existing or planned capital ships, Britain 23 and Japan 17.

Effects

 
The treaty arrested the continuing upward trend of battleship size and halted new construction entirely for more than a decade.

The treaty marked the end of a long period of increases of battleship construction. Many ships that were being constructed were scrapped or converted into aircraft carriers. Treaty limits were respected and then extended by the London Naval Treaty of 1930. It was not until the mid-1930s that navies began to build battleships once again, and the power and the size of new battleships began to increase once again. The Second London Naval Treaty of 1936 sought to extend the Washington Treaty limits until 1942, but the absence of Japan or Italy made it largely ineffective.

There were fewer effects on cruiser building. The treaty specified 10,000 tons and 8-inch guns as the maximum size of a cruiser, but that was also the minimum size cruiser that any navy was willing to build. The treaty began a building competition of 8-inch, 10,000-ton "treaty cruisers", which gave further cause for concern.[19] Subsequent naval treaties sought to address that by limiting cruiser, destroyer and submarine tonnage.

Unofficial effects of the treaty included the end of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance. Although it was not part of the Washington Treaty in any way, the American delegates had made it clear that they would not agree to the treaty unless the British ended their alliance with the Japanese.[20] The 1921 Imperial Conference earlier in the year had already decided not to renew the Alliance.[21]

Violations

In 1935, the French Navy laid down the battleship Richelieu; combined with the two Dunkerque-class battleships also under construction, which placed the total tonnage over the 70,000-ton limit on new French battleships until the expiration of the treaty. The keel laying of Jean Bart in December 1936, albeit less than three weeks before the treaty expired, increased the magnitude of France's violation by another 35,000 tons. The French government dismissed British objections to the violations by pointing out that Britain had signed the Anglo-German Naval Agreement in 1935, which unilaterally dismantled the naval disarmament clauses of the Treaty of Versailles. German naval rearmament threatened France, and according to the French perspective, if Britain freely violated treaty obligations, France would similarly not be constrained.[22]

Italy repeatedly violated the displacement limits on individual ships and attempted to remain within the 10,000-ton limit for the Trento-class cruisers built in the mid-1920s. However, by the Zara-class cruisers in the late 1920s and early 1930s, it had abandoned all pretense and built ships that topped 11,000 long tons (11,000 t) by a wide margin. The violations continued with the Littorio-class battleships of the mid-1930s, which had a standard displacement in excess of 40,000 long tons (41,000 t). The Italian Navy nevertheless misrepresented the displacement of the vessels as being within the limits imposed by the treaty.[23]

Japanese denunciation

 
Japanese denunciation of the Washington Naval Treaty, 29 December 1934

The naval treaty had a profound effect on the Japanese. With superior American and British industrial power, a long war would very likely end in a Japanese defeat. Thus, gaining strategic parity was not economically possible.[24]

Many Japanese considered the 5:5:3 ratio of ships as another snub by the West, but it can be argued that the Japanese had a greater force concentration than the US Navy or the Royal Navy. The terms also contributed to controversy in high ranks of the Imperial Japanese Navy between the Treaty Faction officers and their Fleet Faction opponents, who were also allied with the ultranationalists of the Japanese army and other parts of the Japanese government. For the Treaty Faction, the treaty was one of the factors that had contributed to the deterioration of the relationship between the American and the Japanese governments.

Some have also argued that the treaty was one major factor in prompting Japanese expansionism by the Fleet Faction in the early 1930s. The perception of unfairness resulted in Japan's renunciation of the Second London Naval Treaty in 1936.

 
Yamato during sea trials, October 1941. It displaced 72,800 tonnes at full load.

Isoroku Yamamoto, who later masterminded the attack of Pearl Harbor, argued that Japan should remain in the treaty. His opinion was more complex, however, in that he believed the United States could outproduce Japan by a greater factor than the 5:3 ratio because of the huge American production advantage of which he had expert knowledge since he had served with the Japanese embassy in Washington. After the signing of the treaty, he commented, "Anyone who has seen the auto factories in Detroit and the oil-fields in Texas knows that Japan lacks the power for a naval race with America." He later added, "The ratio works very well for Japan – it is a treaty to restrict the other parties."[25] He believed that other methods than a spree of construction would be needed to even the odds, which may have contributed to his advocacy of the plan to attack Pearl Harbor.

On December 29, 1934, the Japanese government gave formal notice that it intended to terminate the treaty. Its provisions remained in force formally until the end of 1936 and were not renewed.[26]

Influences of cryptography

What was unknown to the participants of the Conference was that the American "Black Chamber" (the Cypher Bureau, a US intelligence service), commanded by Herbert Yardley, was spying on the delegations' communications with their home capitals. In particular, Japanese communications were deciphered thoroughly, and American negotiators were able to get the absolute minimum possible deal that the Japanese had indicated they would ever accept.[27]

As the treaty was unpopular with much of the Imperial Japanese Navy and with the increasingly active and important ultranationalist groups, the value that the Japanese government accepted was the cause of much suspicion and accusation among Japanese politicians and naval officers.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ League of Nations Treaty Series, vol. 25, pp. 202–227.
  2. ^ a b Marriott 2005, p. 9.
  3. ^ Potter 1981, p. 232.
  4. ^ Evans & Peattie 1997, p. 174.
  5. ^ Potter 1981, p. 233.
  6. ^ Kennedy 1983, p. 274.
  7. ^ Marriott 2005, p. 10.
  8. ^ "Washington Conference | 1921–1922". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
  9. ^ Jones 2001, p. 119.
  10. ^ Kennedy 1983, pp. 275–276.
  11. ^ Evans & Peattie 1997, pp. 193–196.
  12. ^ a b c Marriott 2005, p. 11.
  13. ^ Giorgerini, Giorgio (2002). Uomini sul fondo : storia del sommergibilismo italiano dalle origini a oggi. Milano: Mondadori. pp. 84–85. ISBN 978-8804505372.
  14. ^ Evans & Peattie 1997, p. 197.
  15. ^ Marriott 2005, pp. 10–11.
  16. ^ Birn, Donald S. (1970). "Open Diplomacy at the Washington Conference of 1921–2: The British and French Experience". Comparative Studies in Society and History. 12 (3): 297–319. doi:10.1017/S0010417500005879. S2CID 143583522.
  17. ^ Evans & Peattie 1997, p. 199.
  18. ^ "Limitation of Naval Armament (Five-Power Treaty or Washington Treaty)" (PDF). Library of Congress. 1922.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  19. ^ Marriott 2005, p. 3.
  20. ^ Howarth 1983, p. 167.
  21. ^ Nish, Ian H. (1972), Alliance in Decline: A Study in Anglo-Japanese Relations 1908–23, London: The Athlone Press, p. 334
  22. ^ Jordan & Dumas 2009, pp. 98–99, 152.
  23. ^ Gardiner & Chesneau 1980, pp. 290–292.
  24. ^ Paine 2017, p. 104-105.
  25. ^ Howarth 1983, p. 152.
  26. ^ Evans & Peattie 1997, p. 298.
  27. ^ Duroselle 1963, p. 156.

Sources

  • Baker, A. D., III (1989). "Battlefleets and Diplomacy: Naval Disarmament Between the Two World Wars". Warship International. XXVI (3): 217–255. ISSN 0043-0374.
  • Duroselle, Jean-Baptiste (1963), From Wilson to Roosevelt: Foreign Policy of the United States, 1913-1945, Harvard University Press, ISBN 978-0-67432-650-7
  • Evans, David & Peattie, Mark (1997), Kaigun: Strategy, Tactics and Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1887–1941, Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, ISBN 978-0-87021-192-8.
  • Gardiner, Robert & Chesneau, Roger, eds. (1980). Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1922–1946. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-913-8.
  • Howarth, Stephen (1983), The Fighting Ships of the Rising Sun, Atheneum, ISBN 978-0-689-11402-1
  • Jones, Howard (2001), Crucible of power: a history of US foreign relations since 1897, Rowman & Littlefield, ISBN 978-0-8420-2918-6
  • Jordan, John (2011), Warships after Washington: The Development of Five Major Fleets 1922–1930, Seaforth Publishing, ISBN 978-1-84832-117-5
  • Jordan, John & Dumas, Robert (2009). French Battleships 1922–1956. Barnsley: Seaforth Punblishing. ISBN 978-1-84832-034-5.
  • Kaufman, Robert Gordon (1990), Arms Control During the Pre-Nuclear Era: The United States and Naval Limitation Between the Two World Wars, New York: Columbia University Press, ISBN 978-0-231-07136-9
  • Kennedy, Paul (1983), The Rise and Fall of British Naval Mastery, London: Macmillan, ISBN 978-0-333-35094-2
  • Marriott, Leo (2005), Treaty Cruisers: The First International Warship Building Competition, Barnsley: Pen & Sword, ISBN 978-1-84415-188-2
  • Paine, S.C.M. (2017), The Japanese Empire: Grand Strategy from the Meiji Restoration to the Pacific War, Cambridge & New York: Cambridge, ISBN 978-1-107-01195-3
  • Potter, E, ed. (1981), Sea Power: A Naval History (2nd ed.), Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, ISBN 978-0-87021-607-7
  • Limitation of Naval Armament, treaty, 1922

External links

  • Conference on the Limitation of Armament (full text). iBiblio. 1922.: the Washington Naval Treaty.
  • "The New Navies". Popular Mechanics (article): 738–48. May 1929.: on warships provided for under the treaty.
  • EDSITEment lesson Postwar Disillusionment and the Quest for Peace 1921–1929
  • In depth video discussion of the Washington Naval Treaty

washington, naval, treaty, also, known, five, power, treaty, treaty, signed, during, 1922, among, major, allies, world, which, agreed, prevent, arms, race, limiting, naval, construction, negotiated, washington, naval, conference, held, washington, from, novemb. The Washington Naval Treaty also known as the Five Power Treaty was a treaty signed during 1922 among the major Allies of World War I which agreed to prevent an arms race by limiting naval construction It was negotiated at the Washington Naval Conference held in Washington D C from November 1921 to February 1922 and it was signed by the governments of the United Kingdom United States France Italy and Japan It limited the construction of battleships battlecruisers and aircraft carriers by the signatories The numbers of other categories of warships including cruisers destroyers and submarines were not limited by the treaty but those ships were limited to 10 000 tons displacement each Washington Naval TreatyLimitation of Naval ArmamentSigning of the Washington Naval Treaty TypeArms controlContextWorld War ISignedFebruary 6 1922 1922 02 06 LocationMemorial Continental Hall Washington D C EffectiveAugust 17 1923 1923 08 17 ExpirationDecember 31 1936 1936 12 31 NegotiatorsCharles Evans Hughes Arthur Balfour Albert Sarraut Carlo Schanzer Katō TomosaburōSignatoriesWarren G Harding George V Alexandre Millerand Victor Emmanuel III YoshihitoParties United States British Empire French Third Republic Kingdom of Italy Empire of JapanLanguageEnglishFull textWashington Naval Treaty 1922 at WikisourceThe treaty was concluded on February 6 1922 Ratifications of that treaty were exchanged in Washington on August 17 1923 and it was registered in the League of Nations Treaty Series on April 16 1924 1 Later naval arms limitation conferences sought additional limitations of warship building The terms of the Washington Naval Treaty were modified by the London Naval Treaty of 1930 and the Second London Naval Treaty of 1936 By the mid 1930s Japan and Italy renounced the treaties while Germany renounced the Treaty of Versailles which had limited its navy Naval arms limitation became increasingly difficult for the other signatories Contents 1 Background 2 Negotiations 2 1 Capital ships 2 2 Cruisers and destroyers 2 3 Submarines 2 4 Pacific bases 3 Terms 4 Effects 5 Violations 6 Japanese denunciation 7 Influences of cryptography 8 See also 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksBackground EditImmediately after World War I Britain still had the world s largest and most powerful navy followed by the United States and more distantly by Japan France and Italy The British Royal Navy had interned the defeated German High Seas Fleet The Allies had differing opinions concerning the final disposition of the Imperial German Navy with the French and Italians wanting the German fleet divided between the victorious powers and the Americans and British wanting the ships destroyed The negotiations became mostly moot after the German crews had scuttled most of their ships News of the scuttling angered the French and the Italians with the French particularly unimpressed with British explanations that the fleet guarding the Germans had then been away on exercises Nevertheless the British joined their allies in condemning the German actions and no credible evidence emerged to suggest that the British had collaborated actively with the Germans with respect to the scuttling The Treaty of Versailles signed soon after the scuttling of the German High Seas Fleet imposed strict limits on the size and the number of warships that the newly installed German government was allowed to build and maintain citation needed The Americans the British the French the Italians and the Japanese had been allies during World War I but with the German threat seemingly finished a naval arms race between the erstwhile allies seemed likely for the next few years 2 US President Woodrow Wilson s administration had already announced successive plans for the expansion of the US Navy from 1916 to 1919 that would have resulted in a massive fleet of 50 modern battleships 3 In response the Japanese Diet finally authorised construction of warships to enable the Japanese Navy to attain its goal of an eight eight fleet programme with eight modern battleships and eight battlecruisers The Japanese started work on four battleships and four battlecruisers all of which were much larger and more powerful than those of the classes that they were replacing 4 The 1921 British Naval Estimates planned four battleships and four battlecruisers with another four battleships to follow the subsequent year 2 The new arms race was unwelcome to the American public The US Congress disapproved of Wilson s 1919 naval expansion plan and the 1920 presidential election campaign caused politics to resume the non interventionalism of the prewar era with little enthusiasm for continued naval expansion 5 Britain also could ill afford any resumption of battleship construction given the exorbitant cost 6 In late 1921 the US became aware that Britain was planning a conference to discuss the strategic situation in the Pacific and Far East regions To forestall the conference and to satisfy domestic demands for a global disarmament conference Warren Harding s administration called the Washington Naval Conference in November 1921 7 The Conference agreed to the Five Power Naval Treaty as well as a Four Power Treaty on Japan and a Nine Power Treaty on China 8 Negotiations EditAt the first plenary session held November 21 1921 US Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes presented his country s proposals Hughes provided a dramatic beginning for the conference by stating with resolve The way to disarm is to disarm 9 The ambitious slogan received enthusiastic public endorsement and likely abbreviated the conference while helping ensure his proposals were largely adopted He subsequently proposed the following A ten year pause or holiday of the construction of capital ships battleships and battlecruisers including the immediate suspension of all building of capital ships The scrapping of existing or planned capital ships to give a 5 5 3 1 67 1 67 ratio of tonnage with respect to Britain the United States Japan France and Italy respectively Ongoing limits of both capital ship tonnage and the tonnage of secondary vessels with the 5 5 3 ratio Capital ships Edit The proposals for capital ships were largely accepted by the British delegation However they were controversial with the British public Britain could no longer have adequate fleets in the North Sea the Mediterranean and the Far East simultaneously which provoked outrage from parts of the Royal Navy citation needed Nevertheless there was huge demand for the British to agree to the limits and reductions the risk of war with the Americans was increasingly regarded as merely theoretical as there were very few policy differences between the two Anglophone powers continued naval spending was unpopular in Britain throughout the empire and Britain was implementing major budget reductions due to the post World War I recession 10 The Japanese delegation was divided Japanese naval doctrine required the maintenance of a fleet 70 the size of that of the United States which was felt to be the minimum necessary to defeat the Americans in any subsequent war The Japanese envisaged two separate engagements first with the U S Pacific Fleet and then with the U S Atlantic Fleet It calculated that a 7 5 ratio in the first battle would produce enough of a margin of victory to be able to win the subsequent engagement and so a 3 5 ratio was unacceptable because a 3 5 total fleet size ratio would imply a 6 5 ratio in the first battle Nevertheless the director of the delegation Katō Tomosaburō preferred to accept the latter to the prospect of an arms race with the United States as the relative industrial strength of the two nations would cause Japan to lose such an arms race and possibly suffer an economic crisis At the beginning of the negotiations the Japanese had only 55 of the capital ships and 18 of the GDP of the Americans citation needed Akagi Japanese ship originally planned as a battlecruiser but converted during construction to an aircraft carrier in April 1925 His opinion was opposed strongly by Katō Kanji the president of the Naval Staff College who acted as his chief naval aide at the delegation and represented the influential big navy opinion that Japan had to prepare as thoroughly as possible for an inevitable conflict against the United States which could build indefinitely more warships because of its huge industrial power citation needed Katō Tomosaburō was finally able to persuade the Japanese high command to accept the Hughes proposals but the treaty was for years a source of controversy in the navy 11 The French delegation initially responded negatively to the idea of reducing their capital ships tonnage to 175 000 tons and demanded 350 000 slightly above the Japanese limit In the end concessions regarding cruisers and submarines helped persuade the French to agree to the limit on capital ships 12 Another issue that was considered critical by the French representatives was the Italian request of substantial parity which was considered to be unsubstantiated however pressure from the American and the British delegations caused the French to accept it That was considered a great success by the Italian government but parity would never actually be attained 13 There was much discussion about the inclusion or exclusion of individual warships In particular the Japanese delegation was keen to retain their newest battleship Mutsu which had been funded with great public enthusiasm including donations from schoolchildren 14 That resulted in provisions to allow the Americans and the British to construct equivalent ships citation needed Cruisers and destroyers Edit HMS Hawkins lead ship for her class of heavy cruisers alongside a quay probably during the interwar period Hughes proposed to limit secondary ships cruisers and destroyers in the same proportions as capital ships However that was unacceptable to both the British and the French The British counterproposal in which the British would be entitled to 450 000 tons of cruisers in consideration of its imperial commitments but the United States and Japan to only 300 000 and 250 000 respectively proved equally contentious Thus the idea of limiting total cruiser tonnage or numbers was rejected entirely 12 Instead the British suggested a qualitative limit of future cruiser construction The limit proposed of a 10 000 ton maximum displacement and 8 inch calibre guns was intended to allow the British to retain the Hawkins class then being constructed That coincided with the American requirements for cruisers for Pacific Ocean operations and also with Japanese plans for the Furutaka class The suggestion was adopted with little debate 12 Submarines Edit A major British demand during the negotiations was the complete abolition of the submarine which had proved so effective against them in the war That proved impossible particularly as a result of French opposition which demanded an allowance of 90 000 tons of submarines 15 and the conference ended without an agreement to restrict submarines 16 Pacific bases Edit Article XIX of the treaty also prohibited the British the Japanese and the Americans from constructing any new fortifications or naval bases in the Pacific Ocean region Existing fortifications in Singapore the Philippines and Hawaii could remain That was a significant victory for Japan as newly fortified British or American bases would be a serious problem for the Japanese in the event of any future war That provision of the treaty essentially guaranteed that Japan would be the dominant power in the Western Pacific Ocean and was crucial in gaining Japanese acceptance of the limits on capital ship construction 17 Terms EditTonnage limitationsCountry Capital ships Aircraft carriersBritish Empire 525 000 tons 533 000 tonnes 135 000 tons 137 000 tonnes United States 525 000 tons 533 000 tonnes 135 000 tons 137 000 tonnes Empire of Japan 315 000 tons 320 000 tonnes 81 000 tons 82 000 tonnes France 175 000 tons 178 000 tonnes 60 000 tons 61 000 tonnes Italy 175 000 tons 178 000 tonnes 60 000 tons 61 000 tonnes The treaty strictly limited both the tonnage and construction of capital ships and aircraft carriers and included limits of the size of individual ships The tonnage limits defined by Articles IV and VII tabulated gave a strength ratio of approximately 5 5 3 1 75 1 75 for the UK the United States Japan Italy and France respectively 18 The qualitative limits of each type of ship were as follows Capital ships battleships and battlecruisers were limited to 35 000 tons standard displacement and guns of no larger than 16 inch calibre Articles V and VI Aircraft carriers were limited to 27 000 tons and could carry no more than 10 heavy guns of a maximum calibre of 8 inches However each signatory was allowed to use two existing capital ship hulls for aircraft carriers with a displacement limit of 33 000 tons each Articles IX and X For the purposes of the treaty an aircraft carrier was defined as a warship displacing more than 10 000 tons constructed exclusively for launching and landing aircraft Carriers lighter than 10 000 tons therefore did not count towards the tonnage limits Article XX part 4 Moreover all aircraft carriers then in service or building Argus Eagle Furious Hermes Langley and Hōshō were declared experimental and not counted Article VIII All other warships were limited to a maximum displacement of 10 000 tons and a maximum gun calibre of 8 inches Articles XI and XII The treaty also detailed by Chapter II the individual ships to be retained by each navy including the allowance for the United States to complete two further ships of the Colorado class and for the UK to complete two new ships in accordance with the treaty limits Chapter II part 2 detailed what was to be done to render a ship ineffective for military use In addition to sinking or scrapping a limited number of ships could be converted as target ships or training vessels if their armament armour and other combat essential parts were removed completely Some could also be converted into aircraft carriers Part 3 Section II specified the ships to be scrapped to comply with the treaty and when the remaining ships could be replaced In all the United States had to scrap 30 existing or planned capital ships Britain 23 and Japan 17 Effects Edit The treaty arrested the continuing upward trend of battleship size and halted new construction entirely for more than a decade The treaty marked the end of a long period of increases of battleship construction Many ships that were being constructed were scrapped or converted into aircraft carriers Treaty limits were respected and then extended by the London Naval Treaty of 1930 It was not until the mid 1930s that navies began to build battleships once again and the power and the size of new battleships began to increase once again The Second London Naval Treaty of 1936 sought to extend the Washington Treaty limits until 1942 but the absence of Japan or Italy made it largely ineffective There were fewer effects on cruiser building The treaty specified 10 000 tons and 8 inch guns as the maximum size of a cruiser but that was also the minimum size cruiser that any navy was willing to build The treaty began a building competition of 8 inch 10 000 ton treaty cruisers which gave further cause for concern 19 Subsequent naval treaties sought to address that by limiting cruiser destroyer and submarine tonnage Unofficial effects of the treaty included the end of the Anglo Japanese Alliance Although it was not part of the Washington Treaty in any way the American delegates had made it clear that they would not agree to the treaty unless the British ended their alliance with the Japanese 20 The 1921 Imperial Conference earlier in the year had already decided not to renew the Alliance 21 Violations EditIn 1935 the French Navy laid down the battleship Richelieu combined with the two Dunkerque class battleships also under construction which placed the total tonnage over the 70 000 ton limit on new French battleships until the expiration of the treaty The keel laying of Jean Bart in December 1936 albeit less than three weeks before the treaty expired increased the magnitude of France s violation by another 35 000 tons The French government dismissed British objections to the violations by pointing out that Britain had signed the Anglo German Naval Agreement in 1935 which unilaterally dismantled the naval disarmament clauses of the Treaty of Versailles German naval rearmament threatened France and according to the French perspective if Britain freely violated treaty obligations France would similarly not be constrained 22 Italy repeatedly violated the displacement limits on individual ships and attempted to remain within the 10 000 ton limit for the Trento class cruisers built in the mid 1920s However by the Zara class cruisers in the late 1920s and early 1930s it had abandoned all pretense and built ships that topped 11 000 long tons 11 000 t by a wide margin The violations continued with the Littorio class battleships of the mid 1930s which had a standard displacement in excess of 40 000 long tons 41 000 t The Italian Navy nevertheless misrepresented the displacement of the vessels as being within the limits imposed by the treaty 23 Japanese denunciation Edit Japanese denunciation of the Washington Naval Treaty 29 December 1934 The naval treaty had a profound effect on the Japanese With superior American and British industrial power a long war would very likely end in a Japanese defeat Thus gaining strategic parity was not economically possible 24 Many Japanese considered the 5 5 3 ratio of ships as another snub by the West but it can be argued that the Japanese had a greater force concentration than the US Navy or the Royal Navy The terms also contributed to controversy in high ranks of the Imperial Japanese Navy between the Treaty Faction officers and their Fleet Faction opponents who were also allied with the ultranationalists of the Japanese army and other parts of the Japanese government For the Treaty Faction the treaty was one of the factors that had contributed to the deterioration of the relationship between the American and the Japanese governments Some have also argued that the treaty was one major factor in prompting Japanese expansionism by the Fleet Faction in the early 1930s The perception of unfairness resulted in Japan s renunciation of the Second London Naval Treaty in 1936 Yamato during sea trials October 1941 It displaced 72 800 tonnes at full load Isoroku Yamamoto who later masterminded the attack of Pearl Harbor argued that Japan should remain in the treaty His opinion was more complex however in that he believed the United States could outproduce Japan by a greater factor than the 5 3 ratio because of the huge American production advantage of which he had expert knowledge since he had served with the Japanese embassy in Washington After the signing of the treaty he commented Anyone who has seen the auto factories in Detroit and the oil fields in Texas knows that Japan lacks the power for a naval race with America He later added The ratio works very well for Japan it is a treaty to restrict the other parties 25 He believed that other methods than a spree of construction would be needed to even the odds which may have contributed to his advocacy of the plan to attack Pearl Harbor On December 29 1934 the Japanese government gave formal notice that it intended to terminate the treaty Its provisions remained in force formally until the end of 1936 and were not renewed 26 Influences of cryptography EditWhat was unknown to the participants of the Conference was that the American Black Chamber the Cypher Bureau a US intelligence service commanded by Herbert Yardley was spying on the delegations communications with their home capitals In particular Japanese communications were deciphered thoroughly and American negotiators were able to get the absolute minimum possible deal that the Japanese had indicated they would ever accept 27 As the treaty was unpopular with much of the Imperial Japanese Navy and with the increasingly active and important ultranationalist groups the value that the Japanese government accepted was the cause of much suspicion and accusation among Japanese politicians and naval officers citation needed See also EditArms controlReferences Edit League of Nations Treaty Series vol 25 pp 202 227 a b Marriott 2005 p 9 Potter 1981 p 232 Evans amp Peattie 1997 p 174 Potter 1981 p 233 Kennedy 1983 p 274 Marriott 2005 p 10 Washington Conference 1921 1922 Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 6 April 2019 Jones 2001 p 119 Kennedy 1983 pp 275 276 Evans amp Peattie 1997 pp 193 196 a b c Marriott 2005 p 11 Giorgerini Giorgio 2002 Uomini sul fondo storia del sommergibilismo italiano dalle origini a oggi Milano Mondadori pp 84 85 ISBN 978 8804505372 Evans amp Peattie 1997 p 197 Marriott 2005 pp 10 11 Birn Donald S 1970 Open Diplomacy at the Washington Conference of 1921 2 The British and French Experience Comparative Studies in Society and History 12 3 297 319 doi 10 1017 S0010417500005879 S2CID 143583522 Evans amp Peattie 1997 p 199 Limitation of Naval Armament Five Power Treaty or Washington Treaty PDF Library of Congress 1922 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Marriott 2005 p 3 Howarth 1983 p 167 Nish Ian H 1972 Alliance in Decline A Study in Anglo Japanese Relations 1908 23 London The Athlone Press p 334 Jordan amp Dumas 2009 pp 98 99 152 Gardiner amp Chesneau 1980 pp 290 292 Paine 2017 p 104 105 Howarth 1983 p 152 Evans amp Peattie 1997 p 298 Duroselle 1963 p 156 Sources EditBaker A D III 1989 Battlefleets and Diplomacy Naval Disarmament Between the Two World Wars Warship International XXVI 3 217 255 ISSN 0043 0374 Duroselle Jean Baptiste 1963 From Wilson to Roosevelt Foreign Policy of the United States 1913 1945 Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 67432 650 7 Evans David amp Peattie Mark 1997 Kaigun Strategy Tactics and Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy 1887 1941 Annapolis Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 0 87021 192 8 Gardiner Robert amp Chesneau Roger eds 1980 Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1922 1946 Annapolis Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 913 8 Howarth Stephen 1983 The Fighting Ships of the Rising Sun Atheneum ISBN 978 0 689 11402 1 Jones Howard 2001 Crucible of power a history of US foreign relations since 1897 Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 8420 2918 6 Jordan John 2011 Warships after Washington The Development of Five Major Fleets 1922 1930 Seaforth Publishing ISBN 978 1 84832 117 5 Jordan John amp Dumas Robert 2009 French Battleships 1922 1956 Barnsley Seaforth Punblishing ISBN 978 1 84832 034 5 Kaufman Robert Gordon 1990 Arms Control During the Pre Nuclear Era The United States and Naval Limitation Between the Two World Wars New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 07136 9 Kennedy Paul 1983 The Rise and Fall of British Naval Mastery London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 35094 2 Marriott Leo 2005 Treaty Cruisers The First International Warship Building Competition Barnsley Pen amp Sword ISBN 978 1 84415 188 2 Paine S C M 2017 The Japanese Empire Grand Strategy from the Meiji Restoration to the Pacific War Cambridge amp New York Cambridge ISBN 978 1 107 01195 3 Potter E ed 1981 Sea Power A Naval History 2nd ed Annapolis Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 0 87021 607 7 Limitation of Naval Armament treaty 1922External links Edit Wikisource has original text related to this article Washington Naval Treaty 1922 Conference on the Limitation of Armament full text iBiblio 1922 the Washington Naval Treaty The New Navies Popular Mechanics article 738 48 May 1929 on warships provided for under the treaty EDSITEment lesson Postwar Disillusionment and the Quest for Peace 1921 1929 In depth video discussion of the Washington Naval Treaty Retrieved from https en 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