[The Peace Negotiations by Robert Lansing]@TWC D-Link book
The Peace Negotiations

CHAPTER XVIII
13/26

Later in the morning the President telephoned me and I informed him of the fixed determination of the Japanese to insist upon their claims.

What occurred between the time of my conversation with the President and the plenary session of the Conference on the Preliminaries of Peace in the afternoon, at which the Covenant of the League of Nations was adopted, I do not actually know, but the presumption is that the Japanese were promised a satisfactory settlement in regard to Shantung, since they announced that they would not press an amendment on "racial equality" at the session, an amendment upon which they had indicated they intended to insist.
After the meeting of the Conference I made the following memorandum of the situation: "At the Plenary Session of the Peace Conference this afternoon Baron Makino spoke of his proposed amendment to the Covenant declaring 'racial equality,' but said he would not press it.
"I concluded from what the President said to me that he was disposed to accede to Japan's claims in regard to Kiao-Chau and Shantung.

He also showed me a letter from -- -- to Makino saying he was sorry their claims had not been finally settled before the Session.
"From all this I am forced to the conclusion that a bargain has been struck by which the Japanese agree to sign the Covenant in exchange for admission of their claims.

If so, it is an iniquitous agreement.
"Apparently the President is going to do this to avoid Japan's declining to enter the League of Nations.

It is a surrender of the principle of self-determination, a transfer of millions of Chinese from one foreign master to another.


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