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The London Naval conference The London Naval Treaty The Geneva Conference

The London Naval conference The London Naval Treaty The Geneva Conference. Vincent and Bri -I-G w Vincent & Bridget. The London Naval Conference. 1930 The five major naval powers gathered to revise the terms of the agreement made in Washington (1922).

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The London Naval conference The London Naval Treaty The Geneva Conference

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  1. The London Naval conferenceThe London Naval TreatyThe Geneva Conference • Vincent and Bri-I-G w Vincent & Bridget

  2. The London Naval Conference • 1930 • The five major naval powers gathered to revise the terms of the agreement made in Washington (1922). • They wanted to extend the agreement • Avoid an arms-race • The Great Depression • Ratio of capital ships from 5:5:3 to 10:10:7 (UK, USA, Japan) • Submarines could not sink ships until the crew was brought to safety • France and Italy agreed to not build capital ships for the following 5 years • Agreements of the size and amount of submarines, cruisers and destroyers were made • The treaty was to stay in effect until 1936

  3. The London Naval Treaty • 1935 - 1936 • The 5 major naval powers met again to renegotiate and extend the terms of the London naval conference of 1930 • Japan and Italy walked out • UK, France and USA agreed on cruiser tonnage • Japanese and Germans introduced rearmament programs • The world was instable due to numerous crises and conflicts  Agreements limiting the amount and size of the warships failed  Conference was a complete failure

  4. Geneva Disarmament Conference • 1932 - 1934 • Disarmament was part of Wilson’s 14 points • There was public support for disarmament • to create a more peaceful world • after the reasonably peaceful 1920’s, the people didn’t believe another war was very likely • the cost of arms would have been great to the nations who were still recovering from the first world war • by reducing the chance of another arms race, they hoped to reduce the chances of another war occurring • the league of nations

  5. Why the Geneva Conference was unsuccessful. • Increasing unpopularity of the terms of the treaty • The Depression • Nations still feared their security • Problems distinguishing between offensive and defensive weapons • There was no one that could make sure all nations followed the terms set at the conference • Other treaties (Rapallo etc.) • Germany tried to expose the hypocrisy of the Allies, they withdrew in 1932 but joined the conference again in 1933 (Hitler) • Mussolini wasn’t in favor of disarmament (attempt to make an all European pact)

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