
Tanggu Truce negotiations
The
Tanggu Truce, sometimes called the Tangku
Truce ( ), Japanese , was
a cease-fire signed between China
and Empire of Japan
in Tanggu District
, Tianjin
on May 31, 1933, formally ending the
Japanese invasion of
Manchuria which had begun two years earlier.
Background
After the
Mukden Incident of
September 18,
1931,
the Japanese
Kwantung Army invaded Manchuria, and by
February 1932 had captured the entire region.
The last emperor of
the Qing
Dynasty
, Puyi, who was living in exile
in the Foreign Concessions in
Tianjin was convinced by the Japanese to accept the throne of
the new Empire of Manchukuo, which
remained under the control of the Imperial Japanese Army.
In January
1933, to secure Manchukuo’s southern borders, a joint Japanese and
Manchukuo force invaded Rehe, and
after conquering that province by March, drove the remaining
Chinese armies in the northeast beyond the Great Wall into
Hebei
Province.
The Western powers condemned Japan's actions but did little else.
When the
League of Nations
demanded that Japan stop hostilities, the Japan withdrew from the
League in February 1933.
As the Japanese army was under explicit instructions from Emperor
Hirohito (who wanted a quick end to the
China conflict) not to go beyond the Great Wall , the Japanese
halted their offensive in May 1933.
Negotiations
On
May 22 1933, Chinese
and Japanese representatives met to negotiate the end of the
conflict. The Japanese demands were severe: a
demilitarized zone extending one hundred
kilometers south of the Great Wall, extending from
Beijing to Tianjin was to be created, with the Great
Wall itself under Japanese control. No regular
Kuomintang military units were to be allowed in
the demilitarized zone, although the Japanese were allowed to use
reconnaissance aircraft or
ground patrols to ensure that the agreement was maintained. Public
order within the zone was to be maintained by a lightly-armed
Demilitarized Zone
Peace Preservation Corps.
Two secret clauses excluded any of the
Anti-Japanese Volunteer
Armies from this Peace Preservation Corps and provided for any
disputes that could not be resolved by the Peace Preservation Corps
to be settled by agreement between the Japanese and Chinese
governments.Having lost every major engagement and substantial
territory, and with the Chinese government under
Chiang Kai-shek more concerned with fighting
the
Chinese Communist Party
than the Japanese, the Chinese government agreed to all demands.
Furthermore, the new demilitarized zone was mostly within the
remaining territory of the discredited Manchurian
warlord Zhang
Xueliang.
Consequences
The Tanggu Truce resulted in the de facto recognition of the
existence of Manchukuo by the Kuomingtang government, and
acknowledgement of the loss of Rehe. It provided for a temporary
end to the combat between China and Japan and for a brief period,
relations between the two countries actually improved. On
May 17,
1935, the Japanese
legation in China was raised to the status of
embassy, and on
June 10,
1935, the
He-Umezu Agreement was concluded. The
Tanggu Truce gave Chiang kai Shek time to consolidate his forces
and to concentrate his efforts against the Chinese Communist Party,
albeit at the expense of
northern
China. However, Chinese public opinion was hostile to terms so
favorable to Japan and so humiliating to China. Although the Truce
provided for a demilitarized buffer zone, Japanese territorial
ambitions towards China remained, and the Truce proved to be only a
temporary respite until hostilities re-erupted with the start of
the
Second Sino-Japanese
War in 1937.
Sources
External links
Notes