Documents of the Interwar Period
"Instances
of Use of United States Forces Abroad, 1798 - 1993," by Ellen C. Collier, Specialist
in U.S. Foreign Policy,
Foreign Affairs and National Defense Division, Washington DC: Congressional Research
Service -- Library of Congress -- October 7, 1993
1918
American
Intervention In The Russian Civil War, 1918-1920
Eugene Debs
lashes out against World War I and calls on the crowd to join the Socialist
party, Canton, Ohio, June 16, 1918
Red Scare, An Image
Database
1919
Documents
on British Foreign Policy, 1919-1939,
edited by E.L. Woodward and Rohan Butler, Third Series, vol. VII, 1939
Woodrow Wilson's Speech,
"Appeal for Support of the League of Nations," 1919
Senate Debate on the
League of Nations, 1919
Covenant
of the League of Nations
H.G. Wells, "The
Idea of a League of Nations," Part 1, Atlantic Monthly, January
1919
P.H.
Kerr, Memorandum on the League of Nations, 29 January 1919
An
extract from proceedings of the Commission on the League of Nations, 13 February
1919 (PRO)
H.G. Wells, "The
Idea of a League of Nations," Part 2, Atlantic Monthly, February
1919
The Palmer Raids
21 March 1919,
Haig's Last Despatch, British Armies in France
Lloyd
George, extract from Fontainebleau memorandum, 25 March, 1919
"What the Filipinos
Ask," By Maximo M. Kalaw, Secretary of the Philippine Mission, New York
Times (May 18, 1919).
Senator Henry
Cabot Lodge, Sr. (R-MA) speaks out against the League of Nations, Washington,
D.C., August 12, 1919
The King-Crane
Commission Report, August 28, 1919
Woodrow Wilson
Defends the League of Nations, Pueblo, Co, September 26, 1919
Reservations
drawn up by Republican Senators to the Treaty of Peace with Germany, November
1919.
THE
LEAGUE OF NATIONS Memordandum by Cecil Hurst, Legal Adviser to the British Foreign
Office, on the American Reservations to the Peace Treaty, 18 November 1919.
(DBFP Series 1, vol V, no. 399.)
Treaty of Peace Between
the Allied and Associated Powers and Bulgaria, and Protocol and Declaration signed at
Neuilly-sur-Seine, 27 November 1919
John
Maynard Keynes, The Economic Consequences of the Peace, 1919
Review of
John Maynard Keynes, The Economic Consequences of the Peace by Thorstein Veblen, Political
Science Quarterly, 35, pp. 467-472
Paul Valéry: On European
Civilization and the European Mind, c. 1919, 1922
1920
The League of Nations
Protocol for the Pacific Settlement of Disputes (1920)
A Mitchell Palmer,
"The Case Against the 'Reds,'" Forum (1920), 63:173- 185
Full
Report of the Committee upon the Arbitration of the Boundary between Turkey
and Armenia, Composition of the Reporting Committee: Mr. W. L. Westermann, Chief
of the Division of Western Asia, American Commission to Negotiate Peace, Major
Lawrence Martin, General Staff Corps, U. S. Army;
Geographer to the Harbord Mission, and Mr. H. G. Dwight, Division of Near Eastern
Affairs, Department of State, February 1920
Conditions
in the Near East: Report of the American Military Mission to Armenia by Maj.
General James G. Harbord, (Senate Document No. 266, 66th Congress, 2d Session.)
Washington. Government Printing Office, 1920.
Warren G. Harding
calls for a "Return to Normalcy," Boston, MA, May 14, 1920
Raymond B. Fosdick,
"The League of Nations is Alive," Atlantic Monthly, June
1920
Treaty of Peace Between
The Allied and Associated Powers and Hungary And Protocol and Declaration, Signed
at Trianon June 4, 1920
"The
Conquest of Haiti," By Herbert J. Seligmann, The Nation 111 (July
10, 1920).
"The
Conquest of Santo Domingo," By Lewis S. Gannett, The Nation 111
(July 17, 1920).
The Peace Treaty
of Sèvres, 10 August, 1920
US
Secretary of State Colby's Letter to Italian Ambassador Avezzana (August 10,
1920)
"Self-Determining
Haiti I. The American Occupation," By James Weldon Johnson, The Nation
111 (Aug. 28, 1920).
"Self-Determining
Haiti II. What the United States Has Accomplished," By James Weldon Johnson,
The Nation 111 (Sept. 4, 1920).
"Self-Determining
Haiti III. Government Of, By, and For the National City Bank," By James
Weldon Johnson, The Nation 111 (Sept. 11, 1920).
"Self-Determining
Haiti IV. The Haitian People," By James Weldon Johnson, The Nation
111 (Sept. 25, 1920).
The 25 Points: An Early Nazi
Program, 1920
Raymond B. Fosdick,
"The League of Nations as an Instrument of Liberalism," Atlantic
Monthly, October 1920
The League of Nations
Protocol for the Pacific Settlement of International Disputes, 2 October, 1920
19 October, 1920,
The Post-War Soviet / U.S. Agreement on Food Shipments to Russia
"Haiti
and Intervention," By Felix Frankfurter, The New Republic 25 (Dec.
15, 1920).
The Black
Man's Burden: The White Man in Africa from the Fifteenth Century to World War
I, E.
D. Morel Manchester: National Labour Press, 1920, BoondocksNet Edition, 2001
ITALY
AND THE WORLD WAR BY
THOMAS NELSON PAGE, AMERICAN AMBASSADOR TO ITALY FROM 1913 TO 1919, NEW YORK,
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS, 1920
IRELAND:
AN ENEMY OF THE ALLIES?
TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH OF R. C. ESCOUFLAIRE, NEW YORK, E. P. DUTTON &
COMPANY, 681 FIFTH AVENUE, COPYRIGHT, 1920,
1921
Franco-Polish Agreement,
Paris, February 19, 1921
Warren G.
Harding, Inaugural Address, Friday, March 4, 1921
Trade Agreement
Between His Brittanic Majesty's Government and the Government of the Russian
Socialist Federal Soviet Republic, 16 March 1921
"Our
Imperialist Propaganda: The National Geographic's Anti-Haitian Campaign,"
The Nation 112 (April 6, 1921).
COMMISSION DES
RÉPARATIONS DES OBLIGATIONS DE L'ALLEMAGNE, ÉTAT DES LIVRAISONS
ET PAYEMENTS SUR COMPTE ANTÉRIEUR AU 1er MAI 1921 entre le 11 Novembre,
1 1918 et le 30 Avril 1922
French
desire for Security: speech by a French delegate to the 1921 League Assembly,
M. Noblemaire.
"The
Beginnings of World Dominion," by Scott Nearing, Chapter 6 of The American
Empire (New York: Rand School of Social Science, 1921).
"Pan-Americanism,"
By Scott Nearing, Chapter 15 of The American Empire (New York: Rand School
of Social Science, 1921).
Internet Public Library, Warren
G. Harding
TREATY OF
PEACE WITH AUSTRIA, A TREATY BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND AUSTRIA, SIGNED ON
AUGUST 24, 1921, TO ESTABLISH SECURELY FRIENDLY RELATIONS BETWEEN THE TWO NATIONS
"Hearing
the Truth About Haiti," By Helena Hill Weed, The Nation 113 (Nov.
9, 1921).
"Why Should
You Worry About Haiti?" Haiti-Santo Domingo Independence Society, The
Nation 113 (Nov. 9, 1921).
Treaty
between the United States of America, the British Empire, France, and Japan,
Signed at Washington December 13, 1921
ANDRÉ
TARDIEU, The Truth about the Treaty, Foreword by EDWARD M. HOUSE, Introduction
by GEORGES CLEMENCEAU, INDIANAPOLIS: THE BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY, PUBLISHERS,
1921
ALBERT RHYS
WILLIAMS, Through the Russian Revolution, BONI AND LIVERIGHT, Publishers
New York, 1921
1922
CONFERENCE ESTABLISHING A
COMMISSION OF JURISTS TO CONSIDER LAWS OF WAR, Washington, February 4, 1922
Treaty
Between the US, Belgium, the British Empire, China, France, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands,
and Portugal. Signed at Washington, 6 February 1922
The
Treaty Relating to the Use of Submarines and Noxious Gases in Warfare, Treaty
between the United States of America, the British Empire, France, Italy, and
Japan, Signed at Washington, February 6, 1922
A TREATY IN RELATION
TO THE USE OF SUBMARINES AND NOXIOUS GASES IN WARFARE, Washington, D.C., February
6, 1922
CONFERENCE
ON THE LIMITATION OF ARMAMENT, WASHINGTON, NOVEMBER 12 1921-FEBRUARY 6, 1922.
Treaty Between the United States of America, the British Empire, France, Italy,
and Japan, Signed at Washington, February 6, 1922.
CONFERENCE ON THE LIMITATION
OF ARMAMENT, WASHINGTON, NOVEMBER 12 1921-FEBRUARY 6, 1922.
"Haiti
and Santo Domingo Today -- I," By Ernest H. Gruening, The Nation
114 (Feb. 8, 1922).
"Haiti
and Santo Domingo Today -- II," By Ernest H. Gruening, The Nation
114 (Feb. 15, 1922).
Texts
of Resolutions Adopted at the Washington Conference, February 1922
"The
Great Ditch in Haiti," By Katharine Sergeant Angell, The New Republic
30 (March 22, 1922).
"Haiti
under American Occupation," By Ernest H. Gruening, The Century 103
(April 1922).
German-Russian
agreement, signed at Rapallo, April 16, 1922.
The San Remo Conference,
1922
The Hague Rules of Air
Warfare, The Hague, December, 1922-February, 1923, [These rules were never adopted by
the powers concerned.]
THE WASTE LAND
By T. S. ELIOT, 1922
Oswald Spengler:
The Decline of The West, 1922
Peace and
Bread in Time of War
By Jane Addams (New York: Macmillan, 1922) (BoondocksNet Edition, 2000)
"Memorial to
the President and Congress of the United States," By the Philippine Parliamentary
Mission to the United States, December 1922.
1923
The Treaty of Lausanne
(1923)
L.P. Jacks, "A
League of Nations as a League of Governments?" Atlantic Monthly, February
1923
The
Convention Relating to the Regime of the Straits, 24 July 1923
Memorandum
on Treaties of Mutual Guarantee and the Reduction of Armaments by Leopold Amery,
1st Lord of the Admiralty, July 1923 (PRO reference number F0371 420 .
Italy's
attitude to the League after 1922: despatch from the British Ambassador at Rome,
to the Foreign Office, 19 October 1923 (PRO reference number F0371/8900).
Sun Yat-sen,
"Fundamentals of National Reconstruction" (1923 CE)
1924
"History of
the Independence Movement in the Philippines," By Vicente G. Bunuan, Acting
Director, Philippine Press Bureau, Congressional Digest 3 (April 1924):
228-229
"Memorial of the
Philippine Independence Mission," Submitted to the Committee on Platform
and Resolutions of the National Democratic Convention, June 24, 1924, New York
City, New York
The
British conception the League: extract from a Round Table article, 'Europe,
the Covenant and the Protocol' 1924
Marcus Garvey
calls for the establishment of a separate black nation, New York, NY, August
1, 1924.
The Covenant of the
League of Nations, including Amendments adopted December 1924)
Christopher
Terrence Ryan, "Two Intellectual Responses to the Dilemma of Political
"Engagement" in Interwar France: André Breton & Pierre Drieu La
Rochelle," Essays in History
1925
Calvin Coolidge,
Inaugural Address, Wednesday, March 4, 1925
Adolf
Hitler, "The Discovery of Antisemitism in Vienna," 1925
Attitude
of Dominions to Geneva Protocol (PRO reference number F0371 11066) [Governor-General
of Canada to British Secretary of State for Colonies, 4 March, 1925].
Sir
Austen Chamberlain's speech to the League Council at Geneva, 12 March 1925,
in which he outlined British Government objections to the Geneva Protocol (PRO
reference number F0371/11070)
Speech
by Chicherin at the Third Soviet Congress, 14 May, 1925 (Stenograficheskii Ofchet,
p. 83).
PROTOCOL FOR
THE PROHIBITION OF POISONOUS GASES AND BACTERIOLOGICAL METHODS OF WARFARE, Geneva,
June 17, 1925
Letter
from Stresemann to the former German Crown Prince, 7 September 1925, (Diaries,
Papers and Letters, edited by Eric Sutton, Vol. II, pp. 503-5).
Treaty of Locarno
Between France and Poland, October 16, 1925
American Imperialism:
The Menace of the Greatest Capitalist World Power
By Jay Lovestone (Chicago: Workers Party of America, n.d. [1925]).
The All-America Anti-Imperialist
League by Jim Zwick
SOCIAL AND
DIPLOMATIC MEMORIES (Third Series) 1902-1919 BY THE RIGHT HON. SIR JAMES RENNELL
RODD, G.C.B., LONDON, EDWARD ARNOLD & CO., 1925
1926
Robert
Cecil on disarmament, 1926 (PRO reference number F0371/11878)
Slavery Convention
(25 September 1926) and Protocol (7 December 1953)
1927
Calvin Coolidge,
"Intervention in Nicaragua," 1927
Mao Zedong
(1893-1976): Report on an Investigation of the Peasant Movement in Hunan, March
1927
Internet Public Library, Calvin
Coolidge
Imperialism Is
Easy, by John Dewey, The New Republic (March 23, 1927)
J. V. Stalin,
THE REVOLUTION IN CHINA AND THE TASKS OF THE COMINTERN, Speech Delivered
at the Tenth Setting, Eight Plenum of the E.C.C.I., May 24, 1927
ON SPECIAL
MISSIONS, Translated from the French of CHARLES LUCIETO of the Allied Secret
Service, A. L. BURT COMPANY Publishers, New York, First Published, May, 1927
REPORT
OF THE AGENT GENERAL FOR REPARATION PAYMENTS [S. PARKER GILBERT] June 10, 1927,
BERLIN
1928
United
Kingdom, Further Correspondence with Government of the United States Respecting
the United States Proposal for the Renunciation of War, Memorandum from Mr.
Atherton to Sir Austen Chamberlain, 23 June 1928
United
Kingdom, Further Correspondence with Government of the United States Respecting
the United States Proposal for the Renunciation of War, Draft of the Proposed
Treaty, 23 June 1928
United
Kingdom, Further Correspondence with Government of the United States Respecting
the United States Proposal for the Renunciation of War, Sir Austen Chamberlain
to Mr. Atherton, 18 July 1928
THE
MULTILATERAL PACT on the "RENUNCIATION OF WAR" BY EDWIN BORCHARD (An
address delivered at the Williamstown Institute of Politics August 22, 1928)
Kellogg-Briand
Pact, August 27, 1928
Hearings
Before the Committee on Foreign Relations United States Senate Seventieth Congress
on The General Pact for the Renunciation of War signed at Paris, 7 and 11 December
1928
"Colonies
and Imperialist War," Chapter 5 of The Platform of the Class Struggle:
National Platform of the Workers (Communist) Party, 1928 Published for the
National Election Campaign Committee by Workers Library Publishers, 1928.
STATESMEN
OF THE WAR: In Retrospect, 1918-1928 By WILLIAM MARTIN (MINTON, BALCH &
COMPANY, NEW YORK, 1928)
1929
Herbert Hoover,
Inaugural Address, Monday, March 4, 1929
Internet Public Library, Herbert
Hoover
PUBLIC
RELATIONS OF THE COMMISSION FOR RELIEF IN BELGIUM: DOCUMENTS By GEORGE I. GAY,
Commission for Relief in Belgium with the collaboration of H. H. FISHER, Stanford
University IN TWO VOLUMES (STANFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS, STANFORD UNIVERSITY, CALIFORNIA,
1929)
1930
"Grand
Strategy and Foreign Economic Policy: British Grand Strategy in the 1930s,"
Lars S. Skålnes, World Politics 50.4 (1998) 582-616
Gareth
Jones, "The Snobbery of Soviet Russia," The News Chronicle,
London, 3 October 1930
Gareth
Jones, "The Two Russias--Rulers and Ruled," The Times, 13 October
1930
Gareth
Jones, "The Two Russias--Fanaticism and Disillusion," The Times,
14 October 1930
Gareth
Jones, "The Two Russias--Strength of the Communists," The Times,
16 October 1930
Gareth
Jones, ""The Victim of 1930," The Western Mail, Cardiff,
December 31st, 1930
1931
League
of Nations, Particulars concerning the position of the armaments of the different
countries. Communication by the government of the United States of America,
Publication Date: 1931
League
of Nations, Particulars concerning the position of the armaments of the different
countries. Communication by the government of the United States of America.
Annex. Publication Date: 1931
"Americanizing
the Moros," The New Republic, January 21, 1931
Gareth
Jones, "Communists Five-Year Plan: How is it working in Russia:
'No more compromise with Capitalism'," The Western Mail, April 7th,
1931
Gareth
Jones, "Russias Future. Stupendous Plan of Communist; Coal, iron
and steel. A vast scheme for agriculture," The Western Mail, April
8th, 1931
Gareth
Jones, "Forces behind Stalins Dictatorship. Peasants submissiveness
which Britons would not tolerate," The Western Mail, April 9th,
1931
Gareth
Jones, "Russian workers disillusioned: forces against the Five-Year Plan:
Scarcity of food and clothing," The Western Mail, April 10th, 1931
Gareth
Jones, "Mixture of successes and failures: Progress at the expense of happiness,"
The Western Mail, April 11th, 1931
Gareth
Jones, Correspondence from Gareth Jones to his parents in August 1930 on the
Dire Prospects for the Soviet People, 26 August 1931
The Nanjing Massacre and
the Tokyo War Crimes Trial
Basic Facts on the Nanjing Massacre
and the Tokyo War Crimes Trial, New Jersey Hong Kong Network
U.S., Department
of State, Publication 1983, Peace and War: United States Foreign Policy,
1931-1941 (Washington, D.C.: U.S., Government Printing Office, 1943), THE
FATEFUL DECADE
U.S.,
Department of State, Publication 1983, Peace and War: United States Foreign
Policy, 1931-1941 (Washington, D.C.: U.S., Government Printing Office, 1943),
JAPANESE CONQUEST OF MANCHURIA 1931-1932, Attack of September 18, 1931
POLITICAL STRATEGY
PRIOR TO OUTBREAK OF WAR, PART I, PREPARED BY MILITARY HISTORY SECTION HEADQUARTERS,
ARMY FORCES FAR EAST, DISTRIBUTED BY OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF MILITARY HISTORY
DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY, Japanese Monograph No. 144, 31 December 1952
Japanese War Crimes against China,
1931-45
The Alliance for Preserving the Truth about
the Sino-Japanese War
STATUTE
OF WESTMINSTER, 1931
POLITICAL STRATEGY
PRIOR TO OUTBREAK OF WAR, PART I, PREPARED BY MILITARY HISTORY SECTION HEADQUARTERS,
ARMY FORCES FAR EAST, DISTRIBUTED BY OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF MILITARY HISTORY
DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY, Japanese Monograph No. 144, 31 December 1952, "The
Manchurian Incident"
Appeal
of the Chinese Government to the League Council, 21 September 1931 (L of Ns
0J, 1931).
Statement
by the Japanese Government on events in China, 24 September 1931 (L of Ns OJ,
1931).
Mr.
Osborne (Washington) to the Marquess of Reading, 24 September 1931, (DBFP Series
II, vol. VIII, no. 524).
Telegram
from The Minister in China (Johnson) to the US Secretary of State, PEIPING,
September 22, 1931-8 p.m.
Memorandum
Handed by the Secretary of State to the Japanese Ambassador (Debuchi), [WASHINGTON,]
September 22, 1931.
RESOLUTION
ADOPTED BY THE LEAGUE COUNCIL on Manchuria, SEPTEMBER 30, 1931
The
British Ambassador in Tokyo, Sir F. Lindley, to the Marquess of Reading, 1 October
1931
Telegram:
Paraphrase from the US Secretary of State (Stimson) to the Consul at Geneva
(Gilbert), WASHINGTON, October 9, 1931-6 p. m.
CABLE
FROM THE U.S. SECRETARY OF STATE TO THE SECRETARY-GENERAL OF THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS
OFFERING AMERICAN SUPPORT, OCTOBER 9, 1931
Gareth
Jones, "The Peasant on the Farms: Increase and its cost," The Times,
October 14th 1931
Gareth
Jones, "The Outlook for the Plan: From the farm to the factory," The
Times, October 15th 1931
Gareth
Jones, "Youth and the future: A blessed word," The Times, October
16th 1931
RESOLUTION
ADOPTED BY THE LEAGUE COUNCIL on Manchuria, OCTOBER 24, 1931
An
analysis by Izvestia of the Manchurian Situation, 22 November 1931
Memorandum
by Sir John Simon on the Manchurian situation, prepared for the Cabinet, 23
November 1931 (DBFP Series 11, vol. VIII, no. 769)
WAR
CASUALTIES
By Albert G. Love, Lt. Colonel, Medical Corps, U.S.A., MEDICAL FIELD SERVICE
SCHOOL, CARLISLE BARRACKS, PENNSYLVANIA, 1931, THE ARMY MEDICAL BULLETIN, NUMBER
24
1932
Treaty of Non-Aggression
and Pacific Settlement of Disputes between the Soviet Union and Finland, concluded
on January 21, 1932
LETTER
FROM THE CHINESE GOVERNMENT TO THE SECRETARY-GENERAL, SUBMITTING ITS APPEAL
TO THE COUNCIL UNDER ARTICLES 10 AND 15 OF THE COVENANT, JANUARY 29, 1932
Telegram
from the Secretary of State to the Ambassador in Japan (Forbes), WASHINGTON,
February 1, 1932
STATEMENT
BY THE RT. HON. SIR JOHN SIMON, SECRETARY OF STATE FOR FOREIGN AFFAIRS, IN HOUSE
OF COMMONS on situation in Manchuria, FEBRUARY 2, 1932
Address
Delivered by the Honorable Hugh S. Gibson, of the United States Delegation,
at the General Disarmament Conference, Geneva, February 9, 1932, [Extracts]
LETTER
FROM THE CHINESE REPRESENTATIVE TO THE SECRETARY-GENERAL, FEBRUARY 12, 1932
Telegram
from the Secretary of State (Stimson) to the Minister in Switzerland (Wilson),
FEBRUARY 12, 1932
The Secretary
of State to the Chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations (Borah), United
States Senate, [WASHINGTON,] February 23, 1932.
RESOLUTION
ADOPTED BY THE LEAGUE SPECIAL ASSEMBLY on Sino-Japanese relations, MARCH 11
1932
Franklin Roosevelt, The
Forgotten Man, Radio Address, Albany, N. Y April 7, 1932
AGREEMENT
CONCLUDED BETWEEN THE CHINESE AND JAPANESE REPRESENTATIVES WITH THE ASSISTANCE
OF REPRESENTATIVES OF FRIENDLY POWERS, MAY 5, 1932
Franklin Roosevelt, Address
at Oglethorpe University, May 22, 1932
US, Statement
of the Instructions Issued by President Hoover to the American Delegation to
the Conference for the Limitation and Reduction of Armaments, read by Ambassador
Gibson before the General Commission, June 22nd, 1932.
Background to the
German Crisis, From the speech by von Papen, German Chancellor,
to the Lausanne Conference of 16 June-9 July 1932. Printed in Documents on British
Foreign Policy, Second series, vol. 3 197-201.
Roosevelt's Nomination
Address, Chicago, Ill., July 2, 1932
The Ambassador
in Japan (Grew) to the US Secretary of State, Tokyo, August 13, 1932.
Franklin D. Roosevelt,
Campaign Address at Columbus, Ohio, August 20, 1932
U.S., Department
of State, Publication 1983, Peace and War: United States Foreign Policy,
1931-1941 (Washington, D.C.: U.S., Government Printing Office, 1943), DISARMAMENT
DISCUSSIONS 1932-1934
Benito
Mussolini: What is Fascism?, 1932
STATEMENT
ISSUED BY THE JAPANESE GOVERNMENT, SEPTEMBER 15, 1932
JAPAN-MANCHOUKUO
PROTOCOL, SIGNED ON SEPTEMBER 15TH, 1932, AT SINKING
JV.5.c
British Ambassador in Tokyo to Sir John Simon, 13 October 1932, reporting reaction
in Japan to publication of Lytton Commission report (DHFP Series 11, vol. XI,
no. 4).
HM
Ambassador in Moscow to Simon on Manchuria, 25 October 1932 (DBFP Series II,
vol. XI, no. 18).
Foreign
Office Memorandum, written by Mr. Orde, on the Lytton Report, October 1932 (DBFP
Series II, vol. X, no. 746).
Gareth
Jones, "Lenins widow talks to a Welshman. 15th anniversary
of the Bolshevik Revolution," The Western Mail, November 7th, 1932
Gareth
Jones, Experiences in Russia 1931 - A Diary, Pittsburgh: Alton Press,
1932
1933
John Maynard
Keynes, "National Self-Sufficiency," The Yale Review, Vol. 22,
no. 4 (June 1933), pp. 755-769
U.S.,
Department of State, Publication 1983, Peace and War: United States Foreign
Policy, 1931-1941 (Washington, D.C.: U.S., Government Printing Office, 1943),
WARNINGS OF DANGER 1933-1935
Memorandum
by the US Secretary of State (Stimson) Regarding a Conversation With the Japanese
Ambassador (Debuchi), [WASHINGTON,] January 5, 1933.
EXTRACT
FROM THE REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE OF NINETEEN TO THE ASSEMBLY OF THE LEAGUE OF
NATIONS on the situation in Manchuria, FEBRUARY 15, 1933
RESOLUTIONS
ADOPTED BY THE LEAGUE SPECIAL ASSEMBLY on Manchuria, FEBRUARY 24, 1933
The
Secretary of State to the Minister in Switzerland, (Wilson), [Telegram], WASHINGTON,
February 25, 1933
Malcolm
Muggeridge, "Famine in North Caucasus," The Manchester Guardian,
25th March 1933.
TELEGRAM
FROM THE JAPANESE MINISTER. FOR FOREIGN AFFAIRS TO THE SECRETARY-GENERAL OF
THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS, REGARDING JAPAN'S WITHDRAWAL FROM THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS,
MARCH 27,1933
The
Imperial Rescript, Japan, Relating to Withdrawal from the League of Nations,
Proclaimed on March 27, 1933.
Malcolm
Muggeridge, "Hunger in the Ukraine," The Manchester Guardian,
27th March 1933.
Gareth
Jones, "Famine grips Russia Millions Dying. Idle on Rise, Says Briton,"
Evening Post Foreign Service, New York, 29 March 1933
Edgar
Ansel Mowrer, "Russian Famine Now as Great as Starvation of 1921, Says
Secretary of Lloyd George," The Chicago Daily News Foreign Service,
29 March 1933
The
Sun,
"Lloyd Georges Secretary Tells of Visit to Ukraine - Says Terrorism
Is Rife," 29 March 1933
The
Morning Post
[London], Russia in Grip of Famine. Death and Despair Stalk the Land . Evidence
at First Hand. 'There Is No Bread: We Are Dying'," March 30th, 1933
Walter
Duranty, "Russians Hungry, but not Starving," The New York Times,
31 March 1933
The
Secretary of State to the Chairman of the Committee on Foreign Affairs (McReynolds),
House of Representatives, on the munitions export act,
APRIL 5, 1933.
Time,
"Crusts
on the Floor," April 10,1933
Franklin
Roosevelt, Address before the Governing Board of the Pan American Union,
April 12, 1933
President
Roosevelt to the Secretary of State on Germany and the Disarmament Treaty, [WASHINGTON,]
May 6, 1933.
Letter
from Joseph C. Grew, Ambassador to Japan, to Cordell Hull about Japanese power,
May 11, 1933
Message
of President Roosevelt to the Congress on the Disarmament Conference and the
World Monetary and Economic Conference, May 16, 1933
Franklin
Roosevelt, Message to the nations of the World, May 16, 1933
Memorandum
by the US Secretary of State to the Committee On Foreign Relations on the Arms
Embargo Resolution, United States Senate, May 17, 1933
Address
Delivered by the Honorable Norman H. Davis, Chairman Of the United States Delegation,
at the General Disarmament Conference, Geneva, May 22, 1933
The
Consul General at Berlin (Messersmith) to the Under Secretary of State (Phillips),
[Extracts], BERLIN, June 26, 1933.
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With the German Ambassador
(Luther) [Extract] [WASHINGTON,] October 9, 1933.
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With the German Ambassador
(Luther), [WASHINGTON,] November 2, 1933.
Exchange
of Communications between President Franklin Roosevelt and Maxim Litvinov of
the USSR (November 16, 1933)
The
Consul General at Berlin (Messersmith) to the Under Secretary of State (Phillips),
[Extracts], BERLIN, November 23, 1933.
Statement
by the Secretary of State (Hull) at the Seventh International Conference of
American States, Montevideo, December 15, 1933
Rights
and Duties of States-Convention Signed at Montevideo, December 26, 1933
Address
Delivered by President Roosevelt at Washington, December 28, 1933
"Civil
Society and the Collapse of the Weimar Republic," Sheri
Berman, World Politics 49.3 (1997) 401-429
1934
TEXT OF
GERMAN-POLISH AGREEMENT OF JANUARY 26, 1934.
Informal
and Personal Message From, the Japanese Minister For Foreign Affairs (Hirota)
to the Secretary of State [17], February 21, 1934
Informal
and Personal Message From, the Secretary of State To the Japanese Minister for
Foreign Affairs (Hirota), 3 March 1934
League
of Nations, Committee for the Regulation of the Trade in and Private and State
Manufacture of Arms and Implements of War : note by the president of the Conference.
Publication Date: [1934].
The Appointed
Minister to Austria (Messersmith) to the Under Secretary of State (Phillips),
Transmitting a Memorandum to the Embassy on the "Main Purpose of the Nazis,"
written by Douglas Miller, the Acting Commercial Attache, 21 April 1934
The Ambassador
in Japan (Grew) to the Secretary of State, [Telegram: Paraphrase ], TOKYO, April
25, 1934-1 p. m., [Received April 25-9: 55 a.m.]
The Secretary
of State to the Ambassador in Japan (Grew), [Telegram], WASHINGTON, April 28,
1934
Address Delivered
by the Secretary of State (Hull) at Washington, May 6, 1934, [Extracts]
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State (Hull) Regarding a Conversation With the Japanese
Ambassador (Saito), [Extracted], [WASHINGTON,] May 16, 1934.
Memorandum
by the United States Military Attaché, Berlin, May 17, 1934 [Extracts]
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State (Hull) Regarding a Conversation With the Japanese
Ambassador (Saito), [WASHINGTON] May 19, 1934.
Statement
by the Honorable Norman H. Davis, Chairman of the United States Delegation to
the General Disarmament Conference, at a Meeting of the General Commission of
the Conference, at Geneva, May 29, 1934
Address Delivered
by the Secretary of State (Hull) at Williamsburg, Virginia, June 11, 1934, [Extract]
The Consul
at Berlin (Geist) to the Chief of the Division of Western European Affairs (Moffat),
Department of State, BERLIN, September 15, 1934.
The Ambassador
in Italy (Long) to the Secretary of State, No. 734 ROME, September 28, 1934.
[Received October 11.]
The Ambassador
in Japan (Grew) to the Secretary of State, No. 1102. TOKYO, December 27, 1934.
, [Received January 16, 1935.]
Statement
by the Secretary of State (Hull), December 29, 1934
1935
1935-1941
The Ethiopian Crisis and Ensuing Wars
U.S., Department
of State, Publication 1983, Peace and War: United States Foreign Policy,
1931-1941 (Washington, D.C.: U.S., Government Printing Office, 1943), ITALIAN
CONQUEST OF ETHIOPIA 1935-1936
Note
from the Abyssinian Government to the Secretary-General of the League, January
15, 1935
Message of
President Roosevelt to the Senate on the International Court of Justice, January
16, 1935
The
Minister in Austria (Messersmith) to the Under Secretary Of State (Phillips),
[Extract], VIENNA, February 8, 1935.
The Ambassador
in Italy (Long) to the Secretary of State, [Telegram: Paraphrase], ROME, February
14, 1935, 7 p. m., [Received February 14]
Address Delivered
by the Secretary of State (Hull) to the Canadian Society at New York, February
16, 1935
Gareth
Jones, "Will Japan adopt Fascism?" Interview with Mr Yosuke Matsuoka,
Japans last representative at the League of Nations, Tokyo, March, 1935
Constitution
of the Republic of the Philippines, 14 May 1935
Adolph
Hitler, Reichstag Speech, May 21, 1935.
Memorandum
by the Minister to Austria (Messersmith) Regarding A Conversation With the Ambassador
in Germany (Dodd), [Extract], BERLIN, March 22, 1935.
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State (Hull) Regarding a Conversation With the German Ambassador
(Luther), [WASHINGTON,] March 28, 1935.
Address
Delivered by the Secretary of State (Hull) at New York, June 12, 1935, [Extract]
Address
Delivered by the Secretary of State (Hull) at Ann Arbor, Michigan, June 17,
1935
Extract
from statement of Eden, Minister for League of Nations Affairs, in the House
of Commons on the Italian-Abyssinian conflict, 1 July 1935 (Hansard, I July
1935, cols. 1525-6).
Sir
Samuel Hoare in the House of Commons on Italian aspirations, 11 July 1935 (Hansard,
11 July 1935, cols. 516-18).
The Secretary
of State to the Ambassador in Italy (Long), [Telegram ], WASHINGTON, August
18, 1935-1 p.m.
"Neutrality
Act" of August 31, 1935, JOINT RESOLUTION
Franklin Roosevelt,
Statement on approval of the Neutrality Act of 1935, August 31, 1935
A
report from The Times correspondent in Paris on Italian-Abyssinian conflict,
carried on 31 August 1935
The Ambassador
in Italy (Long) to the Secretary of State, [Telegram: Paraphrase], ROME, September
10, 1935-6 p.m., [Received September 10-4:15 p.m.]
Sir
Samuel Hoare's Speech at the League Assembly, September 11, 1935
Statement
by the Secretary of State (Hull), September 12, 1935
The Ambassador
In Italy (Long) to the Secretary of State, [Extracts], ROME, September 13, 1935,
No. 1311. [Received September 23.]
Extracts
from M. Laval's speech at Geneva on Italian aspirations, 13 September 1935
Statement
by President Roosevelt, October 6, 1935
The Secretary
of State (Hull) to the United States Delegation at Geneva, [Telegram: Paraphrase
], [WASHINGTON,] October 9, 1935-9 p.m.
Speech
by M. de Velics, Representative of Hungary, on Italian sanctions question, October
9, 1935
Resolutions
adopted by the Committee of the League of Nations, set up to coordinate the
measures against Italy which members might prepare to take under Article 16,
between 11 of October and 19 of October, 1935
Resolutions
adopted by the Committee of the League of Nations, set up to co-ordinate the
measures which members might prepare to take under Article 16, between 11 October
and 19 October 1935 (L of Ns OJ, Special Supplement, no. 145, pp. 14-27).
The Secretary
of State (Hull) to the United States Delegation at Geneva, [Telegram], [WASHINGTON,]
October 17, 1935-6 p.m.
Statement
by Hoare in House of Commons on considerations concerning action against Italy,
22 October 1935 (Hansard, 22 October 1935, cols. 17-33).
Statement
by President Roosevelt on sanctions in the Italian-Ethiopian crisis, 30 October,1935
Extracts
from the reply of the US Secretary of State to the Note of 21 October from the
Chairman of the Co-ordination Committee (US State Department, Press Releases,
no. 318, 2 November, 1935).
Radio Address
of the Secretary of State, November 6, 1935
Franklin Roosevelt,
Address on Armistice Day, November 11, 1935
The Minister
in Switzerland (Wilson) to the Secretary of State, [Extract], BERN, November
13, 1935.
Statement
by the Secretary of State (Hull), November 15, 1935
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With the Italian Ambassador
(Rosso), [WASHINGTON,] November 22, 1935.
Statement
by the Secretary of State (Hull) on North China, December 5, 1935
Extracts
from the note of the Abyssinian Government to the Secretary-General of the League
of Nations, 12 December 1935 (L of Ns OJ, January 1936, pp. 41-2).
Declaration
of the Emperor of Abyssinia, December 16, 1935.
Hoare
explains Hoare-Laval Pact to the House of Commons, 19 December 1935
Memorandum
by the First Secretary of the United States Embassy In Japan (Dickover), [TOKYO,]
December 23, 1935.
Stalin's Purges,
1935
EUGENE
STALEY, WAR AND THE PRIVATE INVESTOR, A Study in the Relations of International
Politics and International Private Investment, Assistant Professor of Economics
in the University of Chicago; Professeur-Adjoint à l'Institut Universitaire
de Hautes Etudes Internationales, Geneva, FOREWORD BY
QUINCY WRIGHT, INTRODUCTION BY SIR ARTHUR SALTER, DOUBLEDAY, DORAN & COMPANY,
INC., Garden City, New York, 1935
1936
U.S.,
Department of State, Publication 1983, Peace and War: United States Foreign
Policy, 1931-1941 (Washington, D.C.: U.S., Government Printing Office, 1943),
DEVELOPING DANGERS 1936-1937
Address Delivered
by President Roosevelt Before the Congress, January 3, 1936, [Extract ]
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With the British Ambassador
(Lindsay), [Extract], [WASHINGTON,] January 22, 1936.
The Minister
in Switzerland (Wilson) to the Secretary of State, [Extracts], BERN, January
27, 1936.
President
Roosevelt to the President of the Argentine Republic (Justo), THE WHITE HOUSE,
January 30, 1936.
M. W. Fodor, "The
Spread of Hitlerism," The Nation, 5 February 1936
William Zukerman, "Where
the German Ghetto Leads," The Nation, 5 February 1936
Report of the Special
Committee on Investigation of the Munitions Industry (The Nye Report), U.S.
Congress, Senate, 74th Congress, 2nd sess., February 24,
1936, pp. 3-13.
"Neutrality
Act" of February 29, 1936
Statement
by President Roosevelt, February 29, 1936
Adolph
Hitler, Reichstag Speech, March 7, 1936.
President
Roosevelt to Mrs. William A. Becker, President General, Daughters of the American
Revolution [28], APRIL 20, 1936.
Statement
by the Honorable Norman H. Davis, Chairman of the United States Delegation,
London Naval Conference, May 13, 1936 [29], [Extracts]
Appeal of Haile
Selassie to the League of Nations, June 1936
Extract
from a speech by Neville Chamberlain, 10 June 1936, to the 1900 Club, (The
Times, 11 June 1936)
HAILE
SELLASSIE VS. MUSSOLINI, by Harold G. Marcus
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With the Japanese Ambassador
to Great Britain (Yoshida), [WASHINGTON,] June 12, 1936.
Mr.
te Water, of South Africa, in the Sixteenth League Assembly on the League's
actions in Ethiopia, 1 July 1936.
M.
Litvinov at the Sixteenth Assembly of the League on Ethiopia, July l936 (L of
Ns OJ,1936).
The Acting
Secretary of State (Phillips) to the Diplomatic And Consular Officers of the
United States in Spain, [Circular telegram], WASHINGTON, August 7, 1936.
Franklin Roosevelt,
Address at Chautauqua, New York, August 14, 1936 (the "I hate war"
speech)
Hirota Cabinet's National
and Foreign Policies (Informally reported to the Emperor on 15 August 1936),
Appendix 1 in POLITICAL STRATEGY PRIOR TO OUTBREAK OF WAR, PART I, PREPARED
BY MILITARY HISTORY SECTION HEADQUARTERS, ARMY FORCES FAR EAST, DISTRIBUTED
BY OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF MILITARY HISTORY DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY, Japanese
Monograph No. 144, 31 December 1952
Statement
by the Department of State on the Export of Arms to Spain, August 22, 1936
Address
Delivered by the Secretary of State (Hull) at Washington, September 7, 1936
Address
Delivered by the Secretary of State (Hull) at New York, September 15, 1936
The Spanish Civil
War: Anarchism in Action, Eddie Conlon, 1986 Published by the Workers Solidarity
Movement
The Spanish Revolution
and Civil War, 1936-39
Franklin Roosevelt, Campaign
Address at Kansas City, Mo., October 13, 1936
German-Japanese Agreement and
Supplementary Protocol, Signed at Berlin, November 25, 1936 (The Anti-Comintern Pact)
Franklin Roosevelt,
Address before the Inter-American Conference for the Maintenance of Peace, Buenos
Aires, Argentina, December 1, 1936
The Ambassador
in Japan (Grew) to the Secretary of State, [Telegram: Paraphrase], Tokyo, December
4, 1936-1 p.m., [Received December 4-9:35 a.m]
Address
Delivered by the Secretary of State at Buenos Aires, December 5, 1936
Declaration
of Principles of Inter-American Solidarity And Cooperation, Buenos Aires, December
21, 1936.
Harold J.
Laski, The Rise of Liberalism: The Philosophy of a Business Civilization
(New York: Harper & Brothers, 1936, Chapter 1, "The Background,"
pp. 1-90
1937
Joint Congressional
Resolution of January 8, 1937 Prohibiting Exports of Arms to Spain
Statement
by President Roosevelt, January 8, 1937 on Building New Capital Ships
Editorial, "Peace
Without Victory," The Nation, January 16, 1937, Vol. 144, No. 3,
P. 59-60
Adolph
Hitler, Reichstag Speech, January 30, 1937
Extracts
from General Emilio de Bono, Anno XIIII: The Conquest of an Empire (Cresset
Press, 1937)
U.S., Department
of State, Publication 1983, Peace and War: United States Foreign Policy,
1931-1941 (Washington, D.C.: U.S., Government Printing Office, 1943), JAPANESE
ATTACK ON CHINA 1937
POLITICAL STRATEGY
PRIOR TO OUTBREAK OF WAR, PART I, PREPARED BY MILITARY HISTORY SECTION HEADQUARTERS,
ARMY FORCES FAR EAST, DISTRIBUTED BY OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF MILITARY HISTORY
DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY, Japanese Monograph No. 144, 31 December 1952, "The
China Incident"
The Nanking Massacre,
1937
Hayashi Cabinet's China
Policy and Guidance Principles for North China China Policy agreed upon on 16
April 1937 at a conference of the Premier and Ministers of Foreign Affairs,
Finance, War, and Navy, Appendix 2 in POLITICAL STRATEGY PRIOR TO OUTBREAK OF
WAR, PART I, PREPARED BY MILITARY HISTORY SECTION HEADQUARTERS, ARMY FORCES
FAR EAST, DISTRIBUTED BY OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF MILITARY HISTORY DEPARTMENT
OF THE ARMY, Japanese Monograph No. 144, 31 December 1952
The
Neutrality Act of 1937, May 1, 1937
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State (Hull) Regarding a Conversation With the Italian Ambassador
(Suvich), [Extracts], [WASHINGTON,] July 6, 1937.
Policies Formulated
by Japanese Army Authorities on 8 July 1937 in POLITICAL STRATEGY PRIOR TO OUTBREAK
OF WAR, PART I, PREPARED BY MILITARY HISTORY SECTION HEADQUARTERS, ARMY FORCES
FAR EAST, DISTRIBUTED BY OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF MILITARY HISTORY DEPARTMENT
OF THE ARMY, Japanese Monograph No. 144, 31 December 1952
The Policies Formulated
by Japanese Navy Authorities on 8 July 1937 in POLITICAL STRATEGY PRIOR TO OUTBREAK
OF WAR, PART I, PREPARED BY MILITARY HISTORY SECTION HEADQUARTERS, ARMY FORCES
FAR EAST, DISTRIBUTED BY OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF MILITARY HISTORY DEPARTMENT
OF THE ARMY, Japanese Monograph No. 144, 31 December 1952
China Policy of the
Japanese Government as reported to and approved by the Emperor on 11 July 1937
in POLITICAL STRATEGY PRIOR TO OUTBREAK OF WAR, PART I, PREPARED BY MILITARY
HISTORY SECTION HEADQUARTERS, ARMY FORCES FAR EAST, DISTRIBUTED BY OFFICE OF
THE CHIEF OF MILITARY HISTORY DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY, Japanese Monograph No.
144, 31 December 1952
Agreement between the
Army and the Navy General Staffs on Operations in North China (11 July 1937)
in POLITICAL STRATEGY PRIOR TO OUTBREAK OF WAR, PART I, PREPARED BY MILITARY
HISTORY SECTION HEADQUARTERS, ARMY FORCES FAR EAST, DISTRIBUTED BY OFFICE OF
THE CHIEF OF MILITARY HISTORY DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY, Japanese Monograph No.
144, 31 December 1952
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With the Japanese Ambassador
(Saito), [WASHINGTON,] July 12, 1937.
Statement
by the Secretary of State, July 16, 1937
Gist of statement made
by Chiang Kai-shek on 17 July 1937 at Lushan in POLITICAL STRATEGY PRIOR TO
OUTBREAK OF WAR, PART I, PREPARED BY MILITARY HISTORY SECTION HEADQUARTERS,
ARMY FORCES FAR EAST, DISTRIBUTED BY OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF MILITARY HISTORY
DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY, Japanese Monograph No. 144, 31
Confidential Instructions
Concerning Troop commitments for Operations against China (to be circulated
informally as a tentative plan of the Supreme Command) (Tentative plan for naval
operations against China formulated by Navy General Staff on 12 July.) in POLITICAL
STRATEGY PRIOR TO OUTBREAK OF WAR, PART I, PREPARED BY MILITARY HISTORY SECTION
HEADQUARTERS, ARMY FORCES FAR EAST, DISTRIBUTED BY OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF MILITARY
HISTORY DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY, Japanese Monograph No. 144, 31
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With the Japanese Ambassador
(Saito), [WASHINGTON,] July 21, 1937
Ludwig Lore, "Will
Europe Go to War?" The Nation, July 31, 1937, Vol. 145, No. 5, P. 127-129
The Ambassador
in Japan (Grew) to the Secretary of State, [Telegram: Paraphrase], TOKYO, August
10, 1937
Press
Release Issued by the Department of State on the Situation in Shanghai on August
23, 1937
Communication
and Appeal from the Chinese Government to the League of Nations, August 30,
1937.
The Secretary
of State to the Ambassador in Japan (Grew), [Telegram: Paraphrase], WASHINGTON,
September 2, 1937-2 p. m.
Appeal
by the Chinese Government to the League of Nations, September 11, 1938
Chinese
appeal invoking Article 10,. 11, and 17 of the Covenant, September 12, 1937;
Japanese letter to the Secretary-General, 25 September 1937
Statement
by President Roosevelt on Banning the Shipment of Arms to China and Japan, September
14, 1937
The Secretary
of State to the Minister in Switzerland (Harrison), [Telegram: Paraphrase],
WASHINGTON, September 28, 1937-10 p. m.
Roosevelt's
Quarantine Speech, 5 October 1937
Press Release
On the Situation in China Issued by the Department of State on October 6, 1937
The Secretary
of State (Hull) to the Honorable Norman H. Davis, United States Delegate to
the Conference at Brussels, [Extract], WASHINGTON, October 18, 1937.
Declaration
Adopted by the Nine Power Conference at Brussels On November 15, 1937
Declaration
Adopted by the Nine Power Conference at Brussels On November 24, 1937
The German Ambassador
to the Soviet Union (Schulenburg) to the German War Minister (Blomberg), No.
609, 1909/429964, Berlin, November 25,1937.
Extracts From
an Address by the German Ambassador to the Soviet Union (Schulenburg) Before
the German Wehrmacht Academy, November 25, 1937
The Secretary
of State (Hull) to the Ambassador in Japan (Grew) on the Sinking of the USS
Panay, [Telegram], WASHINGTON, December 13, 1937.
The Ambassador
in Japan (Grew) to the Secretary of State, [Telegram], TOKYO, December 14, 1937-6
p. m., [Received December 14-10 a. m.]
Report
of the United States Delegate to the Conference at Brussels (Davis), [Extracts],
DECEMBER 16, 1937.
1938
U.S.,
Department of State, Publication 1983, Peace and War: United States Foreign
Policy, 1931-1941 (Washington, D.C.: U.S., Government Printing Office, 1943),
EUROPEAN CRISIS 1938
U.S., Department
of State, Publication 1983, Peace and War: United States Foreign Policy,
1931-1941 (Washington, D.C.: U.S., Government Printing Office, 1943), RELATIONS
WITH JAPAN 1938-1940
POLITICAL STRATEGY
PRIOR TO OUTBREAK OF WAR, PART I, PREPARED BY MILITARY HISTORY SECTION HEADQUARTERS,
ARMY FORCES FAR EAST, DISTRIBUTED BY OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF MILITARY HISTORY
DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY, Japanese Monograph No. 144, 31 December 1952, "The
Second Year of the China Incident"
President
Roosevelt to the Speaker of the House Of Representatives (Bankhead ) on the
Ludlow Amendment, WASHINGTON, January 6, 1938.
The Secretary
of State to the Chairman of the Committee on Foreign Affairs (McReynolds) on
the Ludlow Resolution, House of Representatives, WASHINGTON, January 8, 1938.
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State (Hull) Regarding a Conversation With the German Ambassador
(Dieckhoff ), [WASHINGTON,] January 14, 1938
Franklin
Roosevelt, Message to the Congress recommending increased armament for national
defense, January 28, 1938
HITLER'S
DECREE ON COMMAND OF THE WEHRMACHT, FEBRUARY 4, 1938
The
Secretary of State to the Honorable Louis Ludlow, House Of Representatives,
WASHINGTON, February 10, 1938.
Adolph Hitler,
Reichstag Speech, February 20, 1938
Hugh
R. Wilson, Ambassador to Germany, to the President, Berlin, March 3, 1938
Robery Dell, "Chamberlain's
Treason," The Nation, March 12, 1938, Vol. 146, No. 11, P. 292-294
Address
Delivered by the Secretary of State (Hull) at Washington, March 17, 1938
N.I.
Bukharins Last Plea before the Supreme Court of the U.S.S.R., Moscow,
March 12, Evening session, 1938
Speech made
in the House of Commons on 24 March 1938 by the Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain,
on the Anschluss
Preliminary
Report on Hitler's Conversation With Konrad Henlein, the Leader of the Sudeten
German Party, and Karl Hermann Frank, His Deputy, 28 March 1938
William Zukerman,
"Jews and the Fate of Poland," The Nation, April 2, 1938, Vol.
146, No. 14, p. 379-381
The Eight Demands
of Konrad Henlein Announced at Karlsbad, April 24, 1938
The Secretary
of State to the Chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations (Pittman), United
States Senate, [WASHINGTON,] May 12, 1938.
Viscount Halifax
to Sir N. Henderson (Berlin) on the "May Crisis,"No. 169 Telegraphic,
Foreign Office, May 21, 1938
Hitler's directive
for "Operation Green," 30 May, 1938
Memorandum
of a Press Conference of the Secretary of State, [Extract], [WASHINGTON,] June
11, 1938.
The Chief
of the Office of Arms and Munitions Control (Green), Department of State, to
One Hundred Forty-eight Persons and Companies Manufacturing Airplane Parts,
WASHINGTON, July 1, 1938.
Memorandum
the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With the German Ambassador (Dieckhoff),
[Extracts], [WASHINGTON,] July 7, 1938.
Viscount Halifax
to Mr Newton (Prague) on The Runciman Mission, No. 25 Telegraphic, Foreign Office,
July 18, 1938
Franklin Roosevelt,
Address at Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada, August 18, 1938
Sir N. Henderson
(Berlin) to Viscount Halifax on the crisis in Czechoslovakia, British Embassy,
Berlin, August 22, 1938
Speech by Neville
Chamberlain on his return from the Munich Conference
The Times,
"Nuremberg and Aussig," 7 September 1938
Adolph
Hitler, Speech at Nuremberg, September 14, 1938
Telegram
from Sir R. Lindsay (Washington) on his conversation with Roosevelt to Viscount
Halifax 9/20/38
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With the Canadian Minister
(Marler), [Extract], [WASHINGTON,] September 21, 1938.
Telegram
from Viscount Halifax on British views of the situation in Czechoslovakia to
Sir R. Lindsay 9/23/38
Adolph Hitler,
Speech in the Sportpalast, September 26, 1938
Message sent direct
by the President of the United States to the President of Czechoslovakia and
to the Chancellor of the German Reich, and through the Secretary of State to
the Prime Ministers of Great Britain and France, morning of September 26, 1938
Press Release
Issued by the Department of State On September 26, 1938
Prime Minister
Chamberlain's radio broadcast, 27 September 1938
Press Release
Issued by the Department of State On September 27, 1938
President
Roosevelt to the Ambassador in Italy (Phillips) with a Message to Mussolini,
[Telegram], WASHINGTON, September 27, 1938-3 p.m.
President
Roosevelt to the Chancellor of Germany (Hitler), [Telegram], SEPTEMBER 27, 1938.
Memorandum,
by the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With the German Ambassador
(Dieckhoff), [Extracts], [WASHINGTON] September 28, 1938.
Munich Pact, 29
September 1938
"Peace
in Our Time" Statement Made by Neville Chamberlain, September 30, 1938
Statement
by the Secretary of State, September 30, 1938
The British Parliamentary
Debate on the Munich Agreement, October 1938
The Secretary
of State to President Roosevelt on Strategic Materials, WASHINGTON, October
21, 1938.
Address
Delivered by the Secretary of State (Hull) at New York, November 1, 1938
Statement
by President Roosevelt, November 15, 1938
The Tragedy
of the Chinese Revolution by
Harold Isaacs, 1938
"Declaration
of Lima" by the Eighth International Conference of American States, December
24, 1938
Declaration
of American Principles by the Eighth International Conference of American States,
December 24, 1938
The Ambassador
in Japan (Grew) to the Japanese Minister For Foreign Affairs (Arita) [40], No.
1153, TOKYO, December 30, 1938.
1939
U.S.,
Department of State, Publication 1983, Peace and War: United States Foreign
Policy, 1931-1941 (Washington, D.C.: U.S., Government Printing Office, 1943),
EUROPEAN WAR 1939
POLITICAL STRATEGY
PRIOR TO OUTBREAK OF WAR, PART I, PREPARED BY MILITARY HISTORY SECTION HEADQUARTERS,
ARMY FORCES FAR EAST, DISTRIBUTED BY OFFICE OF THE CHIEF OF MILITARY HISTORY
DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY, Japanese Monograph No. 144, 31 December 1952, "The
Third Year of the China Incident"
BBC Online,
"The Road to War"
Franklin Roosevelt,
Annual Message to the Congress, January 4, 1939
Message of
President Roosevelt to the Congress, January 12, 1939
"Civil Liberties
in American Colonies," By the American Civil Liberties Union (New York:
American Civil Liberties Union, February 1939).
US, Department
of State, Memorandum of Conversation with the British Charge d'Affaires, Mr.
V.A.L. Mallet, the Under-Secretary on information concerning the Japanese decision
to join the Axis, 6 February 1939
Statement
by the Acting Secretary of State (Welles), March l7, 1939
THE WESTERN
GUARANTEE OF POLISH INDEPENDENCE, MARCH 31, 1939
Statement
by the Secretary of State on Albania, April 8, 1939
President
Roosevelt to the Chancellor of Germany (Hitler), [Telegram], 14 April 1939
Address Delivered
by the Secretary of State at Washington, April 25, 1939, [Extract]
The Secretary
of State to the Chairman of the Committee on Foreign Relations (Pittman), United
States Senate, WASHINGTON, May 27, 1939.
Statement
by the Secretary of State on the Six-Point Peace and Neutrality Proposal, July
1, 1939
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With the Japanese Ambassador
(Horinouchi), [Extracts], [WASHINGTON,] July 10, 1939.
Message From
President Roosevelt to the Congress, Transmitting A Statement by the Secretary
of State, July 14, 1939
Press Release
Issued by the White House on July 18, 1939
The Secretary
of State (Hull) to the Japanese Ambassador (Horinouchi) Terminating the 1911
Treaty of Commerce and Navigation between the U.S. and Japan, 26 July 1939
German-Soviet Non-Aggression
Pact, Moscow, August 23, 1939
President Roosevelt
to King Victor Emmanuel of Italy, 23 August 1939
Secret Texts of the Molotov-Ribbentrop Non-Aggression
Pact, Cold War International History Project
President
Roosevelt to the Chancellor of Germany (Hitler) [Telegram], 24 August 1939
President
Roosevelt to the Chancelor of Germany (Hitler), [Telegram], AUGUST 25, 1939.
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With the Japanese Ambassador
(Horinouchi), [WASHINGTON,] August 26, 1939.
The German
Chargé (Thomsen) to the Secretary of State, WASHINGTON, August 31, 1939.
Radio Address
Delivered by President Roosevelt From Washington, September 3, 1939
Address Delivered
by President Roosevelt to the Congress, September 21, 1939, [Extracts]
Address
Delivered by the US Under Secretary of State (Welles) at Panama, September 25,
1939
The Neutrality
Act of 1939, November 4, 1939
1940
U.S.,
Department of State, Publication 1983, Peace and War: United States Foreign
Policy, 1931-1941 (Washington, D.C.: U.S., Government Printing Office, 1943),
EUROPEAN WAR 1940
U.S.,
Department of State, Publication 1983, Peace and War: United States Foreign
Policy, 1931-1941 (Washington, D.C.: U.S., Government Printing Office, 1943),
DEFENSE MEASURES OF THE UNITED STATES 1940
Grolier Online, World War
II
Address
Delivered by President Roosevelt to the Congress, January 3, 1940
Statement
by President Roosevelt, March 29,1940
Statement
by President Roosevelt on the Invasions of Denmark and Norway, April 13, 1940
Statement
by the Secretary of State on the Netherlands Indies, April 17, 1940
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With the Japanese Ambassador
(Horinouchi), [WASHINGTON,] April 20, 1940.
President
Roosevelt to the Premier of Italy (Mussolini) [45], [Telegram], WASHINGTON,
April 29, 1940, 6 p.m.
The Ambassador
in Italy (Phillips) to the Secretary of State, [Telegram: Paraphrase], [Rome,]
May 1, 1940
The Premier
of Italy (Mussolini) to President Roosevelt, [Translation], [ROME, May 2, 1940.]
Address
Delivered by President Roosevelt at Washington May 10, 1940
President
Roosevelt to the Premier of Italy (Mussolini) [47], [Telegram], [WASHINGTON,]
May 14, 1940-midnight.
Address
Delivered by President Roosevelt to the Congress, May 16, 1940
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With the Japanese Ambassador
(Horinouchi), [WASHINGTON,] May 16, 1940.
The Premier
of Italy (Mussolini) to President Roosevelt, [Telegram], ROME, May 18, 1940.
President
Roosevelt to the Premier of Italy (Mussolini), [Telegram], WASHINGTON, May 26,
1940-3 p.m.
The
Ambassador in Italy (Phillips) to the Secretary of State, [Telegram: Paraphrase],
ROME, May 27, 1940-1 p.m.
The Secretary
of State to the Ambassador in Italy (Phillips), [Telegram], WASHINGTON, May
30, 1940-6 p.m.
The Secretary
of State to the Ambassador in Japan (Grew), [Telegram: Paraphrase], WASHINGTON,
May 30,1940-2 p.m.
Message
of President Roosevelt to the Congress, May 31, 1940
The Secretary
of State to the Ambassador in Japan (Grew), [Telegram: Paraphrase], WASHINGTON,
May 30,1940-2 p.m.
The
Ambassador in Italy (Phillips) to the Secretary of State, [Telegram: Paraphrase],
ROME, June 1, 1940, 1 p.m.
Address
Delivered by President Roosevelt at Charlottesville, Virginia, June 10, 1940
The President
of the French Council of Ministers (Reynaud) To President Roosevelt, 10 June
1940
President
Roosevelt to the President of the French Council Of Ministers (Reynaud), June
13, 1940
The President
of the French Council of Ministers (Reynaud) To President Roosevelt, June 14,1940
President
Roosevelt to the President of the French Council Of Ministers (Reynaud), 15
June 1940
The Secretary
of State to the Ambassador Near the French Government At Bordeaux (Biddle) on
the Status of the French Fleet, 17 June 1940
The Ambassador
Near the French Government at Bordeaux (Riddle) To the Secretary of State, 18
June 1940
Press Release
Issued by the Department of State on the Request of France for an Armistice
on June 19, 1940
Address
Delivered by the Secretary of State, Cordell Hull, at Harvard University, June
20, 1940
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With The British Ambassador
(Lothian) and the Australian Minister (Casey), 28 June 1940
Statement
by the Secretary of State, (Cordell Hull), July 5, 1940
Statement
by the Secretary of State on the Burma Route, July 16, 1940
Havana Meeting
of Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the American Republics, July 21-30,1940
Declaration
of Reciprocal Assistance anal Cooperation for the Defense Of the Nations of
the Americas, Habana, July 30, 1940
Statement
by the Secretary of State, August 6, 1940
Message
of President Roosevelt to the Congress, September 3, 1940
Press Release
Issued by the Department of State on September 7, 1940
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With the French Ambassador
(Henry-Haye), 11 September 1940
The Ambassador
in Japan (Grew) to the Secretary of State, 12 September 1940
Press Release
Issued by the Department of State on the Situation in Indochina on September
23, 1940
Statement
by the Secretary of State on the Tripartite Pact, September 27, 1940
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With the British Ambassador
(Lothian), 30 September 1940
The Japanese
Embassy to the Department of State Protesting the Ban on Exports of Iron and
Steel Scrap, October 7, 1940
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With the Japanese Ambassador
(Horinouchi), 8 October 1940
The Japanese
Embassy to the Department of State, 8 October 1940
The Secretary
of State to the Charge in France (Matthews) on the French Fleet , 25 October
1940
Address
Delivered by the Secretary of State (Cordell Hull) at Washington, October 26,
1940
The Chargé
in France (Matthews) to the Secretary of State on Petain's View of the French
Fleet, 1 November 1940
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With the French Ambassador
(Henry-Haye), 4 November 1940
President
Roosevelt to King George of Greece, December 5, 1940
President
Roosevelt to the Appointed Ambassador to France (Leahy), 20 December 1940
Radio
Address Delivered by President Roosevelt From Washington ("Arsenal of Democracy"
Speech), December 29, 1940
1941
January
U.S.,
Department of State, Publication 1983, Peace and War: United States Foreign
Policy, 1931-1941 (Washington, D.C.: U.S., Government Printing Office, 1943),
EUROPEAN WAR 1941
U.S., Department
of State, Publication 1983, Peace and War: United States Foreign Policy,
1931-1941 (Washington, D.C.: U.S., Government Printing Office, 1943),DISCUSSIONS
WITH JAPAN 1941 and PEARL HARBOR
Address
Delivered by President Roosevelt to the Congress, January 6, 1941
JAPANESE FIELD SERVICE
CODE ADOPTED BY THE WAR DEPARTMENT, January 8, 1941
Statement
by the Secretary of State (Hull) Before the Committee on Foreign Affairs, House
of Representatives, January 15, 1941
ADDRESS OF PRINCE
FUMIMARO KONOYE, PRIME MINISTER OF JAPAN, DELIVERED BEFORE THE 76TH SESSION
OF THE IMPERIAL DIET, Tokyo, Japan, January 21, 1941
The Ambassador
in Japan (Grew) to the Secretary of State Warning of an Attack on Pearl Harbor,
27 January 1941
February
The Secretary
of State to the Minister in Yugoslavia (Lane), 9 February 1941
The Secretary
of State to the Minister in Yugoslavia (Lane), 14 February 1941
March
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With the Japanese Ambassador
(Nomura), 8 March 1941
The
Lend-Lease Act, March 11, 1941
Address
Delivered by President Roosevelt at Washington, March 15, 1941
Memorandum
by the Acting Secretary of State (Welles) Regarding A Conversation With the
Soviet Ambassador (Oumansky) on a Planned German Attack on the Soviet Union,
20 March 1941
April
Statement
by the Secretary of State on the Invasion of Yugoslavia, April 6, 1941
The Secretary
of State to the Minister in Portugal (Fish), 10 April 1941
Statement
by the Department of State on the US-Danish Agreement on Greenland, April 10,
1941
May
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State (Hull) Regarding a Conversation With the Japanese
Ambassador (Nomura), 11 May 1941
Draft Proposal
Handed by the Japanese Ambassador (Nomura) To the Secretary of State on May
12, 1941
June
Message
of President Roosevelt to the Congress on the Sinking of the Robin Moor,
June 20, 1941
Draft Proposal
Handed by the Secretary of State to the Japanese Ambassador (Nomura), 21 June
1941
Statement
by the Acting Secretary of State (Welles) on the German Invasion of the Soviet
Union, June 23, 1941
July
Telegram from Japan
Outlining Japanese Objectives, MAGIC, From: Tokyo To: Berlin July 2, 1941 Purple
(CA) (K9) Circular #1390
Statement
Handed by the Ambassador in Japan (Grew) to Mr. Tomohiko Ushiba, Private Secretary
of the Japanese Prime Minister (Prince Konoye), 6 July 1941
Message
of President Roosevelt to the Congress on Iceland, July 7, 1941
Statement
Handed by the Japanese Minister for Foreign Affairs (Matsuoka) to the Ambassador
in Japan (Grew), July 8, 1941
Telegram Outlining Japanese
Objectives, MAGIC, From: Canton To: Tokyo July 14, 1941. Purple #255.
Telegram Decribing the
Meeting Between Welles and Wakasugi, MAGIC, From: Washington. To: Tokyo. 21
July 1941 (Purple—CA) #545
Telegram Describing
the Meeting Between Welles and Nomura, MAGIC, From: Washington. To: Tokyo. 23
July 1941 (Purple--CA) #555 (In 2 parts, complete).
Memorandum
by the Acting Secretary of State (Welles) Regarding A Conversation With, the
Japanese Ambassador (Nomura), 23 July 1941
Telegram from Japanese
Foreign Ministry on the Effects of a US Embargo on Japan, MAGIC, From: Tokyo
To: Washington July 24, 1941 Purple (CA) #406
Statement
by the Acting Secretary of State (Welles) on Indochina, July 24, 1941
Memorandum
by the Acting Secretary of State (Welles) on a Meeting Between President Roosevelt
and the Japanese Ambassador on the Japanese Occupation of Indochina, 24 July
1941
Informal
Remarks of President Roosevelt to the Volunteer Participation Committee on Why
Oil Exports Continued to Japan, Washington, July 24, 1941
Telegram from Japanese
Embassy in the Philippines on US Defensive Actions, MAGIC, From: Manila (Nihro)
To: Tokyo 25 July 1941 (Purple) #433
Telegram from Japanese
Foreign Ministry on Seizing British and US assets in China, MAGIC, From: Tokyo
To: Net July 26, 1941 Red Circular #1616
Telegram from Japanese
Foreign Ministry on Response to the US Freezing of Assets, MAGIC, From: Tokyo
To: Washington 27 July 1941 (Purple) Circular #1622
Telegram from Japanese
Foreign Ministry Outlining the Need to Arm for All-out War, MAGIC, From: Tokyo
(Foreign Minister) To: Washington July 31, 1941 Purple (CA) K9 #433
August
Telegram from Japan
Requesting Information About US Airplanes in the Philippines, MAGIC, From: Tokyo
To: Manila 1 August 1941 (Purple) #245 (or 246)
Telegram from Japan
(Toyoda) Requesting Information About US and British Ships Passing Through the
Panama Canal, MAGIC, From: Tokyo (Toyoda) To: Panama August 2, 1941 J-19 #63
Telegram from Japan
to the Ambassador in Washington Regarding Japanese Peace Overtures to the US,
MAGIC, From: Tokyo. To: Washington. 5 August 1941. (Purple) (CA) #447
Oral Statement
on Indochina and the Oil Embargo Handed by the Japanese Ambassador (Nomura)
To the Secretary of State on August 6, 1941
Telegram from Japan
to the Ambassador in Washington Suggesting a Conference Between the US and Japan,
and the Conditions to Be Specified, MAGIC, From: Tokyo. To: Washington. 7 August,
1941 (Purple—CA) #452
Telegram from the Japanese
Ambassador in Washington to Japan Describing US Views of Indochina and the Japanese=German
Axis, MAGIC, From: Washington. To: Tokyo. 7 August 1941 (Purple—CA) #663
Memorandum
Regarding a Conversation Between the Secretary of State and the Japanese Ambassador
(Nomura), 8 August 1941
Document
on Indochina Handed by the Secretary of State to the Japanese Ambassador (Nomura),
8 August 1941
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State Regarding a Conversation With the British Ambassador
(Halifax), 9 August 1941
Telegram from the Japanese
Ambassador in Washington to Japan Describing the Unpromising Conditions Bewteen
the US and Japan, MAGIC, From: Washington. To: Tokyo. 9 August 1941 (Purple)
#674
Joint Message
of President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill To Joseph Stalin, President
of the Soviet of People's Commissars 0f the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics,
August 15, 1941
Telegram from Japan
to the Ambassador in Germany on Japan's View of the Russo-German War, MAGIC,
From: Tokyo. To: Berlin. 15 August 1941 (Purple) #739
Telegram from Japan
to the Ambassador in Germany Outlining Japan's Interest in Entering the German-Russo
War, MAGIC, From: Tokyo To: Berlin 15 August 1941 (Purple) #740
Telegram from the Japanese
Ambassador in Washingto to Japan on US Attitudes Toward Japan, MAGIC, From:
Washington (Nomura) To: Tokyo August 16, 1941 Purple (CA) #703
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State on Negotiations with Japan, 17 August 1941
Telegram from Japan
to the Japanese Ambassador in Washington Warning Against the US Using Pacific
Ports to Resupply the Soviets, MAGIC, From: Tokyo To: Washington August 20,
1941 Purple CA #487
President Roosevelt's
Message to Congress on the Atlantic Charter, 21 August 1941
Telegram from Japan
to the Japanese Ambassador in Washington Urging a High Level US-Japanese Conference,
MAGIC, From: Tokyo To: Washington August 26, 1941 Purple CA (Very Urgent) #504
Telegram from Japan
to the Japanese Ambassador in Washington Comparing Petroleum Shipments to the
Soviet Union and the Embargo on Japan, MAGIC, From: Tokyo To: Washington August
26, 1941 Purple #505
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State on US-Japanese Negotiations, 28 August 1941
Memorandum
Regarding a Conversation Between the Secretary of State and the Japanese Ambassador
(Nomura), 28 August 1941
Telegram from the Japanese
Ambassador in Washington, Nomura to Japan on His Conversation With Hull on 28
August, MAGIC, From: Washington. To: Tokyo. 29 August 1941 (Purple-CA) #756
September
Telegram from the Japanese
Ambassador in Batavia (Isizawa) to Japan on Sino-Japanese Relations, MAGIC,
From: Batavia (Isizawa) To: Tokyo September 2, 1941 Purple #902
Memorandum
by the Secretary of State on US-Japanese Negotiations, 3 September 1941
Telegram from the Japanese
Ambassador in Washington (Nomura) to Japan on a US-Japanese Conference, MAGIC,
From: Tokyo. To: Washington. 3 September 1941 (Purple-CA) #524
Telegram from Japan
to the Japanese Ambassador in Washington on a US-Japanese Conference, MAGIC,
From: Tokyo To: Washington September 4, 1941 Purple (CA) #528
Memorandum
by the Ambassador in Japan (Grew), 6 September 1941
Draft
Proposal Handed by the Japanese Ambassador (Nomura) To the Secretary of State
on September 6, 1941
Telegram from the Japanese
Ambassador in Washington (Nomura) to Japan on the Proposed US-Japanese Conference,
MAGIC, From: Washington To: Tokyo 15 September 1941 (Purple) #819
Telegram from the Japanese
Ambassador in Washington (Nomura) to Japan on the Discussions with Hull, MAGIC,
From: Washington (Nomura) To: Tokyo (Gaimudaijin) 17 September, 1941 (Purple-CA)
#823
Document
Handed by the Japanese Minister for Foreign Affairs (Toyoda) to the Ambassador
in Japan (Grew), September 22, 1941
Telegram from the Japanese
Ambassador in Washington (Nomura) to Japan on the Attitudes Toward War in the
US, MAGIC, From: Washington (Nomura) To: Tokyo September 22, 1941 J-19 #839
Memorandum
Regarding a Conversation Between the Secretary of State and the Japanese Ambassador
(Nomura), 23 September 1941
Ambassador Nomura's
Description of His Meeting with Secretary Hull, MAGIC, From: Washington To:
Tokyo 23 September, 1941 (Purple-CA) #842
Telegram from Tokyo
Requesting Information on Pearl Harbor, MAGIC, From: Tokyo (Toyoda) To: Honolulu
September 24, 1941 J-19 #83
Telegram from Tokyo
to Ambassador Nomura on the Japanese Peace Proposal, MAGIC, From: Tokyo To:
Washington September 26, 1941 Purple (CA) #597
Document
Handed by the Japanese Ambassador (Nomura) to the Secretary of State on September
27, 1941
Telegram from Tokyo
to Nomura on the Proposed US-Japanese Conference, MAGIC, From: Tokyo To: Washington
27 September 1941 (Purple-CA) #604
Off-the-record statement
made by Foreign Minister Toyoda to Ambassador Grew, MAGIC, From: Tokyo To: Washington
27 September 1941 (Purple CA) #605
Telegram from Ambassador
Nomura on Different Issues Surrounding the Japanese Peace Proposal, MAGIC, From:
Washington To: Tokyo 27 September 1941 (Purple-CA) #865
Telegram from the Japanese
Foreign Ministry to Ambassador Noumra on the Peace Proposal, MAGIC, From: Tokyo
(Foreign Minister) To: Washington September 28, 1941 Purple (CA) #606
Memorandum
Regarding a Conversation Between the Secretary Of State and the Japanese Ambassador
(Nomura), 29 September 1941
Telegram from Ambassador
Nomura on His Discussion with Secretary Hull, MAGIC, From: Washington To: Tokyo
29 September 1941 (Purple) (CA) #867
Telegram from the Japanese
Embassy in Washington to Tokyo on Difficulties in the Negotiations, MAGIC, From:
Washington. To: Tokyo. 29 September 1941 (Purple) #870
Instructions from Tokyo
on the Peace Negotiations, MAGIC, From: Tokyo To: Washington September 30, 1941
Purple (CA) #614
Telegram from Rome to
Tokyo Noting Italian Coolness Toward Japan's Lack of Support of the Axis, MAGIC,
From: Rome To: Tokyo September 30, 1941 Purple #627
Note from Ambassador
Nomura Regarding a Conversation with US Admiral Stark on the US Position in
China, MAGIC, From: Washington (Nomura) To: Tokyo September 30, 1941 Purple
(CA) #881
October
Telegram from Tokyo
to Washington on the Peace Negotiations and the Domestic Situation in Japan,
MAGIC, From: Tokyo To: Washington 1 October 1941 (Purple—CA) #618
Telegram from Berlin
to Tokyo Outlining German Dissatisfaction With Japanese Support, MAGIC, From:
Berlin To: Tokyo 1 October 1941 (Purple) #1198
Memorandum
Regarding a Conversation Between the Secretary Of State and the Japanese Ambassador
(Nomura), 2 October 1941
Oral
Statement Handed by the Secretary of State to the Japanese Ambassador (Nomura),
2 October 1941
Telegram from Tokyo
to Washington on the Japanese Domestic Political Situation, MAGIC, From: Tokyo
To: Washington October 2, 1941 (Purple—CA) #625
Ambassador Nomura's
Description of His Meeting with Secretary Hull, MAGIC, From: Washington (Nomura)
To: Tokyo October 2, 1941 (Purple-CA) #889
FRANKLIN
D. ROOSEVELT'S BROADCAST ON "THE COMMUNITY MOBILIZATION OF HUMAN NEEDS",
Washington, D. C., October 3, 1941
Telegram from Tokyo
to Washington Describing the British View of the Peace Negotiations, MAGIC,
From: Tokyo To: Washington 3 October 1941 (Purple--CA) #627
Telegram from Tokyo
to Washington Describing British Ambassador Craigie's View of the Importance
of the Peace Negotiations, MAGIC, From: Tokyo To Washington 3 October 1941 (Purple-CA)
#628
Note from Ambassador
Nomura Regarding the US Position in the Negotiations, MAGIC, From: Washington
(Nomura) To: Tokyo 3 October 1941 (Purple-CA) #894
Telegram From Tokyo
(Toyoda) to Washington on the Peace Negotiations, MAGIC, From: Tokyo (Toyoda)
To: Washington October 4, 1941 Purple (CA) #637
FRANKLIN
D. ROOSEVELT'S LETTER TO THE AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR CONVENTION, Seattle,
October 7, 1941
Telegram from Tokyo
to Washington Regarding a Discussion with Ambassador Grew and the US Proposal
of 2 October, MAGIC, From: Tokyo To: Washington 7 October 1941 (Purple-CA) #643
LETTER FROM
PRESIDENT FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT TO PREMIER JOSEPH STALIN, October 8, 1941
Telegram from the Japanese
Foreign Minister Discussing the "Encirclement" Strategy of the US
and Britain, MAGIC, From: Tokyo (Foreign Minister) To: Washington October 8,
1941 Purple (CA) Message to Berlin #873
Ambassador Nomura's
Views on the American Position in the Peace Negotiations, MAGIC, From: Washington
(Nomura) To: Tokyo October 8, 1941 Purple #907
FRANKLIN
D. ROOSEVELT'S MESSAGE TO CONGRESS URGING THE ARMING OF AMERICAN FLAG SHIPS
ENGAGED IN FOREIGN COMMERCE, October 9, 1941
Ambassador Nomura's
Views on his Recent Meeting with Secretary Hull, MAGIC, From: Washington. To:
Tokyo. 9 October 1941 (Purple-CA) #915
Ambassador Nomura's
Notes on Further Discussions with American Officials, MAGIC, From: Washington
(Nomura) To: Tokyo 9 October 1941 (Purple) #917
Telegram from the Japanese
Ministry (Toyoda) Berating Ambassador Noruma on the Slowness of the Negotiations,
MAGIC, From: Tokyo (Toyoda) To: Washington October 10, 1941. Purple (CA) #650
Telegram from Noruma
on the US Position in the Negotiations, MAGIC, From: Washington (Nomura) To:
Tokyo October 10, 1941 Purple (CA) #923
Telegram from Toyoda
Describing His Meeting with US Ambassador Grew, MAGIC, From: Tokyo (Toyoda)
To: Washington October 12, 1941 Purple (CA) # 54
Telegram from Tokyo
to Washington on Clarifications of the US Position, MAGIC, From: Tokyo To: Washington
13 October 1941 (Purple) (CA) #658
Telegram from Tokyo
Identifying the Coded Phrases to Be Used in Telephone Conversations, MAGIC,
From: Tokyo To: Washington 13 October 1941 (Purple-CA) #662
Telegram from the Japanese
Embassy in Washington to Tokyo on the Meeting with Sumner Welles, MAGIC, From:
Washington To: Tokyo 13 October 1941 (Purple-CA) #939
Telegram from Nomura
on the Welles Meeting, MAGIC, From: Washington (Nomura) To: Tokyo 13 October
1941 (Purple) #941
Telegram from Tokyo
with Further Instructions on the Negotiations, MAGIC, From: Tokyo To: Washington
15 October 1941 (Purple-CA) #667
Telegram from Ambassador
Nomura Indicating Pressure from the Japanese Military to Make No Concessions
on Evacuating Troops From China, MAGIC, From: Washington (Nomura) To: Tokyo
15 October 1941 (Purple) #950
Telegram from Japan
(Toyoda) Indicating Pressure from Germany and Italy for Japan to Take a Stronger
Position Against the US, MAGIC, From: Tokyo (Toyoda) To: Washington October
16, 1941 Purple (CA) #671
Statement by the Japanese
Government Warning the US Against Further Deterioration of German-American Relations,
MAGIC, From: Tokyo To: Washington October 16, 1941 Purple (English Text) #672
Ambassador Nomura's
Description of a Discussion Between Teraskai and Admiral Turner on the Role
of the Japanese Military in Japanese Politics, MAGIC, From: Washington (Nomura)
To: Tokyo October 16, 1941 Purple #959
Ambassador Nomura's
Description of a Meeting Between Wakasugi, Welles, and Hull, MAGIC, From: Washington
(Nomura) To: Tokyo October 16, 1941 Purple #962
Note from Tokyo Informing
the Japanese Embassy in Washington of the Resignation of the Japanese Cabinet,
MAGIC, From: Tokyo To: Washington 17 October 1941 (Purple—CA) #682
Ambassador Nomura's
Notes on the Meeting Between Wakasugi, Welles, and Hull, MAGIC, From: Washington
(Nomura) To: Tokyo 17 October 1941 (Purple) #966
Ambassador Nomura Offering
his Resignation, MAGIC, From: Washington (Nomura) To: Tokyo October 18, 1941
CA
Telegram from Ambassador
Nomura Asserting thatan Agreement With the US was Unlikely, MAGIC, From: Washington
(Nomura) To: Tokyo October 20, 1941 Purple (CA)
Statement
by the Secretary of State Before the Committee on Foreign Relations, United
States Senate, October 21, 1941
Telegram from Tokyo
to the Japanese Embassy in Washington on the Effects of the Changed Cabinet
on the Peace Negotiations, MAGIC, From: Tokyo To: Washington 21 October 1941
(Purple-CA) #698
Ambassador Nomura Again
Asks to Resign, MAGIC, From: Washington (Nomura) To: Tokyo October 22, 1941
Purple (CA)
Telegram from Tokyo
Rejecting Nomura's Resignation, MAGIC, From: Tokyo To: Washington 23 October
1941 (Purple---CA) Unnumbered
Ambassador Nomura Describing
the Meeting Between Waksugi and Welles, MAGIC, From: Washington (Nomura) To:
Tokyo Octo