Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The League Of Nations
- Setting up the
league
- The aim of the League of Nations was to bring peace
through preventing wars, encouraging disarmament, and
make the world a better place by improving people's
work conditions and tackling disease
- Its organisation comprised of an assembly, which met once a
year; a council, which met more regularly to consider crises;
a small secretariat to handle the paperwork; a Court of
International Justice; and a number of committees such as
the International Labour Organisation and the Health
Committee to carry out its humanitarian work
- Its main strength was that, because it was set up by the Treaty of
Versailles, anyone who had signed it joined meaning 58
members had joined by the 1930s. To enforce its will it could offer
arbitration through the Court of International Justice
- The main weaknesses were that everybody
hated the Treaty of Versailles; its aims were
overly ambitious; Germany,Russia and the
US were not members; it had no army; its
organisation was cumbersome; and all
decisions had to be anonymous
- Successes and Failures
- The League of nations was
successful in creating a better
world
- It had brought half a million
POWs home
- It had helped Turkish refugees
- It attacked drug smugglers and slave
traders
- It supported measures against
malaria and leprosy
- The League of Nations was
quite successful in stopping
border disputes
- It settled a dispute between
Sweden and Finland over the
Aaland islands
- It stopped a war between
Greece and Bulgaria
- However, when faced with strong
nation who chose to ignore the
league- like Italy in 1923 over Corfu-
It could do nothing
- Manchuria and Abyssinia
- In the early 1930s, two events destroyed people's
belief in the league's ability to stop wars
- The downfall of both situations were
both due to the fact that the league
were too slow to react or made bad
decisions about how to suppress the
aggressor nation
- This served to show that smaller countries could
not expect protection from the League and that
aggressors (such as Hitler) had nothing to stand in
their way
- Manchuria
- By February 1932, India had
invaded and conquered Manchuria
- It took a year for the league to
declare that Japan should leave, at
which point Japan left the league of
Nations
- The league couldn't send an army in and needed
America to back a trade sanction so in the end they did
nothing to stop it
- Abyssinia
- In 1935, Italy invaded Abyssinia
- The Abyssinian emperor went to the
league for help but all they did was
ban the sale of arms which actually
did more harm to Abyssinia
- The league then decided to offer Italy a
part of Abyssinia but they invaded them brutally
anyway
- Far from stopping Italy, Britain and
France tried to make a secret pact to
give Abyssinia to Italy
- The Effects
- It became clear that if a strong nation
decided to ignore the league then there
was nothing it could do
- The league's
delays and
slowness made it
look scared
- The sanctions were shown to
be useless
- Everyone realised that Britain
and France were not prepared to
use force
- The four major powers- Japan, Italy,
Britain, and France- all betrayed the
league
- Smaller countries realised the
league could not and would not
protect them
- Britain and France decided that the
League was useless to stop war,
and followed instead the policy of
appeasement
- Hitler was
encouraged to
move ahead with
his plans