World Disarmament Conference | Summary, Outcome, & Significance | Britannica (original) (raw)
Quick Facts
Formally:
Conference for the Reduction and Limitation of Armaments
World Disarmament Conference, conference convened in Geneva in 1932–34 and attended by delegates of more than 60 countries for the purpose of disarmament. The conference ended without resolution.
Postwar attempts at disarmament
The conference was among the international initiatives that came about as a response to the devastation of World War I. It was widely believed that the enormous increase in armaments undertaken by the great powers of Europe during the immediate prewar period had been not only a consequence, but also in itself a cause, of tension, hostility, and, finally, war.
The war also inspired other general propositions—collective security, arbitration, economic and social cooperation, and open diplomacy—which were manifested in various degrees by the plans drawn up during and after the war. On January 10, 1920, the Treaty of Versailles took force, limiting Germany’s military, and the League of Nations was established that same day to promote international cooperation.
It became accepted League doctrine that increased security was a necessary condition for disarmament and that general disarmament was a necessary condition of security. This double thesis was embodied by the League Assembly of 1923 in a draft treaty of mutual security, which was promptly rejected by all the principal countries except France.
Meanwhile, in the reconstruction of Europe, the question of Germany’s admission to the League assumed great importance. Germany demanded membership as a symbol of its restoration to equality with other great powers, and admission would enable Germany to share in the general management of international affairs, including those arising from the peace treaties. The proposal to admit Germany to the League was supported by the former neutrals as well as those among the former belligerents who had hoped to achieve a new beginning through reconciliation. The latter group also called for the execution without further delay of the provisions for disarmament in the Covenant of the League of Nations. In France, Poland, and other countries that were neighbours of Germany, these sentiments were not absent but were accompanied by deep anxiety lest the military ambitions of the German Empire become uppermost in its successor state, the Weimar Republic. Indeed, the attitude of the powerful right-wing parties in Germany gave substance to these fears. Germany’s neighbours maintained that the security provided by the Covenant was inadequate and that disarmament could be undertaken only after they had received guarantees of prompt and effective support in case a new aggression should take place. (German armaments had been drastically cut by the Versailles treaty, but it was believed that Germany was evading such obligations.)
German membership was eventually effected through the Locarno Pact (October 1925), a group of treaties that elaborated upon a proposal for mutual security by Germany’s foreign minister, Gustav Stresemann. Stresemann had suggested that France, Germany, Britain, and Italy should jointly guarantee the inviolability of the existing Franco-German frontier and also the demilitarization of the Rhineland. The Locarno Pact was interwoven at every point with the institutions of Geneva, and its entry into force was made conditional on Germany’s admission to the League. Stresemann indeed had already been making cautious approaches to the League Council on the subject and had received a friendly reply. All members of the League were now strongly in favour of German membership, and a special meeting of the Assembly was held in March 1926 to pass the necessary resolutions.
Conference at Geneva
After Locarno, it seemed once more that the road to disarmament was clear. The League Council therefore appointed (December 1925) a commission to prepare the way for the conference. Germany, the United States, and the U.S.S.R. agreed to send delegates to this preparatory commission, which for the next five years held many long, difficult, and sometimes stormy meetings. At first, progress was slowed chiefly by disagreements among the victorious powers, but, as the years passed without definite result, the question of German armaments rose more and more into the foreground. The Treaty of Versailles stated that the restrictions it imposed on German armaments were “intended to render possible the initiation of a general limitation.” Stresemann’s own demands, at least in public, were for equality of status based on reduction by the victorious powers, but the alternative—to reach equality by rebuilding Germany’s armed forces—was deeply appealing to the German nation. Stresemann’s death in 1929 and the spectacular advance of the Nazi Party led to a still more complete deadlock. The German demand for rearmament became more threatening. The powers who feared a German attack were the more resolved to keep their superiority in weapons.
When at last the World Disarmament Conference did meet in February 1932, the preparatory work of the commission was neglected, and the question of German equality dominated all others. When Germany failed to achieve satisfaction by the July adjournment, it withdrew from the negotiations. France, Britain, and the United States devised various formulas to break the deadlock, including a No Force Declaration (December 11, 1932), abjuring the use of force to resolve disputes, and a promise by five powers (including Italy) to grant German equality “in a system providing security for all nations.” On the strength of these the Disarmament Conference resumed in February 1933.
By then, however, Adolf Hitler had become chancellor of Germany, and, in the atmosphere of fear and mistrust created by his rise to power, the conference could make little progress. Negotiations were also delayed by a sudden initiative from Italian leader Benito Mussolini in March calling for a pact among Germany, Italy, France, and Britain to grant Germany equality, revise the peace treaties, and establish a four-power directorate to resolve international disputes. Mussolini appears to have wanted to downgrade the League in favour of a Concert of Europe, enhancing Italian prestige and perhaps gaining colonial concessions in return for reassuring the Western powers. The French watered down the plan until the Four-Power Pact signed in Rome on June 7 was a mass of anodyne generalities. Any prospect that the new Nazi regime might be drawn to collective security disappeared on October 14, 1933. Hitler, finding that the Entente powers had proposed to maintain the restrictions of the peace treaty for another four years, seized the occasion to make a spectacular withdrawal from the conference and from the League. From then on Germany was openly rearming. In June 1934 the conference abandoned its efforts altogether, and all prospects of disarmament disappeared.