Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Title Description Keywords Objectives Author Organisation Version Date Copyright 7. Reading - Italy & Abyssinia; Failure of the League M G Callagher Focus Questions 1. What were Italy’s motivations for invading Abyssinia? 2. How did the League of Nations and individual member nations respond to the crisis? 3. How did the invasion ultimately contribute to the collapse of Collective Security? You should increase your awareness that there are many factors for nations to consider when making decisions involving International Relations. Italy after World War I Italy was disappointed at territory gained at the Paris Peace Conference. At the beginning of the war Italy had remained neutral. Italy supported the Allied side in World War I joining in 1915. Italian participation was costly and Italian forces were humiliated at Caporetto. Italy felt cheated at Paris because it did not gain Dalmatia, Fiume or any former German colonies. Political Disruption Party politics in the post-war period were confused and disorderly. The cost of living had increased 500%. Post-war unemployment was high. There were widespread industrial strikes in the north.. The peasants lived in poverty. Left Wing versus Right Wing There was a strong socialist movement throughout Europe which had been inspired by the Russian Bolshevik revolution The Socialists were gaining strength and popularity in Italy Fearful of a takeover, the Government allowed and encouraged opposition rightwing parties to attack and try to eliminate the socialist threat. These confrontations got out of hand with the socialist and fascist (right-wing) political parties brawling with each other in parliament and in the street. Prime Minister Giolitti could do little to prevent these disorders. Fascists Take over Fascism: A Totalitarian state where o The State controls totality of life o The State comes before people & groups o The State is unified in purpose, so it can’t have opposition It is also a strong form of Nationalism. It demands Strong Leadership ie a Dictatorship The National Fascist Party was formed in 1921 and was led by Benito Mussolini. Worsening economic conditions increased party support. The Party gained 22 seats in the elections of 1921. They demanded cabinet (Government) seats. The Prime Minister Giolitti refused. In October 1922, the Fascist Party organised a “March on Rome”. They seized key buildings in the city. No action was taken by the Government to prevent the “March”. After a week Mussolini was invited to form a government. Abyssinian Crisis, 1935-36 <caption>Benito Mussolini</caption> Africa and Empire Much of the world in the 1930s was still governed by European empires. In Africa, only two out of forty states were independent. One of those was the ancient Kingdom of Abyssinia (Ethiopia), ruled by Emperor Haile Selassie. <caption>Emperor Haile Selassie</caption> Italy in Africa Like most European countries in the nineteenth century, Italy had taken part in a “scramble for Africa” – a contest to get as many colonies there as possible. Italy, however, came last in the scramble and gained only some worthless territory – Libya in the north and Eritrea and Somaliland on either side of Abyssinia (Ethiopia). Defeat at Adowa When the Italian army tried to take control of Ethiopia in 1896 it was smashed by Ethiopian forces at the Battle of Adowa. The reputation of the Italian army was ruined when 6000 Italian soldiers were killed. <caption>Northern Africa and Empire</caption> Mussolini and his goal Mussolini had dreams of recreating the ancient Roman Empire. Il Duce (Mussolini) often referred to the Mediterranean Sea as the Mare Nostrum (Roman Lake). Mussolini also wanted revenge for the humiliation of Italian troops in 1896 when the natives had defeated them at Adowa. An invasion of Abyssinia would meet both his objectives. <caption>Roman Empire surrounding the Mediterranean Sea - 200 AD</caption> Invasion of Abyssinia, 1935 Border clash Italian troops crossed the border into Ethiopia (Abyssinia) in December 1934 They clashed with Ethiopian forces, killing 100. Full Scale invasion Mussolini used this as an excuse to fully invade Ethiopia in October 1935. The forces of the Ethiopian Emperor, Haile Selassie, were no match for the modern Italian army which used tanks, aircraft and gas The 1924 Geneva Convention had outlawed the use of gas in warfare. <caption>Map of Italy’s invasion of Abyssinia</caption> Collapse of Collective Security Appeal to the League of Nations Emperor Haile Selassie went to Geneva and appealed to the League of Nations for help. The League swiftly condemned Italy as the aggressor and ordered all members to impose economic sanctions on Italy <caption>Haile Selassie appealing to the League of Nations for help</caption> Haile Selassie’s speech Quoted in the New York Times, 1 July 1936 “In October 1935, Italian troops invade my territory…… In that unequal struggle between a government commanding more than 42,000,000 inhabitants and having at its disposal financial, industrial and technical means which enabled it to create unlimited quantities of the most death-dealing weapons, and on the other hand, a small people of 12,000,000 inhabitants, without arms, without resources and having on its side only the justice of its cause and the promise of the League of Nations, what real assistance was given to Ethiopia by the fifty-two nations who had declared the Rome Government guilty of a breach of the covenant……? I assert that the problem submitted to the Assembly today is much wider than merely a question of settlement of Italian aggression; it is collective security, it is the very existence of the League. Representatives of the world. What reply have I to take back to my people?” Failure of Economic Sanctions This was the first time that the League had imposed economic sanctions on a country and, sadly, they did not work. It took six weeks before sanctions were imposed on 18 November. Three of Italy’s allies refused to take part. The sanctions caused difficulties for Italy but they did not include a ban on oil supplies, the only thing that could have stopped the Italian invasion immediately Why no Oil Sanctions? The United States, the world’s biggest oil supplier at that time, was not a member of the League. Also Britain and France, the League’s leading members, feared that a ban on oil would isolate Mussolini and force him into an alliance with Germany. The British also did not close the Suez Canal, which it controlled, to Italian ships taking military supplies to fight against Ethiopia. Hoare-Laval Plan, December 1935 <caption>Mussolini later said: “if the League had extended sanctions to oil I would have had to withdraw from Abyssinia”</caption> While the League was slowly organising sanctions against Italy, the British and French were following their own line of action. Their aim was to negotiate a peaceful end to the conflict. The Hoare-Laval Plan: Was drawn up by the British and French Foreign Ministers, Simon Hoare and Pierre Laval. In return for an end to the fighting, Italy would gain two large parts of Abyssinia. Supposedly secret, it was leaked to the press. Mussolini agreed to accept the HoareLaval Plan But after it was leaked to the British Press there were huge protests from people who thought that the Plan betrayed Ethiopia. Hoare was forced to resign as Foreign Minister and the plan was dropped. Both sanctions and the Hoare-Laval Plan had failed to stop the Italian army. Ethiopia was defeated in May 1936. The Plan showed the lack of commitment Britain and France had for the League. Italy withdrew from the League of Nations in protest at the sanctions. <caption>Map showing land offered to Italy under the Hoare-Laval Plan. It also shows the access that Italy had through the Suez Canal to carry on their attack</caption> League of Nations Fails The Italian conquest of Ethiopia was a disaster for the League of Nations. It had failed to stop one of its members from invading another. Moreover, the League’s two leading members, Britain and France had privately followed their own line of action while the League was still organising sanctions. The League’s role as a peacekeeping organisation was dealt a huge blow from which it never recovered. The League had already been weakened over the Manchurian incident. It now became inconsequential. Only two countries had offered to fight to save Abyssinia: The USSR and New Zealand. League of Nations Membership Stresa Front Collapses Britain & France were being soft on Mussolini partly due to the recently signed Stresa Front. The Abyssinian campaign contributed significantly to the collapse of the Stresa Front. Popular opinion forced Britain and France to apply limited sanctions This offended Mussolini The sanctions annoyed Mussolini so much that he turned away from his old allies and looked instead for support from Adolf Hitler’s Germany. In the words of the civil service head of the British Foreign Office, the result of the agitation against the Hoare-Laval agreement was, that: “We lost Abyssinia, we lost Austria, we formed the Axis. We made certain of Germany’s next war” Hitler Benefits The alienation of Italy from the Western powers was confirmed and her friendship with Germany begun Italy’s protection of Austria from German acquisition was withdrawn The Germans had encouraged Mussolini’s ambitions in Africa They realised that these ambitions would bring <caption>“The Girls he left behind him” - Low, 10 May 1935</caption> him into conflict with France and Britain The result would be Italy turning to Germany for support In Dec 1935 Hitler seems to have been very worried about the proposed Hoare-Laval pact. He feared that it might lead to a compromise and reconciliation between Italy and the Western powers. His fears were groundless Summary In 1922 Italy had become a Totalitarian State led by the Fascist Dictator Benito Mussolini. Mussolini was motivated to conquer Abyssinia for various reasons including his desire to build an Italian Empire and achieve revenge for a previous defeat. The League of Nation response to the crisis was undermined by the lack of will of more powerful states to adequately sanction Italy. Italy ended up isolated and upset resulting in their leaving the League of Nations and the eventual breaking the Stresa Front The League was undermined by this incident which followed the Manchurian incident, thus making it totally ineffective in its goal to provide “peace for future generations” The main beneficiary was Hitler’s Germany who had split Italy from supporting the collective security interests of France and Britain.