Manchurian Crisis Timeline
Date | Event |
1911-1912 | China experienced the Xinhai Revolution. The revolution ended Chinese imperial rule and deposed Emperor Pu Yi. |
18 September 1931 | Japan orchestrated the Mukden Incident by rigging the Japanese railway with dynamite and blowing it up. This incident was blamed on the Chinese which became a precursor to the Japanese invasion of Manchuria. |
18 September 1931 - 28 February 1932 | Japanese Kwantung Army invaded Manchuria. The invasion lasted over five months. |
16 February 1932 | Japan occupied Manchuria and established the State of Manchukuo with the former Chinese Emperor Pu Yi as its head. |
March 1933 | Japan left the League of Nations following the League's opposition to the Japanese invasion of Manchuria. |
Manchurian Crisis 1931 Summary
The Manchurian Crisis was an artificially instigated operation by the Japanese Kwantung Army in Manchuria in 1931. At the time, the confidence of the Japanese army was at an all-time high, so high in fact that the government in Tokyo rarely dared to challenge the army officials thinking that the army had the means to overthrow even the Japanese government.
Nevertheless, when the Great Depression hit the global economy, even Japan was affected. With over a third of its workforce no unemployed and no serious natural resource to gather, Japan needed new territories from which it could recover from the heavy burden of the Great Depression.
Fig. 1: Pu Yi, the last Emperor of China
The Japanese Kwantung Army organised the Mukden incident. The Japanese themselves sabotaged the Japanese South Manchuria Railway by rigging it with dynamite and blowing it up, though not completely. This was blamed on the Chinese and so the Japanese invasion of Manchuria began.
The League of Nations asked Japan to stop its invasion but these demands were continually ignored. With no one willing to interfere in the conflict Japan occupied Manchuria and on 16 February 1932 established a puppet state of the State of Manchukuo and installed Pu Yi as its leader.
Who was Pu Yi?
Pu Yi was the last Emperor of China and was overthrown during the 1911 Xinhai Revolution, which saw the establishment of the Republic of China. Pu Yi was instilled as the Chief Executive of Manchukuo and was given the new title Datong. Pu Yi believed that ruling Manchukuo was only the beginning and soon he would renew his reign in China. This never happened.
Pu Yi was head of the Qing Dynasty, an ethnically Manchu royal dynasty whose origins lay in Manchuria.
Causes of the Manchurian Crisis
The Need for Manchuria
Following the Great Depression, nations around the world were suffering from the sudden global economic implosion. To keep its economy running, Japan needed new ways to increase exports and limit imports.
Japan's main export was its primary natural resource, silk. Other than silk, Japan had few natural resources. Once the Great Depression eventually reached Japan, not even silk was worth its original price. This happened because people in the United States and several Western European states could no longer afford Japanese silk, which was an expensive textile. The Great Depression brought with it rampant unemployment and, by 1930, Japan lost one-third of its entire workforce.
Fig. 2: The Japanese Empire in 1931, including Japan, the Korean Peninsula and Taiwan
Since 1915, Japan had leased vast territories in Manchuria from China which were used to aid the Japanese economy by mining for natural resources and transporting them back to Japan via Korea using the South Manchuria Railway.
The more you know...
Korea was a territory that was part of the Japanese Empire since 1910, while the South Manchuria Railway was the railway system that went from Manchuria to Korea and was also owned by Japan.
Apart from the woes of the Great Depression, Japan had the Soviet threat from the north to keep in mind. This stemmed from the fact ever since Japan defeated Russia in 1905, Japan had been expecting a revanchist movement from their northern rival.
Revanchism
A policy that aims to reclaim a nation's lost territory
With this in mind, Japan needed Manchuria for two chief reasons:
- To have access to the natural resources of Manchuria;
- To establish a buffer zone between itself and the Soviet Union.
During the First World War, Japan formed entered into an alliance with the Entente and upon the conclusion of the war, was the founding member of the League of Nations. This form of alliance granted Japan the opportunity to expand its sphere of influence in China.
Fig. 3: Japan in red and the territorial gains Japan made in China by 1939 following the Manchurian Crisis
The Mukden Incident
Japan needed a justification to enter and occupy Manchuria. In the end, they opted for a false flag operation that would take place in Mukden, in the north-west of Japanese-occupied Korea.
False flag operation
A planned-out hostile event or action that is designed to look like it was perpetrated by the party that the operation is conducted for.
On 18 September 1931, soldiers of the Japanese Kwantung Army under Lieutenant Suemori Kawamoto sabotaged a section of the South Manchuria Railway. Though the rails were not harmed in a major way (trains were still able to pass over the damaged section), Japan swiftly blamed the Chinese.
Fig. 4: Japanese experts examining the damage caused by the sabotage of the South Manchuria Railway that caused the Invasion of Manchuria
The Mukden incident eventually transformed into a full-scale invasion of Manchuria and the establishment of the new Japanese puppet State of Manchukuo with Pu Yi installed as its head.
Fig. 5: Flag of the State of Manchukuo
Manchurian Crisis League of Nations
The Manchurian crisis proved that the League of Nations had no stopping power nor the ability to stop a crime committed by one state towards another. Japan ultimately left the League of Nations in March 1933.
Fig. 6: Map of the League of Nations describing who joined and left when
There were reasons why the League of Nations did not more forcibly intervene against Japanese aggression. Primarily, it was the age of the Great Depression. No state had the money or the means, or the desire to present itself as a protector in Asia. The closest superpower that could at least theoretically stop Japan was the Soviet Union. However, the Soviet Union joined the League in 1934, by which time Japan had already left the organisation.
The more you know...
Japan was one of the founders of the League of Nations.
Consequences of the Manchurian Crisis
The League's inability to subdue the Japanese presented an opportunity for an emerging European power to wage war in Africa. This was the case for Italy which sought to annex Abyssinia (Ethiopia). Italy's charismatic leader Benito Mussolini had paid close attention to the League's ineptitude to punish Japan. The lack of authority from the League presented itself as an opportunity for Mussolini. In 1935, the Abyssinian Crisis again proved the ineffectiveness of the League of Nations.
Manchurian Crisis - Key takeaways
- Japan too was suffering from the Great Depression.
- Japan needed new resources and new land to mine these resources.
- Japan instigated a false flag operation in Mukden.
- The Japanese Kwantung Army sabotaged the Japanese South Manchuria Railway with dynamite, blew it up and blamed it on China.
- Japan soon attacked, occupied Manchuria and in its place established a puppet state Manchukuo.
- The League of Nations were absolutely inept in trying to resolve this crisis.
References
- Haakon A. Ikonomou, The League of Nations: Perspectives from the Present (2019)
- Mark Gamsa, Manchuria: A Concise History (2020)
- Fig. 1: Pu Yi, Qing dynasty, China, Last emperor. (https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Pu_Yi,_Qing_dynasty,_China,_Last_emperor.jpg#metadata). Author unknown, licenced as public domain
- Fig. 2: Empire-of-Japan-Topographic-Map-大日本帝国の地形図-1918 (https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Empire-of-Japan-Topographic-Map-%E5%A4%A7%E6%97%A5%E6%9C%AC%E5%B8%9D%E5%9B%BD%E3%81%AE%E5%9C%B0%E5%BD%A2%E5%9B%B3-1918.jpg) by Asahi Shimbun, licenced as CC BY-SA 1.0
- FIg. 3: Imperial Japan map 1939 (https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Imperial_Japan_map_1939.svg) by bamse, licenced as CC BY-SA 3.0
- Fig. 4: 193109 mukden incident railway sabotage (https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:193109_mukden_incident_railway_sabotage.jpg). Author unknown, licenced as public domain
- Fig. 5: Flag of Manchukuo (https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Flag_of_Manchukuo.svg) by Urmas, licenced as public domain
- Fig. 6: League of Nations Anachronous Map (https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:League_of_Nations_Anachronous_Map.png) by Reallyjoel, licenced as CC BY-SA 3.0
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