HISTORY OF WORLD WAR I
VIII
JAPAN IN THE WAR
On August 15, 1914, the Empire
of Japan issued an ultimatum to Germany. She demanded the evacuation of
Tsing-tau (eastern China on the Yellow Sea, north north-west of Shanghai), the disarming of the warships there and the handing over of the
territory to Japan for ultimate reversion to China. The time limit for her
reply was set at 12 o'clock, August 24th. To this ultimatum Germany made no
reply, and at 2.30 P. M., August 23d, the German Ambassador was handed his passports
and war was declared.
The reason for the action of
Japan was simple. She was bound by treaty to Great Britain to come to her aid
in any war in which Great Britain might be involved. On August 4th a note was
received from Great Britain requesting Japan to safeguard British shipping in
the Far East. Japan replied that she could not guarantee the safety of British
shipping so long as Germany was in occupation of the Chinese province of
Tsing-tau. She suggested in turn that England agree to allow her to remove this
German menace. The British Government agreed, on the condition that Tsing-tau
be subsequently returned to China.
The Japanese Government in
taking this stand was acting with courage and with loyalty. Toward individual
Germans she entertained no animosity. She had the highest respect for German
scholarship and German military science. She had been sending her young men to
German seats of learning, and had based the reorganization of her army upon the
German military system. But she did not believe that a treaty was a mere
"scrap of paper," and was determined to fulfill her obligations in
the treaty with England.
It seems to have been the
opinion of the highest Japanese military authorities that Germany would win the
war. Japan's statesmen, however, believed that Germany was a menace to both
China and Japan and had lively recollections of her unfriendly attitude in
connection with the Chino-Japanese war and in the period that followed.
Germany had been playing the
same game in China that she had played in the Mediterranean and which had
ultimately brought about the war.
The Chino-Japanese war had
been a great Japanese triumph. One of Japan's greatest victories had been the
capture of Port Arthur, but the joy caused in Japan had not ended before it was
turned into mourning because of German interference. Germany had then compelled
Japan to quit Port Arthur, and to hand over that great fort to Russia so that
she herself might take Kiao-chau without Russia's objection.
Japan had never forgotten or forgiven.
The German seizure of Kiao-chau had led to the Russian occupation of Port
Arthur, the British occupation of Wei-hai-wei and French occupation of
Kwan-chow Bay. The vultures were swooping down on defenseless China. This had
led to the Boxer disturbance of 1910, where again the Kaiser had interfered.
Japan, who recognized that her
interests and safety were closely allied with the preservation of the
territorial integrity of China, had proposed to the powers that she be
permitted to send her troops to the rescue of the beleaguered foreigners, but
this proposition was refused on account of German suspicion of Japan's motives.
Later on, during the Russo-Japanese war, Russia was assisted in many ways by
the German Government.
Furthermore, the popular sympathy
with the Japanese was strongly with the Allies. It was the Kaiser who started
the cry of the "yellow peril," which had deeply hurt Japanese pride.
Yet, even with this strong feeling, it was remarkable that Japan was willing to
ally herself with Russia. She knew very well that after all the greatest danger
to her liberties lay across the Japan Sea. Russian autocracy, with its
militarism, its religious intolerance, its discriminating policy against
foreign interests in commerce and trade, was the natural opponent of liberal
Japan.
The immediate object of Japan
in joining hands with England was to destroy the German menace in the Pacific.
Before she delivered her ultimatum the Germans had been active; ignoring the
rights of Japan while she was still neutral they had captured a Russian steamer
within Japanese jurisdiction, as well as a number of British merchant vessels,
and even a few Japanese ships had been intercepted by German cruisers. This was
the disturbance to general peace in the Far East, which had prompted England to
request Japan's assistance.
Japan, when she entered the
war, was at least twice as strong as when she began the war with Russia. She
had an army of one million men, and a navy double the size of that which she
had possessed when the Treaty of Portsmouth was signed. As soon as war was
declared she proceeded to act. A portion of her fleet was directed against the
German forces in the Pacific, one squadron occupying Jaluit, the seat of
government of the Marshall Islands, on October 3d, but her main forces were
directed against the fortress of Tsing-tau.
The Germans had taken great
pride in Tsing-tau, and had made every effort to make it a model colony as well
as an impregnable fortress. They had built costly water works, fine streets
and fine public buildings. They had been making great preparations for a state
of siege, although it was not expected that they would be able to hold out for
a long time. There were hardly more than five thousand soldiers in the
fortress, and in the harbor but four small gunboats and an Austrian cruiser,
the Kaiserin Elizabeth. As Austria was not at war with Japan the authorization
of Japan was asked for the removal of the Kaiserin Elizabeth to Shanghai, where
she could be interned. The Japanese were favorable to this proposition, but at
the last moment instructions arrived from Vienna directing the Austro-Hungarian
Ambassador to ask for his passports at Tokio and the commander of the Kaiserin
Elizabeth to assist the Germans in the defense of Tsing-tau. The Germans also
received orders to defend their fortress to the very last. A portion of the
German squadron, under Admiral von Spee, had sailed away before the Japanese
attack, one of these being the famous commerce raider, the Emden.
On the 27th of August the
Japanese made their first move by taking possession of some of the small
islands at the mouth of the harbor of Kiao-chau. From these points as bases
they swept the surrounding waters for mines, with such success that during the
whole siege but one vessel of their fleet was injured by a mine. On the 2d of
September they landed troops at the northern base of the peninsula upon which
Tsing-tau was situated, with the object of cutting off the fortress from the
mainland.
The heavy rains which were
customary at that season prevented much action, but airplanes were sent which
dropped bombs upon the wireless station, electric power station and railway
station of Kiao-chau, and upon the ships in the harbor. On September 13th
General Kamio captured the railway station of Kiao-chau which stands at the
head of the bay. This placed him twenty-two miles from Tsing-tau itself. On
September 27th he captured Prince Heinrich Hill giving him a gun position from
which he could attack the inner forts. On the 23d a small British force arrived
from Wei-hai-wei to co-operate with the Japanese.
The combined forces then
advanced until they were only five miles from Tsing-tau. The German warships
were bombarding the Japanese troops fiercely, and were being replied to by the
Japanese squadron in the mouth of the harbor. The great waste of German
ammunition led General Kamio to the opinion that the Germans did not
contemplate a long siege. He then determined on a vigorous assault.
Before the attack was made he
gave the non-combatants an opportunity of leaving, and on the 15th of October a
number of women and children and Chinese were allowed to pass through the
Japanese lines. On October 31st the bombardment began, and the German forts
were gradually silenced. On November 2d the Kaiserin Elizabeth was sunk in the
harbor.
The Allied armies were pushing
their way steadily down, until, on November 6th, their trenches were along the
edge of the last German redoubts. At 6 o'clock on that day white flags were
floating over the central forts and by 7.30 Admiral Waldeck, the German
Governor, had signed the terms of capitulation.
Germany's prize colony on the
continent of Asia had disappeared. The survivors, numbering about three
thousand, were sent to Japan as prisoners of war. Japanese losses were but two
hundred and thirty-six men killed. They had, however, lost one third-class
cruiser, the Takachiho, and several smaller crafts. The whole expedition was a
notable success. It had occupied much less time than either Japan or Germany
had expected, and the news was received in Germany with a universal feeling of
bitterness and chagrin.
After the Japanese capture of
Kiao-chau Japan's assistance to the Allies, while not spectacular, was
extremely important, and its importance increased during the last two years of
the war. Her cruiser squadrons did continuous patrol duty in the Pacific and in
the China Sea and even in the Indian Ocean. She occupied three groups of German
Islands in the South Sea, assisted in driving German raiders from the Pacific,
and by her efficiency permitted a withdrawal of British warships to points
where they could be useful nearer home. She patrolled the Pacific coast of
North and South America, landed marines to quell riots at Singapore, and
finally entered into active service in European waters by sending a destroyer
squadron to the assistance of the Allies in the Mediterranean.
But while the aid of Japan's
navy was important to the Allies, her greatest assistance to the Allied cause
was what she did in supplying Russia with military supplies. The tremendous
struggle carried on by Russia's forces during the first years prevented an easy
German victory, and was only made possible through the assistance of Japan.
Enormous quantities of guns, ammunition, military stores, hospital and Red
Cross supplies, were sent into Russia, with skilled officers and experts to
accompany them.
In the last year of the war
Japan once more came prominently in the public eye in connection with the
effort made by the Allies to protect from the Russian Bolsheviki vast stores of
ammunition which had been landed in ports of Eastern Siberia. She was compelled
to land troops to do this and to preserve order in localities where her
citizens were in danger. Upon the development of the Czecho-Slovak movement in
Eastern Siberia a Japanese force, in association with troops from the United
States and Great Britain, was landed to protect the Czecho-Slovaks from
Bolsheviki treachery. These troops succeeded in their object, and throughout
the latter period of the war kept Eastern Siberia friendly to the Allied cause.
In this campaign there was but little blood shed. The expedition was followed
by the strong sympathy of the allied world which was full of admiration for the
loyalty and courage of the Czecho-Slovaks and their heroic leaders.

|