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162:. The London Conference succeeded where Geneva failed, with the US being permitted a larger number of heavy cruisers than Britain, but Britain being permitted a larger number of light cruisers. Agreement was reached in part because the British and US delegations recognized a greater shared interest and the need to cut government expenditure as a result of the Wall Street Crash of 1929. These events focused minds on the need to reach an agreement.
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Britain, by contrast, was prepared to accept parity with the US in its cruiser fleet, so long as the Royal Navy was able to maintain the very large cruiser force, if necessary of smaller and cheaper ships, which it felt was necessary to protect the long trade routes and imperial commitments of the
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Under the
Washington Treaty, each nation was allowed to build cruisers of up to 10,000 tons displacement carrying 8-inch guns. In practice this had also become a minimum figure, with navies competing to design cruisers of exactly 10,000 tons displacement. The US's negotiating position, on which it
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The
Washington Treaty had defined a ratio of 5:5:3:1.75:1.75 in the strength of capital ships (battleships and battlecruisers) between Britain, the United States, Japan, France, and Italy respectively. The USA sought to use the Geneva conference to extend this ratio to smaller craft, allowing both
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The principal
Japanese concern was to avoid a repetition of the 5:5:3 ratio. The Japanese naval staff felt that a fleet 70% the size of that of the US was the minimum required to win a war against the US. Since the 70% ratio had not been achieved with battleships, it was particularly important to
143:. Britain proposed the reduction of the 10,000-ton and 8-inch limit for newly constructed cruisers. The British estimated they needed 70 cruisers totalling 560,000 tons displacement (i.e. averaging 8,000 tons each), almost twice the total tonnage of the American proposal.
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retain it for cruisers. However, since the
British and American delegations were unable to reach agreement, Japanese objections were not crucial to the failure of the summit.
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issued a call to the Big Five Powers to meet in Geneva to confront the issue of naval rivalries, as a result of discussions about naval arms limitations at
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disarmament meetings. Britain and Japan accepted the invitation, but France and Italy (the other nations which had signed the
Washington Treaty) declined.
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of 300,000 tons, with the
Japanese allowed 180,000 tons. At the same time, the USA wanted to avoid further restrictions on the sizes of individual ships.
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In the end, the participants at the conference failed to reach a binding agreement regarding the distribution of naval tonnage.
78:, in 1927. The aim of the conference was to extend the existing limits on naval construction which had been agreed in the
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The question of limitations on cruiser tonnage was raised again at the London Naval
Conference of 1930, resulting in the
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was unwilling to compromise, was a plan to build 25 heavy cruisers of 10,000 tons displacement (250,000 tons total).
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Szudarek, Krystian Maciej. "The
British government and the naval disarmament conference in Geneva (1927)."
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Baker, A. D. III (1989). "Battlefleets and
Diplomacy: Naval Disarmament Between the Two World Wars".
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Kaigun: Strategy, Tactics and
Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1887-1941
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Treaty Cruisers: The First International Warship Building Competition
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was a conference held to discuss naval arms limitation, held in
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Conference for the Reduction and Limitation of Armaments
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319:, 2nd Ed. Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, 1981.
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30:officers at the conference (from left to right:
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122:Britain and themselves cruisers with a total
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289:The Rise and Fall of British Naval Mastery
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428:Diplomatic conferences in Switzerland
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16:For other conferences in Geneva, see
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317:Sea Power: A Naval History
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222:Evans and Peattie, p.234
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80:Washington Naval Treaty
68:Geneva Naval Conference
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255:Warship International
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402:London Treaty (1936)
387:London Treaty (1930)
333:27.1 (2014): 87–151.
315:Potter, E (Editor).
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160:London Naval Treaty
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88:aircraft carriers
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100:submarines
96:destroyers
267:0043-0374
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154:Impact
72:Geneva
166:Notes
321:ISBN
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