There were three major international
naval conferences in
London, the first in 1908-09, the second in 1930 and the third in 1935. The latter two, together with the
Washington Naval Conference in 1921-22 and the Geneva Conferences (1927 and 1932), resulted in agreements between the major powers on navy vessel numbers, armaments and the rules of engagement in the inter-war period.
First conference
The first conference was a continuation of the debates of the
2nd Hague Conference, with the
United Kingdom hoping for the formation of an International Prize Court. Ten nations sent representatives, the main naval powers of Europe and the
United States and
Japan. The conference met from
December 4, 1908 to
February 26, 1909. The agreements were issued as the
Declaration of London, containing seventy-one articles it restated much existing international maritime law.
The signatories' governments did not all ratify the Declaration and it never went into effect. During the First World War the neutral United States pushed for the major antagonists to respect the treaty, hoping that the good protection in the Declaration for neutral vessels would be enforced.
Second conference
The London conference of
January 21 to
April 22 1930 was concerned with the agreements reached in Washington in 1922 that resulted in the
Washington Naval Treaty. The UK, the USA, France, Italy and Japan attended. The major change was in battleship tonnage, altering the ratio between Britain, the US and Japan from 5:5:3 to 10:10:7, France and Italy excluded themselves from the new ratio agreement. All five agreed to a five-year halt on
capital ship construction, tighter controls on
submarine warfare, and the continuation of limits on
aircraft carriers signed in the
London Naval Treaty. The next meeting was planned for 1935.
Third conference
The December 1935 meeting was held with the treaties having a year to run. It marked the effective collapse of the controls, as Japan withdrew from the agreement after her requests for parity in naval power with the big two were rejected. The remaining powers signed a weak agreement, the
Second London Naval Treaty, on tonnage and the UK, France and the USA agreed a ratio of construction. All five powers were constructing vessels violating the agreements by 1938.
See also
External links