1907. The Agreement on General Political Questions (1907), which was signed on July 17 (30) in St. Petersburg by A. P. Iz-vol’skii for Russia and I. Motono for Japan, consisted of two parts, a public convention and a secret treaty that was notpublished until the October Revolution of 1917. In the public convention Japan and Russia promised to respect each other’sterritorial integrity and all rights based on extant treaties.
The public convention also declared that Japan and Russia recognized the independence and integrity of Chinese territory, as well as the principle of equal opportunity in trade and industry in China. However, the secret part of the treaty divided Northeast China (Manchuria) into Russian (northern) and Japanese (southern) spheres of influence. Japan promised not to acquire railroad and telegraph concessions in the Russian zone, and Russia made a reciprocal promise regarding the Japanese zone. According to article 2 of the secret treaty, Russia promised not to obstruct the development of relations between Japan and Korea. According to article 3, Japan recognized the existence of special Russian interests in Outer Mongolia and promised “to refrain from any interference that might prejudice those interests.”
The Agreement of 1907 was intended to guarantee the preservation of the status quo in the Far East for the Entente and link the Entente with the Anglo-Japanese bloc. It protected Russia against the seizure of its Far Eastern possessions by Japan and against Japanese penetration into northern Manchuria, tsarist Russia’s sphere of interest, and it opened the possibility ofa rapprochement between Russia and Japan.
1910. The Agreement of 1910 was signed in St. Petersburg on June 21 (July 4) by A. P. Izvol’skii for Russia and I. Motono forJapan. The agreement was prompted by a proposal presented in 1909 by US Secretary of State Knox for the “commercial neutralization” of the railroad in Manchuria. Directed primarily against the interests of Russia and Japan, Knox’ proposal was intended to facilitate the penetration of American capital into Northeast China. The agreement of 1910, which consisted of open and secret texts, developed the principles of the Russo-Japanese Agreement of 1907. The public agreement stated that the two sides would provide each other with “friendly assistance” in improving their railroad lines in Manchuria, maintain the status quo there, and in the event of a threat to the status quo, confer on measures to preserve it. In the secret agreement Russia and Japan promised not to violate or oppose the consolidation of each other’s “special interests” in the spheres of influence in Manchuria established by the 1907 agreement. Each side promised to refrain from political activity in the other’s sphere of special interests. Both sides promised to confer on joint defensive measures if their interests in Manchuria were threatened. The Agreement of 1910 in fact signified Russia’s approval of the Japanese annexation of Korea, which took place in the same year.
1912. The Russo-Japanese Convention of 1912, a secret document, was signed in St. Petersburg on June 25 (July 8) by S.D. Sazonov for Russia and I. Motono for Japan, with the objective of elaborating the Russo-Japanese agreements of 1907 and 1910. The revolution of 1911 in China and Outer Mongolia’s declaration of its independence from China strengthened Japan’s desire to include Inner Mongolia in its sphere of influence, because Japan feared that Outer Mongolia would annex Inner Mongolia.
In January 1912, Japan proposed the establishment of a new line dividing the Russian and Japanese spheres of influence along the Kalgan-Urga road. Russia rejected this proposal because Sino-Russian trade routes were included in the Japanese sphere. Ultimately, the Russian government’s proposal was accepted: the demarcation line in Manchuria would run from the intersection of the Tuolaho River with the meridian 122°E long, to the watershed between the Moushisha and Haldaitai rivers, and from there along the frontier between Heilungkiang Province and Inner Mongolia to the extreme point ofthe frontier between Inner Mongolia and Outer Mongolia. Inner Mongolia (art. 2) was divided along the Peking meridian intoeastern (Japanese) and western (Russian) spheres of influence. The Convention of 1912 affirmed the obligation of each country not to violate the other’s special interests in its sphere of influence.
1916. The Treaty of 1916, signed in Petrograd on June 20 (July 3) by S. D. Sazonov for Russia and I. Motono for Japan, established a Russo-Japanese alliance and consisted of a public convention and a secret convention that was published only after the October Revolution of 1917. In the public convention each government promised not to participate in any political combinations directed against the other. In the event of a threat to their territorial rights or special interests in the Far East, Japan and Russia were to confer on joint defensive measures. The secret convention reaffirmed previous Russo-Japanese agreements and provided for communication regarding joint measures necessary to prevent a third power hostile to Japan or Russia from establishing political dominance in China. If these measures involved one of the parties in a war with the third power, the other party would provide assistance on the demand of its ally. Without the consent of its ally, neither side would make peace with the third power. However, the treaty stipulated that neither side was obliged to provide military assistance without having secured from its allies cooperation corresponding to the gravity of the impending conflict. (France was Russia’s ally, and Great Britain was Japan’s.) The agreement was concluded for five years.