|
(Part One)
Without
some basic historical knowledge, the subject I am dealing
with would not be understood.
In
Europe, people had heard about China. In the autumn of 1298,
Marco Polo told marvelous tales about an amazing country he
called Cathay. Columbus, an intelligent and intrepid sailor,
was aware of the Greeks’ knowledge about the roundness of
the Earth. His own observations led him to coincide with
those theories. He came up with the plan of reaching the
Far East sailing westward from Europe. But, he calculated
the distance with far too much optimism, for it was several
times greater. Unexpectedly, between the Atlantic and the
Pacific Oceans, this continent loomed up on his route.
Magellan would make the journey conceived by him, even
though he died before reaching Europe. Still, the voyage was
paid with the value of the spices gathered, and the trip
begun with several vessels, out of which only one returned,
was a prelude of future colossal profits.
Since
those days, the world began to change at an accelerated
pace. Old forms of exploitation were repeated again, from
slavery to feudal serfdom; ancient and new religious beliefs
spread over the planet.
From
that fusion of cultures and events, accompanied by technical
advances and scientific discoveries, today’s world was born,
and it could not be understood without a minimum of real
precedents.
International trade, with its advantages and disadvantages,
was imposed by the colonial powers, such as Spain, England
and the other European powers. These, especially England,
soon began to control southwest, south and southeast Asia,
and Indonesia, Australia and New Zealand, forcibly expanding
its rule everywhere. The colonizers were not able to impose
their authority over the gigantic country of China, which
had an ancient culture and fabulous natural and human
resources.
Direct
trade between Europe and China began in the sixteenth
century, after the Portuguese established the commercial
enclave at Goa in India and at Macao in southern China.
Spanish
control in the Philippines facilitated an accelerated
exchange with the great Asian country. The Qin dynasty,
which ruled China, tried to limit this kind of unfavorable
commercial operation with foreign countries as much as
possible. It was allowed only through the port of Canton,
today called Guangzhou. Great Britain and Spain had great
deficits because of the low demand of the enormous Asiatic
country, related to English goods manufactured in the
metropolis, or Spanish products coming from the New World
which were not essential to China. Both of them had begun
to sell opium.
Large-scale opium trade was at first dominated by the Dutch
through Jakarta, Indonesia. The English observed the profits
that were close to 400 percent. Their opium exports which,
in 1730, were 15 tons, grew to 75 in 1773, shipped in crates
weighing 70 kilograms each; with this they bought porcelain,
silks, spices and Chinese tea. Opium, not gold, was the
currency Europe used to acquire Chinese goods.
In the
spring of 1830, faced with the unbridled abuse of the opium
trade in China, Emperor Daoguang ordered Lin Hse Tsu, an
Imperial official, to fight the plague; he ordered the
destruction of 20 thousand crates of opium. Lin Hse Tsu sent
a letter to Queen Victoria asking for respect of
international standards and that she forbid the trade with
toxic drugs.
The
Opium Wars were the English response. The first of them
lasted three years, from 1839 to 1842. The second, with
France joining in, lasted four years, from 1856 to 1860.
They are also known as the Anglo-Chinese Wars.
The
United Kingdom forced China to sign unfair treaties
committing this country to opening up several ports to
foreign trade and handing over Hong Kong. Several countries,
following England’s lead, imposed unequal terms of exchange.
Such
humiliation contributed to the Taiping Rebellion of 1850 to
1864, the Boxer Rebellion of 1899 to 1901 and, finally, the
fall of the Qin Dynasty in 1911 that, for various reasons
–including their weakness in the face of foreign powers– had
become highly unpopular in China.
What
happened with Japan?
This
country with its ancient culture and very hard-working
ethic, like others in the region, resisted “western
civilization” and for more than 200 years –among other
causes because of a chaotic domestic administration– it
remained hermetically sealed to foreign trade.
In
1854, after an earlier exploratory voyage with four
gunboats, a U.S. naval expedition commanded by Commodore
Matthew Perry, threatening to bomb a Japanese town –
defenseless before the modern technology of those vessels–
obliged the shoguns to sign, on behalf of the Emperor, the
Treaty of Kanagawa on March 31, 1854. Thus, the insertion of
capitalist trade and western technology was begun in Japan.
At the time, Europeans were unaware of the Japanese capacity
to develop in that field.
On the
heels of the Yankees, representatives of the Russian Empire
arrived from the Far East, fearful that the U.S., to whom
they later sold Alaska on October 18, 1867, would get a
head-start on them in the trade activities with Japan. Great
Britain and the other European colonizing nations arrived
quickly in the country, with the same intentions.
During
the U.S. intervention in 1862, Perry occupied different
parts of Mexico. At the end of the war, the country lost
more than 50 percent of its territory, precisely those areas
where the greatest oil and gas reserves were to be found,
even though at that time, gold and land to expand into, not
fuel, were the main goals of the conquerors.
The
first China-Japan War was officially declared on August 1,
1894. At the time Japan wanted Korea, a tributary state
subordinated to China. With more developed weaponry and
technology, it defeated Chinese forces in several battles
near the cities of Seoul and Pyongyang. Later military
victories opened their way towards Chinese territory.
In the
month of November in that year, they took Port Arthur, today
Lüshun. In the River Yalu estuary and at the Weihaiwei Naval
Base, surprised by a land attack from the Liaodong
Peninsula, heavy Japanese artillery destroyed the fleet of
the attacked nation.
The
dynasty had to ask for peace. The Treaty of Shimonoseki,
which put an end to the war, was signed in April of 1895.
China was forced to cede Taiwan, the Liaodong Peninsula and
the archipelago of the Pescadores Islands to Japan “in
perpetuity”; China also had to pay a war indemnity of 200
million taels of silver and open up four ports to the
exterior. Russia, France and Germany, defending their
individual interests, obliged Japan to return the Liaodong
Peninsula, paying in exchange another 30 million taels of
silver.
Before
mentioning the second China-Japan War, I should include
another armed episode with a double historical importance;
it took place between 1904 and 1905 and it cannot be
omitted.
After
being inserted into armed civilization and wars for the
partitioning of the world as imposed by the West, Japan,
which had already waged the first war against China as
mentioned above, developed its naval power to such a degree
that it was able to deal a harsh blow to the Russian Empire
which was at the point of prematurely inciting the
revolution programmed by Lenin when he created in Minsk, ten
years prior, the Party which would later unleash the October
Revolution.
On
August 10, 1904, with no advance warning, Japan attacked and
destroyed the Russian Pacific Fleet at Shandong. Czar
Nicholas II of Russia, upset by the attack, ordered the
Baltic Fleet to be mobilized and to set sail for the Far
East. Convoys of colliers were contracted to bring in the
shipments needed by the fleet while it was sailing towards
its distant destination. One of the operations to transfer
coal had to be carried out on the high seas due to
diplomatic pressures.
The
Russians, upon entering south China, sailed towards
Vladivostok, the only available port for the fleet’s
operations. In order to arrive at that point, there were
three routes: the best choice was the Tsushima route; the
other two required navigation to the east of Japan and
increased the risks and the enormous wear and tear on the
vessels and crews. The Japanese admiral had the same
thought: for this option he prepared his plan and located
his ships so that the Japanese Fleet, after making a U-turn,
would have all its vessels, mainly cruisers, passing about 6
thousand meters away from the adversary’s ships, a large
number of battleships. These would be at the reach of the
Japanese cruisers, outfitted with personnel that were
rigorously trained in the use of their cannon. As a result
of the lengthy route, the Russian battleships were
navigating at a speed of only 8 knots as compared with the
16 knot speed of the Japanese vessels.
The
military action is known by the name of Battle of Tsushima.
It took place on May 27th and 28th of
1905.
On the
side of the Russian Empire, 11 battleships and 8 cruisers
took part.
Admiral
of the Fleet: Zinovy Rozhdestvensky.
Losses:
4,380 dead, 5,917 wounded, 21 ships sunk, 7 captured and 6
rendered useless.
The
Admiral of the Russian Fleet was wounded by a shell fragment
that hit him in the skull.
On the
side of the Japanese Empire, 4 battleships and 27 cruisers
took part.
Admiral
of the Fleet: Heichachiro Togo
Losses: 117 dead, 583 wounded and 3 torpedo ships sunk.
The
Baltic Fleet was destroyed. Napoleon would have termed it
“Austerlitz at sea”. Anyone can imagine the deep wound
caused by the dramatic event to traditional Russian pride
and patriotism.
After
the battle, Japan became a much feared naval power, rivaling
Great Britain and Germany and competing with the United
States.
Japan
rehabilitated the concept of the battleship as the principal
weapon in the years to come. They embroiled themselves in
the task of empowering the Imperial Japanese Army. They
requested and paid a British shipbuilder to construct a
special cruiser, with the intent of later reproducing it in
their Japanese shipbuilding yards. Later, they manufactured
battleships that were much better than those of their
contemporaries, both in amour and power.
There
was no other nation on the face of the earth that could come
close to Japanese naval engineering in the 1930’s in the
design of war ships.
That
explains the bold action with which, one day, they attacked
their master and rival, the United States which, through
Commodore Perry, started them off on their path of war.
I shall
continue tomorrow.
Fidel
Castro Ruz
March
30, 2008
7:35
p.m.
Part 2 |