ABSTRACT
The Sino-Japanese crisis of 1931-33 provides effective illustrations of wider themes in British Foreign Policy. It might even be said that the general pattern of opinion in the UK at the time was to be reproduced in subsequent crises. The Manchurian problem and the controversies which it provoked give invaluable clues to an understanding of later developments.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |2 pages
PART ONE: THE FIRST PHASE
part |2 pages
PART TWO: THE SECOND PHASE
part |2 pages
PART FOUR: THE LAST PHASE
part |2 pages
PART SIX: COMMENTARY