the entire fabric of international dealings in China
was based. These treaties, with their always-recurring
“most-favoured nation” clause, and their
implication of equal treatment for all Powers alike,
constitute the Public Law of the Far East, just as
much as the Treaties between the Nations constitute
the Public Law of Europe; and any attempt to destroy,
cripple, or limit their scope and function has been
very generally deemed an assault on all the High Contracting
Parties alike. By a thoroughly Machiavellian
piece of reasoning, those who have been responsible
for the framing of recent Japanese policy, have held
it essential to their plan to keep the world chained
to the principle of extraterritoriality and Chinese
Tariff and economic subjection because these things,
imposing as they necessarily do restrictions and limitations
in many fields, leave it free to the Japanese to place
themselves outside and beyond these restrictions and
limitations; and, by means of special zones and secret
encroachments, to extend their influence so widely
that ultimately foreign treaty-ports and foreign interests
may be left isolated and at the mercy of the “Higher
machinery” which their hegemony is installing.
The Chinese themselves, it is hoped, will be gradually
cajoled into acquiescing in this very extraordinary
state of affairs, because being unorganized and split
into suspicious groups, they can be manipulated in
such a way as to offer no effective mass resistance
to the Japanese advance, and in the end may be induced
to accept it as inevitable.
If the reader keeps these great facts carefully in
mind, a new light will dawn on him and the urgency
of the Chinese question will be disclosed. The
Japanese Demands of 1915, instead of being fantastic
and far-fetched, as many have supposed, are shown to
be very intelligently drawn-up, the entire Treaty
position in China having been most exhaustively studied,
and every loophole into the vast region left untouched
by the exterritorialized Powers marked down for invasion.
For Western nations, in spite of exorbitant demands
at certain periods in Chinese history, having mainly
limited themselves to acquiring coastal and communication
privileges, which were desired more for genuine purposes
of trade than for encompassing the destruction of
Chinese autonomy, are to-day in a disadvantageous
position which the Japanese have shown they thoroughly
understand by not only tightening their hold on Manchuria
and Shantung, but by going straight to the root of
the matter and declaring on every possible occasion
that they alone are responsible for the peace and
safety of the Far East,—and this in spite
of the fact that their plan of 1915 was exposed and
partially frustrated. But the chief force behind
the Japanese Foreign Office, it should be noted, is
militarist; and it is a point of honour for the Military
Party to return to the charge in China again and again
until there is definite success or definite failure.