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Below is one of our free research papers on the following factors were all equally important for the failure of the league of nations in the 1930s. If the term paper below is not exactly what you're looking for, you can search our essay database for other topics.
In this essay I am going to explain why the league failed in the 1930s. Firstly the self-interest of the leading members didn’t help, the lack of troops and the slow decision making by the league.
My first point is the self-interest of the leading members. The main members were Britain, France, Italy, Japan and later Germany. Italy withdrew in 1937 and Japan and Germany withdrew in 1933 after Hitler became chancellor of Germany and they walked out of the league during a meeting. So this if the permanent council can just walk away from the league then they must have bee doing badly and not working. They also weren’t helping the league when an international affair happened, for example in the Vilna in the 1920s. Where the league asked Britain and France to supply troops to act as a police force, and move the poles out of Lithuania but they saw Poland as a potential alley against Germany in the future so they did not act. This is a good example of the self-leading members being selfish. Also in 1935-36 when Italy invaded Abyssinia the league did not act because Britain and France saw the Italians as potential alleys and if they stopped trading with Italy then Britain would lose 30 000 coal miners whom they couldn’t not afford to lose after the great depression of 1929. So in a way they were being selfish, but they had a pact with Italy called the strsea pact which was vital but unfortunally Italy made a pact with Hitler so it never did help. Also Britain and France made a sec...
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