HAILE SELASSIE. 1892 – 1975. EMPEROR OF ETHIOPIACHAPTER XXIV.WAR
Haile
Selassie's Speech to his Soldiers.
“It is better to die free than to live as slaves. Soldiers,
follow the example of your warrior ancestors. Young and old, unite to fight the
invader. Your sovereign will be among you. He will not hesitate to shed his
blood if necessary for Ethiopia and her independence. For forty years Italy has
cherished the desire to conquer Ethiopia. We were resolved to safeguard our honour, but we consider that a Government does not degrade
itself by submitting to a ruling pronounced by an impartial and qualified
international body. We therefore solemnly declared that Ethiopia would bow
immediately and completely to any ruling against her if she were found at
fault. Right up to the last moment we shall persist in our efforts for peace.
If our repeated endeavours and goodwill fail, our
conscience will be pure. God will defend the just cause of our country.”
In
the preceding chapters the stage has been slowly set for the last act. Either
Ethiopia will emerge from the conflict a free and strong nation—or she will go
under fighting, a long drawn out agony of guerilla warfare, with its records of
ambush and capture, disease and starvation, to underline the-irony of the term
“Italian civilisation.” .
It was on
November 24th, 1934, that a telephone call informed the Emperor that an
“incident” had occurred at Ual-Ual in the direction
of the Somaliland border. No blood had been shed, but an Italian outpost had
behaved in most insulting fashion to a Border Commission composed of Ethiopian
chiefs and British officers, who were examining the state of affairs along the
frontier for the purpose of clearing up certain difficulties arising from the
movements of nomad tribes. Later in the day a message from the British
representative at the capital enquired if the Emperor had any news of the
trouble.
It was some
time before the full account of what had happened was available. The facts were
these.
The Commission
had reached Ual-Ual on November 23rd, and had wished
to make use of the wells. There were two British officers, several Ethiopian
officials and an escort of about five hundred troops.
It must be emphasised that it was not the Italian frontier in which
the Commission were interested. They did not realise until they saw the Italian flag flying on a defensive post ahead of the line of
wells that they were near any territory which the Italians might consider
theirs. Their work concerned the British Somaliland boundary to the north-east;
and in any case the maps which the Commission were using showed Ual-Ual to be at least sixty miles within the boundary of
Ethiopia.
The British
Commissioners were astonished when the Italian Somali troops (about two hundred
and fifty in number and under a native sergeant) showed themselves hostile;
but the Abyssinians were in much greater strength and the Somalis at length
retreated beyond the wells.
This is an
important point since it shows that when they were in vastly superior strength
the Ethiopian officers were able to restrain their men. Some days later, by
which time the Italians had brought up aeroplanes and
tanks, it is alleged that the Ethiopians deliberately attacked them—though
they were now, if not outnumbered, obviously hopelessly outclassed. To return
to the actual course of events. The Englishmen protested to the Italians
against this interference; what followed is best seen in the account of the
Commission.
(10) ‘In view of the urgent representations of the
two Commissioners, Captain Cimmaruta was finally
prevailed upon to draw up a letter acknowledging receipt of the protest of
November 23rd, 1934. At the same time he proposed a provisional arrangement,
pending his Government’s reply, to prevent any incident from occuring between the Abyssinian escort and his “banda.” The two Commissioners replied that they were
prepared, subject to the fullest reservations, to study his proposal on the
spot with him. The Commission and Captain Cimmaruta proceeded there and then to th place where the
Abyssinian escort and the “banda” were facing one
another.
(11) ‘Although, in form, Captain Cimmaruta’s proposal appeared to be sincere and opportune,
it became perfectly clear to the Abyssinian Mission, during the investigation
on the spot, that the de facto situation might create an undesirable precedent
as regards Italian territorial claims. This was demonstrated by the uncompromising
attitude of Captain Cimmaruta, who wished to indicate
the position of the two opposing lines by marking tree trunks and affixing his
signature. He invited the Abyssinian and British Commissioners to do the same.
The two Commissioners considered Captain Cimmaruta’s request inadmissible.
(12) ‘Captain Cimmaruta refused to comply with the Abyssinian Mission’s request that the line of the
Italian “banda” should be withdrawn a few metres so that the water of a well close at hand might be
used for the Commission’s requirements. He promised, however, that he would
permit the Commission to draw as much water as it required from any well
selected behind the line of his “banda.” His
permission would be given once and for all. This offer being calculated in the
circumstances to wound the Abyssinian national pride, the Abyssinian Mission
simply declined what, in Captain Cimmaruta’s eyes,
appeared to be an offer. In order, however, not to embitter the situation, the
Mission proceeded ’ with the examination of the Cimmaruta proposal in regard to the provisional separating-line.
(13) ‘The British Mission made every effojt to arrive at an equitable solution, but was
constantly thwarted by the unconciliatory and
disobliging attitude of the Italian officer, which may be judged from his
remarks, several times repeated; “Take it or leave it,” “Just as you please,”
and by the threat that in case of refusal he would send for “several hundred
soldiers” (not “banda”).
(14) ‘Just at that moment, about 4 p.m., two
Italian military aeroplanes, Nos. S.O.4 and S.O.7,
appeared in the south and began to dive very low, first over the members of the
Commission, who were busy at that moment with Captain Cimmaruta,
and then over the camps of the two Missions, where the national flags were
flying, and over the camp of the Abyssinian escort. This operation was repeated
several times. During its last series of dives, a member of the crew of aeroplane S.O.4 was seen training a machine-gun on the
members of the Commission, their staff and their escort, who were with Captain Cimmaruta and in their respective camps. This was observed
in particular by Fitaurari Tessama, Lidj Zaude, Fitaurari Shiffera, Fitaurari Alemayehu, Ato Mersie-Hazen, among the
Abyssinians, and by Mr. Curie, Captain Taylor, Lieutenant Collingwood and
Corporal Griffiths among the British.
‘The British Commissioner thereupon expressed
to Captain Cimmaruta his great indignation at this
provocative demonstration and announced that in order not to complicate the
situation for the Abyssinian Government, the British Mission would retire to
Ado as soon as possible. The Abyssinian Mission also expressed its intense
indignation, pointing out that such a procedure on the part of the agents of a
Government with which Abyssinia had concluded a Treaty of Friendship did not
appear to be in keeping with international usage.’
The reason for
the British officers and their party retiring had best be explained in full,
since it has often been questioned, for it is not the tradition of the British
to retire in the face of possible trouble. The fact was that Captain Taylor,
Mr. Curie and their companions thought that the Italian Commander might be
suffering from an attack of nerves and could not credit that his attitude was
part of definite official intention to force a quarrel. The tropics produce
strange effects in white men and it is said that the British believed that this
explained the whole affair, though the action of the aeroplane pilots showed more than normal Italian irresponsibility.
Were British
casualties to result under such circumstances a comparatively unimportant
error of judgment on the part of an overwrought officer might be magnified into
an international imbroglio to which there was no seeing the end. Besides, the
Commissioners were the guests of the Ethiopians, and it was the duty of the
latter as hosts to see that their guests were not insulted. Rather than
embarrass the Ethiopians by remaining in so awkward a situation the British
showed their good sense by getting out of the way. The Abyssinian forces did
not retreat because to have done so might have enraged the local population
who, on seeing the forces sent to protect them apparently abandoning the task,
would probably have taken matters into their own hands. Any subsequent fighting
might easily have imperilled the safety of the
Commission.
This was
unofficially explained to the Emperor who perfectly appreciated the correctness
of the British Commissioner’s conduct. But before this was done news came that
fighting had begun.
The Italians
had the best of it. Their casualties were thirty killed and twice that number
wounded. The Abyssinians had one hundred and seven dead and forty- five
wounded. The figures are instructive—an Italian hit meant a death twice in
three times. Abyssinian hits killed only once in three.
As to the
responsibility for the firing of the first shot there can rarely have been a
case in which the accounts of the disputants were more directly at variance.
The Italians say that the Abyssinians paraded along the line of the native
Somali troops shouting insults and “executing provocative fantasias,” and that
early on December 5th they attacked the Italian pickets. The report which
reached the Emperor said that the Somalis ambushed a party of Ethiopians sent
for water. This accords well with the scene of the disturbance and the observed
habits of the Somalis.
Needless to say
the Ethiopians were completely overwhelmed by the modern equipment of the
Italian troops; but they did not retreat in disorder, some detachments showing
amazing nonchalance under withering fire. The enemy then bombed the line of
retreat, and three days later, when all possible danger to the invader was
passed, bombed the defenceless town of Ado which the
British Commission had only just quitted and where their baggage still
remained. And three weeks later, by way of demonstration, there was a further
and utterly unprovoked air raid upon Gerlogubi.
The Emperor
consulted with his ministers on receipt of the news and wrote to the Italian
Government on December 6th, asking for arbitration as provided for by the 1928
treaty of friendship between the two nations. Nothing could have been more
correct and objective than the Emperor’s attitude. The Italians, however,
refused to receive the Ethiopian envoy and replied in the following terms:
1. “The incident of December 5th occurred in
such clear and manifest circumstances that there can be no doubt of its nature;
viz, that it consisted of a sudden and unprovoked attack by Abyssinians on an
Italian outpost.
2. “The Abyssinian Government asks that the
case be submitted to arbitral procedure. The Italian Government does not see
what question could be submitted to this procedure.
3. “Accordingly, the Italian Government must
insist that the reparations and apologies due to it as a consequence of these
events be made as soon as possible.”
“It is 1914
over again,” said an Ethiopian merchant to a British resident, “and we are
Serbia.”
At this stage,
however, the rest of the world cared nothing about an obscure frontier incident
in a remote part of Africa, the general impression in diplomatic circles in
Europe being that Signor Mussolini was, as usual, acting the part of the
“strong man,” and that provided he were allowed to occupy the stage in that
role, he would not, as one official remarked, “throw any coconuts at the
audience.”
But those in
touch with the situation at the British Foreign Office noted two things. First,
that the clash at Ual-Ual had been premeditated on
the part of the Italians, since more than two years previously the commander of
the troops in that region had, in a letter to the British Administration,
implied a claim to the disputed wells.
(The British,
extremely puzzled by this apparently quite irresponsible implication, refused
to reply.) Secondly, the Italians were moving troops both in Somaliland and
Italy in a manner quite out of proportion to the apparent issues involved.
The Emperor of
Ethiopia was approached and urged to exercise the greatest possible restraint
over his forces. To show good faith he ordered all frontier patrols to
withdraw.
Late in
December, however, there was brought to the attention of the Emperor an article
in the Italian periodical Forze Armate which seriously alarmed him. Knowing that the
whole press of Italy was under such strict control that this article could
hardly have appeared without official sanction, both Haile Selassie and his
immediate advisers were troubled to find that it outlined a claim so fantastic
that were it to be maintained there was no possibility of avoiding conflict.
In the treaty
of 1908 the Italian Somaliland boundary is discussed as follows:
“ From the Webi Schebeli the frontier
proceeds northeast following the line agreed on in 1897. All the territory
belonging to the tribes towards the coast shall remain dependent on Italy; all
the territory of Ogaden and all that of the tribes
towards Ogaden shall remain Abyssinian.”
(The Webi Schebeli is the principal
river of that district. It does not reach the sea, but the Italians think it
might be made the basis of extensive irrigation.)
Now, as has
been shown, the tribes involved move at certain seasons, and therefore, some
two or thcee years after the signing of the treaty,
the Italians sent General Citerni to clear the matter
up. It was almost precisely the same problem as that which Rennell Rodd had
dealt with so efficiently, but the Italians never managed to straighten things
out.
The article in Forze Armate stated that the
Ethiopians had proved so “intolerant, hostile and insulting” that the Italian
mission had been compelled to withdraw. The report of Ethiopians concerned was
to the effect that when they refused to allow frontier landmarks to be erected
quite arbitrarily General Citerni broke off
negotiations.
The article
(which was published in two parts) continued that in the case of nomad tribes
normally under Italian protection, the treaty conveyed jurisdiction to Italy
wherever these tribes moved. This was called “frontier delimitation based on
ethnic criteria,” and was an entirely novel proposition in international
relations. But there was worse to follow—for finally, as if aware of the
unsatisfactory nature of the arguments already advanced the journal played one
last card, a trump of the most peculiar kind.
In 1885 the
Sultan of Obbia concluded a treaty with the German
East Africa Company by which rights were given extending over an area
“twenty-five days’ march inland.” When in 1889 by a series of treaties with the
various Somali Sultans, Menelek, Britain and the Sultan of Zanzibar, Italy was
given her sphere of influence (which she confirmed in 1905 by purchasing the Benadir ports for .£144,000 from the Sultan of
Zanzibar)—these rights granted in 1885 became, so Forze Armate argued, vested in Italy forthwith. That Italy
could claim a hinterland frontier at twenty-five days’ march inland on the
strength of a trading agreement with a Sultan of Obbia was perhaps the most fantastic claim that any country has ever made in
territorial matters. It might well have been held to bring half Ethiopia under
Italian rule. The Sultan wras selling
something he had no right to sell— unless he considered a day’s march to be in
the neighbourhood of seven or eight miles: and even
then his jurisdiction was extremely doubtful.
This article,
so hopelessly wrongheaded, so wilful in its defiance
of common-sense, produced a profound impression on the Emperor. From that
moment, while determined to permit not the slightest act of provocation on the
part of his men, he was convinced that he would shortly be compelled to fight
for the independence of his country.
There were
several points of view in the Emperor’s Council. One was that an. immediate
attack before the Italians could bring up reinforcements was the best course.
From a military point of view this was allowable. The Italian attitude, and the
constant reinforcement of the Somaliland troops, together with the construction
of military roads, pointed to definitely hostile intentions and constituted
acts of war.
Nor would an
attack have been a breach of the League Covenant, for the Italians were clearly
the aggressors in that they had refused arbitration. But it had been plain to
all the signatories of the Covenant that the question of what constituted
aggression was the one weak point in the scheme and would inevitably lead to
all sorts of subtle distinctions and evasions. When, as in the present
situation, the borderline between two nations was not strictly delimited, there
was obviously splendid scope for special pleading. The policy of attack, which
the Emperor never for one moment considered, belonged to another age. The
Emperor determined to rely on the League of Nations.
He would have
appealed at once, but it was suggested to him through diplomatic channels that
the effect of this might be to magnify the importance of what, after all, might
prove a very easily arbitrated dispute. He therefore adopted the middle course,
exercising his right under Art. 11, Section 2 of the Covenant, which reads:
“It is also
declared to be the friendly right of each member of the League to bring to the
attention of the Assembly or of the Council any circumstance whatever affecting
international relations which threatens to disturb international peace or the
good understanding between nations on which peace depends.”
(Italy had
already committed a breach of the Covenant by refusing arbitration of a dispute
which is made compulsory upon all League members by Art. 12 of the Covenant.)
On December
14th the Emperor notified Geneva by telegraph just as the Council was about to
meet, that a dangerous situation had arisen with Italy, concluding the message:
“In the presence of Italian aggression the Abyssinian Government draws the
Council’s attention to the gravity of the situation.”
Now the League
was faced with a challenge. At once the subtle diplomats began a series of
moves by which they hoped to prevent any action. The Emperor, realising that if he were to rely implicitly upon the
League, he must at once test its quality, decided on January 3rd, 1935, after
Italy had persistently refused any sort of arbitration, to make a definite
appeal.
That same day
Monsieur Laval left for Rome, following which, on January 19th, it was
announced from Geneva that since both of the Governments concerned in the
dispute had agreed to negotiate in the spirit and under the terms of the 1928
Treaty of Friendship between them, the appeal of Ethiopia to the League would
be postponed until the following session in May.
Now it is
important that Europeans understand how this situation appears to Ethiopia. The
average educated inhabitant of Addis Ababa is a keen student of European news
and draws very acute conclusions from what he reads. To him the facts appear in
this light:
First
Italy refuses to submit her claims to arbitration. She has therefore broken the
Covenant and Ethiopia appeals to the League.
The Prime
Minister of France consults hurriedly with the Duce of Italy.
Italy is
reported by the League of Nations to be willing to negotiate.
On the strength
of this statement the League postpones consideration of Ethiopia’s appeal.
Meanwhile, the
Paris newspapers are full of articles urging Italy on to a war of conquest in
the name of civilisation, and it soon appears that
Italy is absolutely unwilling to agree to arbitration on any terms which
Ethiopia could possibly accept... The mobilisation of Italian forces continues steadily. From this sequence of events the Emperor
drew one definite conclusion.
“Once again we
are dealing with treachery,” he told his Council. “There is a bargain between
France and Italy. The promise which the Italians have made to arbitrate
concerning the trouble at Ual-Ual is not sincere.
They are wasting time deliberately because their forces are not yet ready for
an advance. The rains will soon begin. During the whole of the rainy season our
enemies will prepare. In the October of this year the attack will come.”
This
astonishingly acute analysis was borne out in every detail. Looking back on the
series of events which led up to the attack on Adowa, which was hailed as so
great a victory by the Italians, the student can see that this was merely the
final move in a well-thought-out program e to which Mussolini adhered without
once wavering, keeping up a pretence of negotiation
in the meantime to quiet British opinion and to provide the League with an
excuse for continued inactivity.
But to return
to the events of January, 1935. On the 20th of that month there came serious
news. A party of Abyssinian raiders on the edge of French Somaliland came into
contact with a French patrol which was wiped out completely, the casualities including a French officer of a colonial
regiment.
The Emperor was
aghast when the report was placed before him; he was also puzzled. Having
carefully scrutinised such details as were available
he called for his Minister of War (a very capable man) and went into the matter
with all the quiet thoroughness of his character.
“We must find
out what the raiders were doing,” he said. “That frontier is quiet at most
times. It is strange that this raid should come just at that very moment when
we wished above all things that no such trouble should occur. Send out reliable
men to enquire what is behind this. It is not a matter of slaves or ivory. We
may find that spies are among the border tribes stirring them up.”
Rough justice
was inflicted upon the raiders. Three minor chieftains, believed to have
fostered the trouble though they had not taken part in it, were seized and
questioned. Two of them were found to have Italian money hidden in their huts.
Now there was a
chance that this money might have been the result of honest trading, but in
view of all the circumstances that seemed highly unlikely. The Emperor did not
make any wild charges but he set in motion a vast “comb out” of the frontier
areas. Of just how much Italian money was found there is no record. But the
results of the enquiry were appalling to the Emperor and his advisers. Secret
orders were issued that spying must be met by counter-spying and that the
traffic of corruption must be stopped.
It is hard to
recapture for the English public the feelings with which the inner circle of
advisers waited in Addis Ababa for each day’s news. At this time the dispute
was still presented as a minor affair in the English newspapers. No one in
London really expected war. Permanent officials one and all expressed the
opinion that it would all blow over. But at the centre of the storm sat the Emperor, each day’s reports before him, and he could see
better than any other observer that the enemies of his country were slowly
hemming her in.
Already
Mussolini was talking of Italian East Africa— a name which had not hitherto
appeared upon any map. Marshal de Bono, whose utterances concerning Ethiopia
had been for many years persistently hostile and militarist, was appointed
Governor-General of this newly conceived area. The Duce himself became Minister
for the Colonies and there were huge increases in the appropriations for
Colonial administration.
Ethiopian
observers stationed on the Suez Canal watched the steady influx of Italian
troopships. There could, fortunately, be no concealment, for since the dues
charged by the Canal Company depend on the number of passengers as well as the
tonnage of the vessels which pass through, there were official figures in
existence showing to the last man how many Italian soldiers had been sent to
the Red Sea ports.
Even in the
last months of 1934 there had been a persistent trickle of Italian troops
through the Canal, but now the numbers were increasing to such an extent that
it was clear to everyone that this was more than the mere reinforcement of
border patrols.
Few people realise in Great Britain how the actions of their country’s
rulers have appeared from the Ethiopian point of view. This is perhaps
inevitable; it is, however, most unfortunate since did the mass of English
people realise how weakly and in some ways
discreditably the situation was met by British diplomacy they would probably
express their views concerning those responsible with a force and candour highly disturbing to the calm of high office. The
first shock to the Emperor came when he learned that Great Britain had given a
lead to Europe by stating that in the interests of peace she was prohibiting
the export of arms to either of the disputants.
In view of the
fact that it was known that Italy was amply supplied while Abyssinia was
utterly without means of manufacturing armaments of any sort whatever in the
modern sense of the word, the pretence that the prohibition
was impartial must be classed as one of the most grotesque pieces of humbug of
which civilised diplomacy has ever been guilty. The
Emperor was bitterly indignant when he learned of this decision.
Certain of his
advisers who claimed to be in close touch with British government circles and
to know the mentality of the British nation attempted to cheer their ruler, however.
Their argument in brief was this: Great Britain can be trusted. You can rely on
justice from her. It may be a long while coming but it is very certain in the
end. She has now denied you arms, admittedly a strange way of showing sympathy
to a small and comparatively defenceless nation
confronted by a powerful and militarised aggressor;
but do not despair—the British mind always works strangely in matters such as
these. She is denying you supplies of arms to defend yourself, but by that very
action according to her standards of honour, she
binds herself to defend you. This prohibition of which you are complaining is
the very best thing that could have happened. If Britain is forbidding you
arms it is because she intends to forbid the war. And this she could do singlehanded.
This was an
attractive hope, but it was somewhat damped by the tactics by which Mr. Anthony
Eden tried to arrange for the peaceful settlement of the quarrel. Ethiopia,
according to his suggestion, was to cede to Italy, for the purpose of
satisfying Italian honour, a comparatively
unimportant tract of territory, and in return for this sweet reasonableness was
to receive from Great Britain a corridor leading to the sea at the port of
Zeila not far south of Jibuti but in British Somaliland.
This
proposition was considered in some quarters to be a skilful solution. Actually it was one of the most glorious howlers of which the
nice-mannered young traveller in international
soporifics has ever been guilty. Mussolini, perceiving that Great Britain
hankered after compromise, stiffened his attitude. Haile Selassie replied that whil^ he would be grateful for access to the sea he saw no
reason wjiy he should cede one foot of land to an
aggressor nation when the League of Nations guaranteed the territorial
integrity of its members. But this was not all. There was a howl of rage from
the French who saw in the proposal an attempt, whether deliberate or inadvertent,
to ruin the port of Jibuti by opening a competing port close by. The French are
always a little sensitive about Jibuti, a terrible town indeed, of which it is
universally stated by travellers that they have
managed to make the worst. It is always referred to by those who have sojourned
there as the ‘world’s worst port.’
In England,
too, there was an exhibition of rage. Retired colonels gnashed their teeth in
public at the thought of abandoning one single Somali tribesman now enjoying
British care to the barbarous Abyssinians—though everyone with the least
knowledge of that part of the world was aware that these tribes roamed at will
into all the adjoining territories and would be completely indifferent to any
changes of boundary which could not to any appreciable extent affect their
lives.
A French
diplomat expressed the view to the present writer that in no country but Great
Britain could a Cabinet Minister have survived a blunder so egregious. He would
have been hounded from office, and overwhelmed with ridicule. “But,” he added,
“in Great Britain, though he has made everyone furious, he has probably
increased his reputation. Which since I like him immensely suits me very well.”
The next
incident in which the British Press and also the Government behaved very
queerly from the Ethiopian point of view was in their comments on the
announcement by the Daily Telegraph early in September, 1935, that a mysterious
Mr. Rickett had been granted a large concession to prospect for oil in
Abyssinia. The Emperor was solemnly lectured as to his unethical conduct in
granting such a concession at a time of international tension, as though it
were tacitly agreed in Europe that as his property was already divided in
secret agreements between the great powers it was a breach of good taste or
even worse on his part to dispose of any rights himself. That is the sort of
attitude which infuriates the educated Abyssinian—the tacit assumption that
Ethiopia is not a free agent in the same sense as other nations and must only
act after receiving advice. As the Emperor was quick to state he had the
perfect right in the interests of his country to make concessions to any
responsible applicant.
It is useless
to recapitulate all the diplomatic shifts of the rainy season which was now
drawing to a close. They can all be summed up as consisting of frantic efforts
by Britain and France to bribe, cajole, or as a last resort, bully Italy into
giving up her plans for war. Mussolini goes straight ahead with his military
preparations showing only just sufficient interest in the various suggestions
of the other European Powers to keep up the pretence of negotiation, which suits him well enough, since he is playing for time.
Ethiopia does
not enter into the picture at all except to make an occasional protest of which
no notice is taken. Then, as soon as the rains show signs of ceasing, Mussolini
begins movements of troops which leave no possible shadow of doubt as to his
intentions. Determined to leave no chance for any fresh ‘incident’ to give
Mussolini the opportunity of claiming that Abyssinia had committed an act of aggression
and thus fogging the issue, Haile Selassie ordered all his patrols to withdraw
from the frontiers. This astute move embarrassed Mussolini not at all. He had
got past the point of needing excuses. On October 2nd, coinciding with the mobilisation of millions of civilians throughout Italy, the
Italian troops crossed the border of Ethiopia. Only now did the Emperor order mobilisation, and even as he did so came news of the first
fighting near Adowa.
The steps by
which the dispute had slowly blossomed into a disgraceful war can best be
appreciated in the form of a summary. Comment is superfluous.
THE PROGRESS OF
THE DISPUTE
Nov. 23rd,
1934.—“Incident at Ual-Ual.” Anglo-Abyssinian
Boundary Commission conflict at Ual-Ual.
Dec. 5th,
1934.—Fighting at Ual-Ual between Abyssinian and
Italian soldiery.
Dec. 6th.—Abyssinia
and Italy both protest.
Dec.
14th.—Abyssinia telegraphs the League informing of the gravity of the
situation.
Jan. 3rd,
1935.—Abyssinia makes her first appeal to the League, quoting Article 11 of the
Covenant.
Jan. 29th and
Feb. 2nd.—Further fighting between Italian and Abyssinian forces reported from Aftub, near Ual-Ual.
Feb.
17th.—First Italian troops embark for Eritrea.
Mar. 4th.—A
neutral area is declared around Ual-Ual.
Mar. 19th.—Abyssinia
again appeals to the League, this time under Articles 10 and 15.
Apr. 15th.—Abyssinia withdraws her appeal to await arbitration. May 20th and
25th.—League Council considers appeal, and agreement on Conciliation Commission
is reached.
June
25th.—Mussolini turns down Mr. Anthony Eden’s suggested territorial exchanges,
usually known as the “Zeila” offer. Conciliation Commission sits for first
time.
July 9th.—Conciliation
Commission disagree on terms of reference and postpone further negotiations
indefinitely.
July 31th and
Aug. 3rd.—Meeting of League Council. Conciliation Commission in conjunction
with fifth arbitrator to report settlement before Sept. 1st.
Aug. 16th and
18th.—Conversations in Paris between Italy, France and England.
Aug.
22nd.—British Cabinet hold hurried consultation.
Aug.
28th.—Italian Cabinet meet at Bolzano.
Sept.
yd.—Conciliation Commission, sitting with fifth member, exonerates both sides
of blame for incidents at Ual-Ual.
Sept. 4th.—Italy
officially notifies the League of her complaints.
Sept. 6th.—A
committee of the Five Powers is established.
Sept. 11th.—British
Foreign Minister addresses the League.
Sept.
17th.—Italy declares for “No compromise.”
Sept. 18th.—The
Five-Power Committee makes its first report.
Sept.
20th.—Abyssinia accepts the recommendations of the Five-Power Committee.
Sept.
21st.—Italy rejects all their proposals.
Sept. 23rd.—British Foreign minister in a communication to Mussolini denies British hostility to Italy. Sept. 25th.—A
full report of the findings of the Five-Power Committee is issued.
Sept.
26th.—League Council decides to stand by Article 15 of Covenant. A special
committee of thirteen is appointed.
Sept.
28th.—Italian official communiqué denies any attacks on British interests.
Oct.
2nd.—Civilians are temporarily mobilised throughout
Italy. 50,000 Italian troops march into Abyssinian territory.
Oct. 3rd.—The
Emperor orders Abyssinia to mobilise. Fighting
_breaks out in the Adowa region.
CHAPTER XXV.THE TREACHERY OF HAILE SELASSIE GUGSA
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