Foreign Relations of the United States Diplomatic Papers, 1938, The Far East, Volume IV
Foreign Relations of the United States Diplomatic Papers, 1938, The Far East, Volume IV
Editors:
- Matilda F. Axton
- Rogers P. Churchill
- N. O. Sappington
- John G. Reid
- Francis C. Prescott
- Louis E. Gates
- Shirley L. Phillips
General Editor:
- G. Bernard Noble
- E. R. Perkins
- Gustave A. Nuermberger
United States Government Printing Office
Washington
1955
- Undeclared War Between Japan and China (continued from Volume III): (Documents 1–788)
- Japanese interference with American treaty rights and with equality of
commercial opportunity in China (Documents 1–137)
- American interest in Japanese demands affecting the integrity of the
International Settlement at Shanghai (Documents 138–158)
- Naval measures taken by China and Japan along the coasts and in the rivers
of China; effect on American and other shipping (Documents 159–256)
- Settlement by Japan of the case of attack on the U. S. S. Panay, sunk December 12, 1937, in the Yangtze above
Nanking (Documents 257–262)
- Measures taken by the United States for the protection of American lives
and property in China resulting from hostilities between Japan and
China (Documents 263–758)
- Problem of controlling the traffic in opium and other narcotic drugs in
parts of China under Japanese military occupation (Documents 759–769)
- Relief activities on behalf of victims of war conditions in China (Documents 770–775)
- Objection by the Department of State to changing status of board of
trustees administering Boxer Indemnity funds in China (Documents 776–781)
- Concern of the United States respecting restrictions upon a free market in
China and unpaid claims by China due to abnormal conditions (Documents 782–788)
- Japanese interference with American treaty rights and with equality of
commercial opportunity in China (Documents 1–137)
- China
- Japan: (Documents 789–823)
- Political developments in Japan;
increasing trend toward totalitarianism (Documents 789–808)
- Representations to Japanese Government against application to American
citizens of special taxes in Japan for support of hostilities in
China (Documents 809–816)
- Renewal of agreement between the United States and Japan regarding export
of Japanese textiles to the Philippines (Documents 817–823)
- Political developments in Japan;
increasing trend toward totalitarianism (Documents 789–808)
- Index