Selkiö Naval Treaty
This article is incomplete because it is pending further input from participants, or it is a work-in-progress by one author. Please comment on this article's talk page to share your input, comments and questions. Note: To contribute to this article, you may need to seek help from the author(s) of this page. |
Ten-Power Treaty | |
---|---|
Type | Arms control |
Context | WSS |
Signed | March 12, 1923 |
Location | Selkiö, Rajamaa |
Effective | September 27, 1923 |
Expiration | 1936 |
Negotiators | |
Signatories | |
Parties |
The 1923 Selkiö Naval Treaty, also known as the Ten-Power Treaty, was a treaty signed by all major parties involved in the War of Serenoran Succession, as well as a few neutral states, which agreed to prevent an arms race by limiting naval construction. It was negotiated at the Selkiö Naval Conference, held in Selkiö, Rajamaa, from December 15, 1922 to March 12, 1923 . The treaty was signed by the governments of Fȳrēþel, Menghe, Sieuxerr, Dayashina, Tír Glas, Rajamaa, New Tyran, Akeniran, Serenoro, and Ostland. It predominantly limited the construction of battleships, battlecruisers, and aircraft carriers by the signatories. Other categories of warships, including cruisers, destroyers, and submarines, were not limited in quantity by the treaty, although a qualitative limit of 12,000 tons displacement was in place for the latter vessel types.
The treaty was concluded on March 12, 1923
, with ratifications being exchanged in Selkiö on September 27, 1923 .Later conferences sought additional limitations of warship building, specifically for cruisers. The push for limiting cruiser proliferation was primarily brought about by escalating tensions at the end of the 1920s, and the terms for the Selkiö Naval Treaty were modified by the Avallone Amendment of 1930Dayashina and Serenoro had openly renounced the treaties, which in turn spurred other signatories to hurriedly abandon the treaty restrictions; This effectively left any further naval arms limitation impossible post 1936 .
. However, by the mid-1930s,Background
In the aftermath of the War of Serenoran Succession, Dayashina possessed the worlds most powerful navy, having been largely unmolested, and in the midst of an arms race which would see Casaterran naval dominance shaken, while vying for dominance over the Helian ocean with Tír Glas.
Negotiations
Terms
Country | Capital ships | Aircraft carriers |
---|---|---|
Dayashina | 453,000 tons | 160,000 tons |
Tír Glas | 453,000 tons | 160,000 tons |
Rajamaa | 394,000 tons | 160,000 tons |
New Tyran | 383,000 tons | 160,000 tons |
Ostland | 324,000 tons | 120,000 tons |
Fȳrēþel | 324,000 tons | 120,000 tons |
Serenoro | 324,000 tons | 120,000 tons |
Menghe | 289,000 tons | 80,000 tons |
Sieuxerr | 232,000 tons | 80,000 tons |
Akeniran | 105,000 tons | 0 tons |
The treaty set stringent controls on the total tonnage and construction of capital ships and aircraft carriers, as well as restrictions on the size of vessels. The tonnage limits defined by the articles of the treaty, those stipulating total tonnage, gave a strength ratio of approximately 6:6:5.5:5.5:4.5:4.5:4.5:4:3:1 for the nations; Dayashina, Tír Glas, Rajamaa, New Tyran, Ostland, Fȳrēþel, Serenoro, Menghe, Sieuxerr, and Akeniran, respectively.
The qualitative limits outlined for each vessel type are as follows:
- Capital ships, battleships and battlecruisers, were limited to 35,000 tons standard displacement and guns of no larger than 14-inch calibre; Except those vessels prescribed on a quantitative per nation basis, which may displace upto 46,000 tons and posses guns of no larger than 16.5-inches in calibre.
- Aircraft carriers were limited to 40,000 tons displacement and heavy guns of no larger than 8-inch calibre, of which not more than 10 may be carried. Each signatory may also not commission any vessel of the type until 1925.
- Cruisers were limited to 12,000 tons displacement and guns of no larger than 8-inch calibre.