by SumGui » Fri Mar 07, 2008 12:22 pm
phil gollin wrote:SumGui wrote:
Keep in mind this descision was while we were under limitation treaties, which I believe didn't end until 1939. .............
No, this was the year that theBritish, Americans and French lost patience with the Japanese and increased the capital ship limit to 45,000 tons.
The prime movers for this were the US who wanted to counter perceived Japanese "cheating". I can't be dogmatic about their real thoughts, but what they told the British confidentially (both diplomatically and on the naval side) was that they wanted to the 45,000 tons because they wanted to build 12 x 16-inch ships. The British told them they would prefer a limit nearer 40,000 tons (where they thought they could build a well-balanced 9 x 16-inch) but the US were adament about the extra tonnage.
The British "thought" that the reports abouts Japanese monsters were extremely unlikely and it was likely that the actual ships would be in the 42 - 43,000 ton mark.
The British eventually gave up trying to persuade the US not to increase to 45,000 tons but then tried to convince the French (already cheating on the tonnage limit), Germans (already cheating on the tonnage limit) Italians (already cheating on the tonnage limits and Russians (???) to keep the "European" increase down to 40,000 tons, but they all said no - the French even regretting the fact.
.
The tonnage increse of capital ships was in 1938:
Article 25 however gave the right to depart limitations if any other country authorised, constructed or acquired a capital ship, an aircraft carrier or a submarine exceeding treaty limits, if such a departure would be necessary for the national security. For this reason, in 1938 the treaty parties agreed on a new displacement limit of 45,000 tons.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_London_Naval_Treaty
(I have this info in many books in my library, but chose to link to Wikipedia because we can't all read my books right now....)
The tonnage limits I was talking about were limits on Cruiser and CV tonnage - they were not abrogated until 1939.
[quote="phil gollin"][quote="SumGui"]
Keep in mind this descision was while we were under limitation treaties, which I believe didn't end until 1939. .............
[/quote]
No, this was the year that theBritish, Americans and French lost patience with the Japanese and increased the capital ship limit to 45,000 tons.
The prime movers for this were the US who wanted to counter perceived Japanese "cheating". I can't be dogmatic about their real thoughts, but what they told the British confidentially (both diplomatically and on the naval side) was that they wanted to the 45,000 tons because they wanted to build 12 x 16-inch ships. The British told them they would prefer a limit nearer 40,000 tons (where they thought they could build a well-balanced 9 x 16-inch) but the US were adament about the extra tonnage.
The British "thought" that the reports abouts Japanese monsters were extremely unlikely and it was likely that the actual ships would be in the 42 - 43,000 ton mark.
The British eventually gave up trying to persuade the US not to increase to 45,000 tons but then tried to convince the French (already cheating on the tonnage limit), Germans (already cheating on the tonnage limit) Italians (already cheating on the tonnage limits and Russians (???) to keep the "European" increase down to 40,000 tons, but they all said no - the French even regretting the fact.
.[/quote]
The tonnage increse of capital ships was in 1938:
Article 25 however gave the right to depart limitations if any other country authorised, constructed or acquired a capital ship, an aircraft carrier or a submarine exceeding treaty limits, if such a departure would be necessary for the national security. For this reason, in 1938 the treaty parties agreed on a new displacement limit of 45,000 tons.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_London_Naval_Treaty
(I have this info in many books in my library, but chose to link to Wikipedia because we can't all read my books right now....)
The tonnage limits I was talking about were limits on Cruiser and CV tonnage - they were not abrogated until 1939.