By Dr. Richard Pankhurst:-
We saw last week how the League of Nations, faced by Mussolini’s 
invasion of Ethiopia in 1935, branded fascist Italy as the aggressor, 
but imposed only ineffective sanctions. Now read on:
The Hoare-Laval Proposals
The British and French foreign ministries, which also had no desire 
to see the imposition of an oil sanction, strove meanwhile to devise a 
compromise peace which would render it unnecessary to impose one. 
Proposals were duly formulated, after which Hoare went to Paris, on 7 
December, to finalise them. Their terms were then submitted to both Rome
 and Addis Ababa. They were also leaked to the French press, and thus 
almost immediately became known to the entire world.
The Hoare-Laval plan, which from the geographical point of view was 
strikingly reminiscent of the Tripartite Convention of 1906, proposed 
that Ethiopia should cede to Italy more or less all the areas then 
occupied by the Italians, i.e. Tegray and Ogaden, and that Italy should 
be given “economic rights” over most of southern Ethiopia, except the 
very far west, which had earlier been considered a British sphere of 
influence. Ethiopia in return was to be offered an outlet to the sea at 
Asab, and a corridor through the Afar desert leading thereto, i.e. the 
very same arrangement which Ethiopia had found unsatisfactory when 
proposed by Italy seven years earlier, in 1928.
These proposals, which the Emperor described as “a prize offering to 
the aggressors”, led to a storm of indignation, in Britain and to a 
lesser extent throughout the world. Hoare was obliged to resign, and was
 replaced by Anthony Eden. In the general excitement public opinion, 
however, largely forgot about the question of an oil sanction. The 
British and French governments were thus able to continue their 
opposition thereto almost without debate. The policy of the new Foreign 
Secretary, it soon transpired, differed little from that of his 
predecessor. He thus claimed in the House of Commons, on 24 February 
1936, that the limited sanctions then in force would “ultimately have an
 important influence”, and that there was therefore no need to extend 
them to oil, which, he declared, was merely “a sanction like any other”.
 This inane remark carried the day, even though it was regarded with 
incredulity in some opposition quarters. The British liberal newspaper, 
the Manchester Guardian, for example commented, “The half-naked 
Abyssinian meeting a “mechanised” enemy could tell him otherwise”.
“If Great Britain had Closed the Suez Canal”
The British and French Governments remained also unwilling to 
contemplate closing the Suez Canal, which would almost certainly have 
brought the invasion to a halt. This was later recognised by the 
American President, Franklin Roosevelt, who observed, “if Great Britain 
had closed the Suez Canal, Italy would have been balked in respect to 
Abyssinia”.
Failure to impose the oil sanction, or to close the canal, resulted 
in the last analysis from the fact that the British and French 
Governments saw no interest in halting Mussolini’s invasion. They were 
reluctant to see the Duce humiliated, and threatened by rebellion, let 
alone provoked into a hostile show of force, and driven into a closer 
military alliance with his ideological partner Hitler. Hugh Wilson, the 
American representative in Geneva, recalls, “Time and again, I was told 
that sanctions applied to Italy must be such as not to drive that nation
 to desperation, not to push it to a point where it would assault the 
States applying the pressure”.
Initial Resistance
The Ethiopian army, though faced by a much more powerful foe in full 
command of the air, succeeded at the end of 1935 in launching a major 
counter-offensive, aimed at isolating the Italian position at Maqale. 
This operation was carried out by forces under three separate commands: 
On the western flank, Gojjam and Bagemder soldiers commanded by Ras Emru
 Hayla Sellase. In the centre, Ras Kasa, the overall commander of the 
northern front, with his three sons, Asfa Wassan, Abarra, and 
Wandwassan, and Ras Seyum Mangasha, with their men, composed 
respectively of Amharas and Tegrays. On the eastern wing, the soldiers 
of Ras Mulugeta Yeggazu, a veteran of the Adwa war and nominal Minister 
of War. These four main commanders, like their Italian opposite numbers 
at Adwa forty years earlier, had relatively little contact between each 
other. This, however, was not entirely a disadvantage, for the invaders 
broke the Ethiopian code, and were therefore informed as to Ethiopian 
radio and telegraph messages.
A “Black Period” for Fascist Arms
The Ethiopian Christmas Offensive, as it was sometimes called, drove 
the enemy back from the Takkaze River, out of much of the territory De 
Bono had captured. This enabled Ras Emru, the most successful of the 
three principal Rases, to defeat a force of Italian colonial troops at 
the pass of Dambagwina, and advance at several points as far as the 
Eritrean frontier. Some Italian observers described this as a “black 
period” for fascist arms. The invaders, however, threw all their forces 
into the struggle, and made extensive use of artillery, tanks, bombing, 
and, on Emru’s front, mustard gas. The Ethiopian advance was halted, and
 decisively defeated, between 20 and 24 January 1936.
The Italian victory in the above fighting, which came to be called 
the First Battle of Tamben, opened the way for a powerful new fascist 
offensive. This was at first directed against Ras Mulugeta and the 
imperial troops, who were stationed on the natural fortress of Amba 
Aradam, south of Maqal. The Italians employed 170 aeroplanes and 280 
cannon, and at one point dropped no less than forty tons of bombs in 
five hours, besides a vast quantity of mustard gas. Massed artillery 
fire, reminiscent of that of World War I, was also used. Ethiopian 
casualties were considerable, and included the aged Ras himself.
The Italians then turned their assault on Kasa and Seyum, whose 
forces were vastly inferior in numbers, let alone fire-power. The 
defenders inflicted heavy casualties on the enemy, but were fairly 
easily crushed, between 27 and 29 February, in the Second Battle of 
Tamben. The eastern and central Ethiopian fronts had thus both been 
broken, and the two Rases, to escape Italian encirclement, were obliged 
to withdraw precipitously, with what was left of their army, to join the
 Emperor at Qoram, in southern Tegray.
One of the effects of this retreat was that Ras Emru’s army, though 
still undefeated, was obliged to undertake a strategic withdrawal, 
across the Takkaze River, to avoid encirclement. This operation was 
rendered the more difficult by the fact that Dajazmach Ayalaw Berru, the
 ruler of Samen, and some of the Gojjam troops, had been in secret 
contact with the enemy, and were uninterested in continuing the 
struggle. Emru’s retreat, known as the Battle of Shere, took place at 
the end of February and first days of March, and involved some of the 
fiercest fighting of the war. The invaders dropped as much as eighty 
tons of bombs on Emru’s army, set the surrounding countryside on fire 
with incendiary devices, and made extensive use of mustard gas. The Ras 
later recalled that his men held firm against bombs, and put enemy tanks
 out of order with their bare hands, but could do nothing against gas: 
they could not “kill” such rain.
Bombing of the Red Cross
The Royal Italian Air Force was meanwhile also engaged in the 
systematic bombing of British, Swedish, Egyptian and other international
 Red Cross hospitals and ambulances in Ethiopia. Attacks were so severe 
that virtually all foreign personnel were driven from the field. Dr John
 Melly, head of the British Red Cross unit, wrote, on 13April, “This 
isn’t a war – it isn’t even a slaughter – its the torture of tens of 
thousands of defenceless men, women, and children, with bombs and poison
 gas. They’re using gas incessantly, and we’ve treated hundreds of 
cases, including infants in arms”.
 Source: http://www.linkethiopia.org
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