The 'Cairo Declaration' was signed at
Cairo, Egypt on
November 27,
1943 by President
Franklin Roosevelt of the
United States, Prime Minister
Winston Churchill of the
United Kingdom, and Generalissimo
Chiang Kai-shek of the
Republic of China [1]. The ''Cairo Communiqué'' was broadcasted through radio on
December 1,
1943 [2].
The Cairo Declaration is cited in Clause Eight (8) of the
Potsdam Declaration, which is referred by the
Japanese Instrument of Surrender.
Summary
While proponents for
Taiwan independence argue that the document is simply a statement of intent and non-binding as it is not signed, the Cairo Declaration still provides important insights into the intentions of the parties that signed the
Potsdam Declaration, the
Japanese Instrument of Surrender, and the
Treaty of Peace between Japan and China. The fact that it is not entered in the official treaty archives of both the United States
[3] and Japan
[4] demonstrates that is not deemed to be a treaty by the involved parties.
The main points of the document are:
★ The Allies resolved to bring unrelenting military pressure against Japan until it agrees to unconditional surrender.
★ Japan should return all the territories stolen from the Republic of China including
Manchuria,
Formosa, and the
Pescadores.
★
Korea shall become free and independent.
References
1. Text of Cairo Declaration in the Japanese National Diet Library
2. Cairo Communiquè received by the radio operators in USA
3. Treaties and Other International Agreements of the United States of America, 1776-1949 III. Multilateral, 1931-1945 (Washington, D. C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1969), Pg 858
4. Nihon Gaiko Nenpyo Narabini Shuyo Bunsho : 1840-1945 vol.2, 1966
See also
★
Cairo Conference
★
Second Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945)
★
Potsdam Declaration (1945)
★
Japanese Instrument of Surrender (1945)
★
Treaty of San Francisco (1951)
★
Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam, U.N. GAOR(1990)
External links
★
'Text of the Constitution and Other Important Documents' in the 'Japanese National Diet Library'