WWII Decisions Online · Stalin faces the Japanese offer
Filter by theme: 18
Filter by location 958
Filter by location:
View full list
13 April 1941
Moscow, USSR
Europe🇷🇺 SUPoliticsStrategy

Stalin faces the Japanese offer

Joseph Stalin, General Secretary of the Communist Party, leader of the USSR

In the spring of 1941, Stalin dreads above all a war on 2 fronts. To the west, the German threat grows, even if he refuses to believe in it fully. To the east, imperial Japan — the USSR's adversary in the bloody border clashes at Khalkhin Gol in 1939 — remains a sword of Damocles over Siberia and the Soviet Far East.

The Japanese foreign minister, , is touring Europe. After passing through Berlin and Rome, he stops in Moscow. Japan, too, has an interest in covering itself: bogged down in China and eyeing the resources of South-East Asia and the Pacific, it does not want to expose itself to a conflict with the USSR at its back.

The interests converge. A neutrality pact would clear the rear of both powers: Stalin could, should the need arise, bring his Siberian divisions back to the west; Tokyo would have its hands free to the south. The points of contention remain — Manchuria, Mongolia, the old rivalry.

In mid-April, the draft agreement is on the table. Stalin must decide whether to seal this pact with an enemy of yesterday.

Moscow, 13 April 1941, leading the USSR: should the eastern flank be secured by a pact with Japan?

View full list

Learn more about this event

📄 Articles Google search 🖼 Images Google Images Videos Google Videos 📍 Map Google Maps
T07-037

Report an error

Saw something wrong on this page? Tell us — we will fix it.

Page reference: