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The Administrative Anatomy of Failure: The League of Nations Disarmament Section, 1919–1925

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 January 2021

Haakon A. Ikonomou*
Affiliation:
Saxo-Instituttet, Københavns Universitet, Att. Haakon A. Ikonomou, Karen Blixens Plads 8, DK-2300 København S

Abstract

This article investigates the creation and workings of the Disarmament Section of the League of Nations Secretariat. It shows that the Disarmament Section was an outlier of the Secretariat: supressed by the Great Powers, it had less autonomy than other parts of the administration, which from an early stage limited its bureaucratic practice to the production of information. This bureaucratic production created unreliable factual foundations for negotiations and unrealistic public expectations. Thus, the article argues that the troubled birth and administrative strangling of the Disarmament Section of the Secretariat should play a significant role in our understanding of the broader collapse of general disarmament. By making this argument, the article breaks new ground by introducing failure as an analytical category to understand the role and practices of international public administrations.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press

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References

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28 The League had greater success with limited efforts at international disarmament: Andrew Webster, ‘Making Disarmament Work: The Implementation of the International Disarmament Provisions in the League of Nations Covenant, 1919–1925’, Diplomacy & Statecraft, 16, 3 (2005), 551–69.

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30 Webster, Strange Allies, 9. This is a criticism Webster levels at much of the state-centric analysis of interwar disarmament.

31 Gram-Skjoldager and Ikonomou, ‘Construction’.

32 Drummond, Memo: Organisation of the Secretariat of the League, 31 May 1919 [Registry Files] R1455, League of Nations Archives, Geneva [henceforth LoNA]; Drummond to Cecil, 05 July 1919, R182, LoNA.

33 Lord Colum Crichton-Stuart “Disarmament”, Undated, R182, LoNA.

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35 Walters to Drummond, 17 July 1919, R182, LoNA; Buxton to Drummond, 18 July 1919, R182, LoNA.

36 Drummond to Hankey, 22 July 1919, R182, LoNA.

37 Walters to Drummond, 17 July 1919, R182, LoNA; Note, Drummond, 21 July 1919, R182, LoNA.

38 Sackville-West to Drummond, 21 June 1919, R184, LoNA; Drummond to Sackville-West, 24 June1919, R184, LoNA.

39 Minutes Directors’ Meeting [henceforth DM], 1 Oct. 1919, 3 Dec. 1919, LoNA.

40 DM, 3 Dec. 1919, LoNA.

41 Drummond to Sackville-West, 16 June 1919, R184, LoNA; Drummond to Hankey, 22 July 1919, R182, LoNA.

42 Webster, ‘Absolutely’, 374.

43 Article 12. Rome Resolutions: Report. On the functions, composition and work of the Secretariat of the PAC, 16 Apr. 1921, R1455, LoNA.

44 ‘Report of Committee No. VI: Armaments’, Records, 1st Assembly, 515-20, 14 Dec. 1920, LoNA.

45 The PAC only spent 52,833,09 Gold Francs of its appropriated 200,000 Gold Francs in 1921 and budgeted with 100,000 Gold Francs in the following year. Budget, 5th Fiscal Period, OJ-3-34-1923, LoNA.

46 Webster ‘Absolutely’ (see footnote 12 for a list of its most important members). See also Andrew Webster, ‘The Transnational Dream: Politicians, Diplomats and Soldiers in the League of Nations’ Pursuit of International Disarmament, 1920–1938’, Contemporary European History, 14, 4 (2005), 493–518, 499; Donaldson, ‘Secret’, 436.

47 C.E./1-27-1921: Minutes, 4th Committee, 2nd Meeting, 19 Nov. 1920, LoNA.

48 Webster, ‘Absolutely’, 376.

49 ‘Consideration of Assembly Resolutions on Reduction of Armaments and Kindred Question’, Report, Bourgeois, Council, Feb. 1921, LoNA.

50 Report, 16 Apr. 1921, R1455, LoNA.

51 Reduction of Armaments: Resolutions adopted by the Assembly, 1 Oct. 1921, LoNA.

52 Drummond to Branting, 29 Sep. 1921, R217, LoNA.

53 By 1923 the PAC-secretaries accounted for 42 per cent of the budgeted spending on salaries, while the chef de section and two MoS absorbed 37,5 per cent. In 1924 the chef and MoS took up 29,3 per cent of salary budget. Estimates based on: Budget, 5th Fiscal Period (1923), OJ-3-34-1923, LoNA; Salaries for 1924 decreased from 168,000 to 141,358 Gold Francs. Based on: Annex to the General Report on Financial Questions. Amendments to the original budget estimates introduced or approved by the Fourth Committee, OJ-3-10-1924, LoNA.

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56 Procès-Verbal: 5th Session, Council. Rome, 14–19 May 1920, 2nd Public Meeting, 19 May 1920, PAC, Bourgeois, LoNA.

57 Drummond, Memorandum: Secretariat of PAC, 11 Apr. 1923, R229, LoNA. In April 1923 the Section consisted of one Chef de Service, one MoS, three military secretaries, one statistics clerk and five assistant secretary-stenographers.

58 Discussions, Réquin and Drummond, Apr.–Sept. 1923, R229, LoNA.

59 Report: PAC to Council, 06 Sept. 1923, R229, LoNA.

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76 AC, 14–15 Nov. 1927, S956, LoNA.

77 AC, 11 June 1930, S957, LoNA.

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89 Webster, ‘Transnational’, 501.

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94 Report by the Secretariat, 1033.

95 The Secretariat suggested groups based on shared borders, like a Northern Group of Sweden, Denmark, Norway and Finland, and groups based on ‘centres of unrest’, like a Group of Succession States to Austria-Hungary.

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104 Walters to Drummond, 17 July 1919, R182, LoNA.

105 DM, 3 Dec. 1919, LoNA.

106 DM, 1 Oct. 1919, LoNA.

107 DM, 29 June 1921, LoNA.

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110 Aghnides to Drummond, 3 Apr. 1922, R217, LoNA.

111 Aghnides to Drummond, 13 Apr. 1922, R217, LoNA.

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113 Webster, ‘Internationalism’, 150.

114 Davies, Possibilities, 79–109.

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118 Comert to Sweetser, 17 Apr. 1926, Geneva, Box 30, Arthur Sweetser Papers, Library of Congress, Washington [henceforth ASP]. My Translation.

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