Meeting with Li Hongzhang in Moscow during the coronation ceremonies for Tsar Nicholas II, Witte promised to maintain Chinese territorial integrity and suggested a secret military alliance against possible future aggression by the Empire of Japan. In exchange, Russia would be allowed to use Chinese ports for its warships, and to build a Russian gauge railway through Heilongjiang and Jilin to Vladivostok on the Pacific coast.[2] Along with the railway concession, Russian personnel and police received extraterritorial jurisdiction over large portions of Northeast China and the permission to station troops to protect the railway.[1] China was also not allowed to interfere with Russian troop movements or munitions and also had to grant Russia decreased tariff rates. To avoid diplomatic issues with the other major powers, Li insisted that the concession be granted to the Russo-Chinese Bank, rather than directly to the Russian government,[1] making the railway nominally a joint project, although it was in reality completely financed and controlled by Russia.
Consequences
The terms of the treaty were tantamount to the annexation of northeast China by Russia in all but name.[1] Rather than protecting China from Japanese territorial ambitions, the treaty opened the door towards further Russian expansionism in the form of the Russia–Qing Convention of 1898, in which China was forced to lease the southern tip of the Liaodong Peninsula to Russia and allow a southern extension of Russia's China Eastern Railway to be built from northern Harbin to the port city of Dalian.[3] These events increased anti-foreign sentiment in China, which came to a head in the Boxer Uprising of 1900.
^ abcdKowner, Rotem (2006). Historical Dictionary of the Russo-Japanese War. The Scarecrow Press. pp. 209–210. ISBN0-8108-4927-5.
Kowner, Historical Dictionary of the Russo-Japanese War, p. 209-210
^Nish, Ian (2014). The Origins of the Russo-Japanese War. Routledge. p. 31.
^Schumpeter, Elizabeth Boody (1940). The Industrialization of Japan and Manchukuo, 1930-1940. Vol. 8. Taylor & Francis. p. 382.
Further reading
Cheng, Tianfang. A history of Sino-Russian relations (1957) pp 57-60.
Kawakami, Kiyoshi Karl. "The Russo-Chinese Conflict in Manchuria." Foreign Affairs 8.1 (1929): 52-68.
Ukoianov, Igor V.L. "The First Russo-Chinese Allied Treaty of 1896." International Journal of Korean History 11 (2007): 151-177 abstract.