Nishi-Rosen Agreement
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nishi-Rosen Agreement (西・ローゼン協定 Nishi-Rozen Kyotei?) was a agreement signed between the Empire of Japan and the Empire of Russia on 25 April 1898 concerning disputes over Korea.
With Japan's victory in the First Sino-Japanese War, and increasing influence in domestic Korean politics, tension continued to rise between Japan and Russia over control of Korea. The Agreement was signed in Tokyo by Japanese Foreign Minister Baron Nishi Tokujiro, and Russian Foreign Minister Baron Roman Romanovich Rosen. Under the terms of the Agreement, both nations agreed to refrain from interfering in domestic Korean politics, and to seek prior approval form each other before sending military or financial advisors at the request of the Korean government. Russia pledged not to obstruct Japanese investment in the commercial and economic development of Korea, thus explicitly acknowledging Korea to be within Japan's sphere of influence. In return, Japan implicitly recognized Russia's sphere of influence over Manchuria.