CHAPTER I
PEACE
Article 1
- The state of war between Japan and each of the Allied Powers is
terminated as from the date on which the present Treaty comes into
force between Japan and the Allied Power concerned as provided for
in Article 23.
- The Allied Powers recognize the full sovereignty of the
Japanese people over Japan and its territorial waters.
CHAPTER II
TERRITORY
Article 2
- Japan recognizing the independence of Korea, renounces all
right, title and claim to Korea, including the islands of Quelpart,
Port Hamilton and Dagelet.
- Japan renounces all right, title and claim to Formosa and the
Pescadores.
- Japan renounces all right, title and claim to the Kurile
Islands, and to that portion of Sakhalin and the islands adjacent
to it over which Japan acquired sovereignty as a consequence of the
Treaty of Portsmouth of 5 September 1905.
- Japan renounces all right, title and claim in connection with
the League of Nations Mandate System, and accepts the action of the
United Nations Security Council of 2 April 1947, extending the
trusteeship system to the Pacific Islands formerly under mandate to
Japan.
- Japan renounces all claim to any right or title to or interest
in connection with any part of the Antarctic area, whether deriving
from the activities of Japanese nationals or otherwise.
- Japan renounces all right, title and claim to the Spratly
Islands and to the Paracel Islands.
Article 3
- Japan will concur in any proposal of the United States to the
United Nations to place under its trusteeship system, with the
United States as the sole administering authority, Nansei Shoto
south of 29deg. north latitude (including the Ryukyu Islands and
the Daito Islands), Nanpo Shoto south of Sofu Gan (including the
Bonin Islands, Rosario Island and the Volcano Islands) and Parece
Vela and Marcus Island. Pending the making of such a proposal and
affirmative action thereon, the United States will have the right
to exercise all and any powers of administration, legislation and
jurisdiction over the territory and inhabitants of these islands,
including their territorial waters.
Article 4
- Subject to the provisions of paragraph (b) of this Article, the
disposition of property of Japan and of its nationals in the areas
referred to in Article 2, and their claims, including debts,
against the authorities presently administering such areas and the
residents (including juridical persons) thereof, and the
disposition in Japan of property of such authorities and residents,
and of claims, including debts, of such authorities and residents
against Japan and its nationals, shall be the subject of special
arrangements between Japan and such authorities. The property
of any of the Allied Powers or its nationals in the areas referred
to in Article 2 shall, insofar as this has not already been done,
be returned by the administering authority in the condition in
which it now exists. (The term nationals whenever used in the
present Treaty includes juridical persons.)
- Japan recognizes the validity of dispositions of property of
Japan and Japanese nationals made by or pursuant to directives of
the United States Military Government in any of the areas referred
to in Articles 2 and 3.
- Japanese owned submarine cables connection Japan with territory
removed from Japanese control pursuant to the present Treaty shall
be equally divided, Japan retaining the Japanese terminal and
adjoining half of the cable, and the detached territory the
remainder of the cable and connecting terminal
facilities.
CHAPTER III
SECURITY
Article 5
- Japan accepts the obligations set forth in Article 2 of the
Charter of the United Nations, and in particular the obligations
- to settle its international disputes by peaceful means in such
a manner that international peace and security, and justice, are
not endangered;
- to refrain in its international relations from the threat or
use of force against the territorial integrity or political
independence of any State or in any other manner inconsistent with
the Purposes of the United Nations;
- to give the United Nations every assistance in any action it
takes in accordance with the Charter and to refrain from giving
assistance to any State against which the United Nations may take
preventive or enforcement action.
- The Allied Powers confirm that they will be guided by the
principles of Article 2 of the Charter of the United Nations in
their relations with Japan.
- The Allied Powers for their part recognize that Japan as a
sovereign nation possesses the inherent right of individual or
collective self-defense referred to in Article 51 of the Charter of
the United Nations and that Japan may voluntarily enter into
collective security arrangements.
Article 6
- All occupation forces of the Allied Powers shall be withdrawn
from Japan as soon as possible after the coming into force of the
present Treaty, and in any case not later than 90 days thereafter.
Nothing in this provision shall, however, prevent the stationing or
retention of foreign armed forces in Japanese territory under or in
consequence of any bilateral or multilateral agreements which have
been or may be made between one or more of the Allied Powers, on
the one hand, and Japan on the other.
- The provisions of Article 9 of the Potsdam Proclamation of 26
July 1945, dealing with the return of Japanese military forces to
their homes, to the extent not already completed, will be carried
out.
- All Japanese property for which compensation has not already
been paid, which was supplied for the use of the occupation forces
and which remains in the possession of those forces at the time of
the coming into force of the present Treaty, shall be returned to
the Japanese Government within the same 90 days unless other
arrangements are made by mutual agreement.
CHAPTER IV
POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC CLAUSES
Article 7
- Each of the Allied Powers, within one year after the present
Treaty has come into force between it and Japan, will notify Japan
which of its prewar bilateral treaties or conventions with Japan it
wishes to continue in force or revive, and any treaties or
conventions so notified shall continue in force or by revived
subject only to such amendments as may be necessary to ensure
conformity with the present Treaty. The treaties and
conventions so notified shall be considered as having been
continued in force or revived three months after the date of
notification and shall be registered with the Secretariat of the
United Nations. All such treaties and conventions as to which
Japan is not so notified shall be regarded as abrogated.
- Any notification made under paragraph (a) of this Article may
except from the operation or revival of a treaty or convention any
territory for the international relations of which the notifying
Power is responsible, until three months after the date on which
notice is given to Japan that such exception shall cease to
apply.
Article 8
- Japan will recognize the full force of all treaties now or
hereafter concluded by the Allied Powers for terminating the state
of war initiated on 1 September 1939, as well as any other
arrangements by the Allied Powers for or in connection with the
restoration of peace. Japan also accepts the arrangements made for
terminating the former League of Nations and Permanent Court of
International Justice.
- Japan renounces all such rights and interests as it may derive
from being a signatory power of the Conventions of St.
Germain-en-Laye of 10 September 1919, and the Straits Agreement of
Montreux of 20 July 1936, and from Article 16 of the Treaty of
Peace with Turkey signed at Lausanne on 24 July 1923.
- Japan renounces all rights, title and interests acquired under,
and is discharged from all obligations resulting from, the
Agreement between Germany and the Creditor Powers of 20 January
1930 and its Annexes, including the Trust Agreement, dated 17 May
1930, the Convention of 20 January 1930, respecting the Bank for
International Settlements; and the Statutes of the Bank for
International Settlements. Japan will notify to the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs in Paris within six months of the first coming
into force of the present Treaty its renunciation of the rights,
title and interests referred to in this paragraph.
Article 9
Japan will enter promptly into
negotiations with the Allied Powers so desiring for the conclusion
of bilateral and multilateral agreements providing for the
regulation or limitation of fishing and the conservation and
development of fisheries on the high seas.
Article 10
Japan renounces all special rights
and interests in China, including all benefits and privileges
resulting from the provisions of the final Protocol signed at
Peking on 7 September 1901, and all annexes, notes and documents
supplementary thereto, and agrees to the abrogation in respect to
Japan of the said protocol, annexes, notes and
documents.
Article 11
Japan accepts the judgments of the
International Military Tribunal for the Far East and of other
Allied War Crimes Courts both within and outside Japan, and will
carry out the sentences imposed thereby upon Japanese nationals
imprisoned in Japan. The power to grant clemency, to reduce
sentences and to parole with respect to such prisoners may not be
exercised except on the decision of the Government or Governments
which imposed the sentence in each instance, and on recommendation
of Japan. In the case of persons sentenced by the
International Military Tribunal for the Far East, such power may
not be exercised except on the decision of a majority of the
Governments represented on the Tribunal, and on the recommendation
of Japan.
Article 12
- Japan declares its readiness promptly to enter into
negotiations for the conclusion with each of the Allied Powers of
treaties or agreements to place their trading, maritime and other
commercial relations on a stable and friendly basis.
- Pending the conclusion of the relevant treaty or agreement,
Japan will, during a period of four years from the first coming
into force of the present Treaty
- accord to each of the Allied Powers, its nationals, products
and vessels
- most-favoured-nation treatment with respect to customs duties,
charges, restrictions and other regulations on or in connection
with the importation and exportation of goods;
- national treatment with respect to shipping, navigation and
imported goods, and with respect to natural and juridical persons
and their interests - such treatment to include all matters
pertaining to the levying and collection of taxes, access to the
courts, the making and performance of contracts, rights to property
(tangible and intangible), participating in juridical entities
constituted under Japanese law, and generally the conduct of all
kinds of business and professional activities;
- ensure that external purchases and sales of Japanese state
trading enterprises shall be based solely on commercial
considerations.
- In respect to any matter, however, Japan shall be obliged to
accord to an Allied Power national treatment, or
most-favored-nation treatment, only to the extent that the Allied
Power concerned accords Japan national treatment or
most-favored-nation treatment, as the case may be, in respect of
the same matter. The reciprocity envisaged in the foregoing
sentence shall be determined, in the case of products, vessels and
juridical entities of, and persons domiciled in, any
non-metropolitan territory of an Allied Power, and in the case of
juridical entities of, and persons domiciled in, any state or
province of an Allied Power having a federal government, by
reference to the treatment accorded to Japan in such territory,
state or province.
- In the application of this Article, a discriminatory measure
shall not be considered to derogate from the grant of national or
most-favored-nation treatment, as the case may be, if such measure
is based on an exception customarily provided for in the commercial
treaties of the party applying it, or on the need to safeguard that
party's external financial position or balance of payments (except
in respect to shiping and navigation), or on the need to maintain
its essential security interests, and provided such measure is
proportionate to the circumstances and not applied in an arbitrary
or unreasonable manner.
- Japan's obligations under this Article shall not be affected by
the exercise of any Allied rights under Article 14 of the present
Treaty; nor shall the provisions of this Article be understood as
limiting the undertakings assumed by Japan by virtue of Article 15
of the Treaty.
Article 13
- Japan will enter into negotiations with any of the Allied
Powers, promptly upon the request of such Power or Powers, for the
conclusion of bilateral or multilateral agreements relating to
international civil air transport.
- Pending the conclusion of such agreement or agreements, Japan
will, during a period of four years from the first coming into
force of the present Treaty, extend to such Power treatment not
less favorable with respect to air-traffic rights and privileges
than those exercised by any such Powers at the date of such coming
into force, and will accord complete equality of opportunity in
respect to the operation and development of air
services.
- Pending its becoming a party to the Convention on International
Civil Aviation in accordance with Article 93 thereof, Japan will
give effect to the provisions of that Convention applicable to the
international navigation of aircraft, and will give effect to the
standards, practices and procedures adopted as annexes to the
Convention in accordance with the terms of the
Convention.
CHAPTER V
CLAIMS AND PROPERTY
Article 14
- It is recognized that Japan should pay reparations to the
Allied Powers for the damage and suffering caused by it during the
war. Nevertheless it is also recognized that the resources of Japan
are not presently sufficient, if it is to maintain a viable
economy, to make complete reparation for all such damage and
suffering and at the same time meet its other obligations.
Therefore,
- Japan will promptly enter into negotiations with Allied Powers
so desiring, whose present territories were occupied by Japanese
forces and damaged by Japan, with a view to assisting to compensate
those countries for the cost of repairing the damage done, by
making available the services of the Japanese people in production,
salvaging and other work for the Allied Powers in question.
Such arrangements shall avoid the imposition of additional
liabilities on other Allied Powers, and, where the manufacturing of
raw materials is called for, they shall be supplied by the Allied
Powers in question, so as not to throw any foreign exchange burden
upon Japan.
-
- Subject to the provisions of subparagraph (II) below, each of
the Allied Powers shall have the right to seize, retain, liquidate
or otherwise dispose of all property, rights and interests of
- Japan and Japanese nationals,
- persons acting for or on behalf of Japan or Japanese nationals,
and
- entities owned or controlled by Japan or Japanese
nationals,
which on the first coming into force of the present Treaty were
subject to its jurisdiction. The property, rights and
interests specified in this subparagraph shall include those now
blocked, vested or in the possession or under the control of enemy
property authorities of Allied Powers, which belong to, or were
held or managed on behalf of, any of the persons or entities
mentioned in (a), (b) or (c) above at the time such assets came
under the controls of such authorities.
- The following shall be excepted from the right specified in
subparagraph (I) above:
- property of Japanese natural persons who during the war resided
with the permission of the Government concerned in the territory of
one of the Allied Powers, other than territory occupied by Japan,
except property subjected to restrictions during the war and not
released from such restrictions as of the date of the first coming
into force of the present Treaty;
- all real property, furniture and fixtures owned by the
Government of Japan and used for diplomatic or consular purposes,
and all personal furniture and furnishings and other private
property not of an investment nature which was normally necessary
for the carrying out of diplomatic and consular functions, owned by
Japanese diplomatic and consular personnel;
- property belonging to religious bodies or private charitable
institutions and used exclusively for religious or charitable
purposes;
- property, rights and interests which have come within its
jurisdiction in consequence of the resumption of trade and
financial relations subsequent to 2 September 1945, between the
country concerned and Japan, except such as have resulted from
transactions contrary to the laws of the Allied Power
concerned;
- obligations of Japan or Japanese nationals, any right, title or
interest in tangible property located in Japan, interests in
enterprises organized under the laws of Japan, or any paper
evidence thereof; provided that this exception shall only apply to
obligations of Japan and its nationals expressed in Japanese
currency.
- Property referred to in exceptions (i) through (v) above shall
be returned subject to reasonable expenses for its preservation and
administration. If any such property has been liquidated the
proceeds shall be returned instead.
- The right to seize, retain, liquidate or otherwise dispose of
property as provided in subparagraph (I) above shall be exercised
in accordance with the laws of the Allied Power concerned, and the
owner shall have only such rights as may be given him by those
laws.
- The Allied Powers agree to deal with Japanese trademarks and
literary and artistic property rights on a basis as favorable to
Japan as circumstances ruling in each country will
permit.
- Except as otherwise provided in the present Treaty, the Allied
Powers waive all reparations claims of the Allied Powers, other
claims of the Allied Powers and their nationals arising out of any
actions taken by Japan and its nationals in the course of the
prosecution of the war, and claims of the Allied Powers for direct
military costs of occupation.
Article 15
- Upon application made within nine months of the coming into
force of the present Treaty between Japan and the Allied Power
concerned, Japan will, within six months of the date of such
application, return the property, tangible and intangible, and all
rights or interests of any kind in Japan of each Allied Power and
its nationals which was within Japan at any time between 7 December
1941 and 2 September 1945, unless the owner has freely disposed
thereof without duress or fraud. Such property shall be
returned free of all encumbrances and charges to which it may have
become subject because of the war, and without any charges for its
return. Property whose return is not applied for by or on
behalf of the owner or by his Government within the prescribed
period may be disposed of by the Japanese Government as it may
determine. In cases where such property was within Japan on 7
December 1941, and cannot be returned or has suffered injury or
damage as a result of the war, compensation will be made on terms
not less favorable than the terms provided in the draft Allied
Powers Property Compensation Law approved by the Japanese Cabinet
on 13 July 1951.
- With respect to industrial property rights impaired during the
war, Japan will continue to accord to the Allied Powers and their
nationals benefits no less than those heretofore accorded by
Cabinet Orders No. 309 effective 1 September 1949, No.
12 effective 28 January 1950, and No. 9 effective 1 February
1950, all as now amended, provided such nationals have applied for
such benefits within the time limits prescribed therein.
- (i) Japan acknowledges that the literary and artistic property
rights which existed in Japan on 6 December 1941, in respect to the
published and unpublished works of the Allied Powers and their
nationals have continued in force since that date, and recognizes
those rights which have arisen, or but for the war would have
arisen, in Japan since that date, by the operation of any
conventions and agreements to which Japan was a party on that date,
irrespective of whether or not such conventions or agreements were
abrogated or suspended upon or since the outbreak of war by the
domestic law of Japan or of the Allied Power concerned. (ii)
Without the need for application by the proprietor of the right and
without the payment of any fee or compliance with any other
formality, the period from 7 December 1941 until the coming into
force of the present Treaty between Japan and the Allied Power
concerned shall be excluded from the running of the normal term of
such rights; and such period, with an additional period of six
months, shall be excluded from the time within which a literary
work must be translated into Japanese in order to obtain
translating rights in Japan.
Article 16
As an expression of its desire to
indemnify those members of the armed forces of the Allied Powers
who suffered undue hardships while prisoners of war of Japan, Japan
will transfer its assets and those of its nationals in countries
which were neutral during the war, or which were at war with any of
the Allied Powers, or, at its option, the equivalent of such
assets, to the International Committee of the Red Cross which shall
liquidate such assets and distribute the resultant fund to
appropriate national agencies, for the benefit of former prisoners
of war and their families on such basis as it may determine to be
equitable. The categories of assets described in Article
14(a)2(II)(ii) through (v) of the present Treaty shall be excepted
from transfer, as well as assets of Japanese natural persons not
residents of Japan on the first coming into force of the
Treaty. It is equally understood that the transfer provision
of this Article has no application to the 19,770 shares in the Bank
for International Settlements presently owned by Japanese financial
institutions.
Article 17
- Upon the request of any of the Allied Powers, the Japanese
Government shall review and revise in conformity with international
law any decision or order of the Japanese Prize Courts in cases
involving ownership rights of nationals of that Allied Power and
shall supply copies of all documents comprising the records of
these cases, including the decisions taken and orders issued.
In any case in which such review or revision shows that restoration
is due, the provisions of Article 15 shall apply to the property
concerned.
- The Japanese Government shall take the necessary measures to
enable nationals of any of the Allied Powers at any time within one
year from the coming into force of the present Treaty between Japan
and the Allied Power concerned to submit to the appropriate
Japanese authorities for review any judgment given by a Japanese
court between 7 December 1941 and such coming into force, in any
proceedings in which any such national was unable to make adequate
presentation of his case either as plaintiff or defendant.
The Japanese Government shall provide that, where the national has
suffered injury by reason of any such judgment, he shall be
restored in the position in which he was before the judgment was
given or shall be afforded such relief as may be just and equitable
in the circumstances.
Article 18
- It is recognized that the intervention of the state of war has
not affected the obligation to pay pecuniary debts arising out of
obligations and contracts (including those in respect of bonds)
which existed and rights which were acquired before the existence
of a state of war, and which are due by the Government or nationals
of Japan to the Government or nationals of one of the Allied
Powers, or are due by the Government or nationals of one of the
Allied Powers to the Government or nationals of Japan. The
intervention of a state of war shall equally not be regarded as
affecting the obligation to consider on their merits claims for
loss or damage to property or for personal injury or death which
arose before the existence of a state of war, and which may be
presented or re-presented by the Government of one of the Allied
Powers to the Government of Japan, or by the Government of Japan to
any of the Governments of the Allied Powers. The provisions
of this paragraph are without prejudice to the rights conferred by
Article 14.
- Japan affirms its liability for the prewar external debt of the
Japanese State and for debts of corporate bodies subsequently
declared to be liabilities of the Japanese State, and expresses its
intention to enter into negotiations at an early date with its
creditors with respect to the resumption of payments on those
debts; to encourage negotiations in respect to other prewar claims
and obligations; and to facilitate the transfer of sums
accordingly.
Article 19
- Japan waives all claims of Japan and its nationals against the
Allied Powers and their nationals arising out of the war or out of
actions taken because of the existence of a state of war, and
waives all claims arising from the presence, operations or actions
of forces or authorities of any of the Allied Powers in Japanese
territory prior to the coming into force of the present
Treaty.
- The foregoing waiver includes any claims arising out of actions
taken by any of the Allied Powers with respect to Japanese ships
between 1 September 1939 and the coming into force of the present
Treaty, as well as any claims and debts arising in respect to
Japanese prisoners of war and civilian internees in the hands of
the Allied Powers, but does not include Japanese claims
specificially recognized in the laws of any Allied Power enacted
since 2 September 1945.
- Subject to reciprocal renunciation, the Japanese Government
also renounces all claims (including debts) against Germany and
German nationals on behalf of the Japanese Government and Japanese
nationals, including intergovernmental claims and claims for loss
or damage sustained during the war, but excepting (a) claims in
respect of contracts entered into and rights acquired before 1
September 1939, and (b) claims arising out of trade and financial
relations between Japan and Germany after 2 September 1945.
Such renunciation shall not prejudice actions taken in accordance
with Articles 16 and 20 of the present Treaty.
- Japan recognizes the validity of all acts and omissions done
during the period of occupation under or in consequence of
directives of the occupation authorities or authorized by Japanese
law at that time, and will take no action subjecting Allied
nationals to civil or criminal liability arising out of such acts
or omissions.
Article 20
Japan will take all necessary
measures to ensure such disposition of German assets in Japan as
has been or may be determined by those powers entitled under the
Protocol of the proceedings of the Berlin Conference of 1945 to
dispose of those assets, and pending the final disposition of such
assets will be responsible for the conservation and administration
thereof.
Article 21
Notwithstanding the provisions of
Article 25 of the present Treaty, China shall be entitled to the
benefits of Articles 10 and 14(a)2; and Korea to the benefits of
Articles 2, 4, 9 and 12 of the present Treaty.
CHAPTER VI
SETTLEMENT OF DISPUTES
Article 22
If in the opinion of any Party to the
present Treaty there has arisen a dispute concerning the
interpretation or execution of the Treaty, which is not settled by
reference to a special claims tribunal or by other agreed means,
the dispute shall, at the request of any party thereto, be referred
for decision to the International Court of Justice. Japan and
those Allied Powers which are not already parties to the Statute of
the International Court of Justice will deposit with the Registrar
of the Court, at the time of their respective ratifications of the
present Treaty, and in conformity with the resolution of the United
Nations Security Council, dated 15 October 1946, a general
declaration accepting the jurisdiction, without special agreement,
of the Court generally in respect to all disputes of the character
referred to in this Article.
CHAPTER VII
FINAL CLAUSES
Article 23
- The present Treaty shall be ratified by the States which sign
it, including Japan, and will come into force for all the States
which have then ratified it, when instruments of ratification have
been deposited by Japan and by a majority, including the United
States of America as the principal occupying Power, of the
following States, namely Australia, Canada, Ceylon, France,
Indonesia, the Kingdom of the Netherlands, New Zealand, Pakistan,
the Republic of the Philippines, the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Northern Ireland, and the United States of
America. The present Treaty shall come into force of each
State which subsequently ratifies it, on the date of the deposit of
its instrument of ratification.
- If the Treaty has not come into force within nine months after
the date of the deposit of Japan's ratification, any State which
has ratified it may bring the Treaty into force between itself and
Japan by a notification to that effect given to the Governments of
Japan and the United States of America not later than three years
after the date of deposit of Japan's ratification.
Article 24
All instruments of ratification shall
be deposited with the Government of the United States of America
which will notify all the signatory States of each such deposit, of
the date of the coming into force of the Treaty under paragraph (a)
of Article 23, and of any notifications made under paragraph (b) of
Article 23.
Article 25
For the purposes of the present
Treaty the Allied Powers shall be the States at war with Japan, or
any State which previously formed a part of the territory of a
State named in Article 23, provided that in each case the State
concerned has signed and ratified the Treaty. Subject to the
provisions of Article 21, the present Treaty shall not confer any
rights, titles or benefits on any State which is not an Allied
Power as herein defined; nor shall any right, title or interest of
Japan be deemed to be diminished or prejudiced by any provision of
the Treaty in favour of a State which is not an Allied Power as so
defined.
Article 26
Japan will be prepared to conclude
with any State which signed or adhered to the United Nations
Declaration of 1 January 1942, and which is at war with Japan, or
with any State which previously formed a part of the territory of a
State named in Article 23, which is not a signatory of the present
Treaty, a bilateral Treaty of Peace on the same or substantially
the same terms as are provided for in the present Treaty, but this
obligation on the part of Japan will expire three years after the
first coming into force of the present Treaty. Should Japan make a
peace settlement or war claims settlement with any State granting
that State greater advantages than those provided by the present
Treaty, those same advantages shall be extended to the parties to
the present Treaty.
Article 27
The present Treaty shall be deposited
in the archives of the Government of the United States of America
which shall furnish each signatory State with a certified copy
thereof.
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