Mr. Tower to Mr. Hay.

No. 523.]

Sir: I have the honor to confirm your telegram of the 1st instant in regard to a report made by the United States minister in China of certain exclusive privileges about to be granted by the Chinese Government to the Russo-Chinese Bank; also my telegram to you of this date.

In accordance with your instructions I addressed at once a note to the Count Lamsdorff, Imperial Russian minister for foreign affairs, communicating to him the text of your telegram, and I now respectfully inclose to you herewith a copy of that note.

I have, etc.

Charlemagne Tower.
[Page 928]
[Inclosure.]

Mr. Tower to Count Lamsdorff.

Mr. Minister for Foreign Affairs: In obedience to instructions which I have received from the Government of the United States, I have the honor to inform your excellency that the American minister to China has reported, in a telegram recently received at Washington, that Prince Ching has agreed to sign the Manchurian convention and also a separate convention with the Russo-Chinese Bank under which exclusive privileges of industrial development in Manchuria are to be granted to that bank.

I am instructed to say that the Government of the United States could look only with concern upon any arrangement by which China should extend to a corporate company the exclusive right within its territory to open mines, construct railways, or to exert other industrial privileges.

It is the belief of the Government of the United States that by permitting or creating a monopoly of this character, China would contravene the treaties which it has already entered into with foreign powers and would injure the rights of American citizens by restricting legitimate trade; also that such action would lead to the impairment of Chinese sovereignty and tend to diminish the ability of China to meet its obligations. Other powers as well might be expected to seek similar exclusive advantages in different parts of the Chinese Empire, which would destroy the policy of equal treatment of all nations in regard to navigation and commerce throughout China.

I am further instructed to convey to your excellency the sentiment of the United States Government that the acquiring by any one power of exclusive privileges in China for its own subjects or its own commerce would be contradictory to the assurances repeatedly given by the Imperial Russian ministry for foreign affairs to the United States of the intention of the Russian Government to maintain the policy of the open door in China as that policy has been advocated by the United States and accepted by all the powers who have commercial interests within the Chinese Empire.

I am to assure your excellency that the Government of the United States is now, as it has always been heretofore, animated by the desire to secure for all nations entirely equal intercourse with China, and I am instructed to present to your excellency the request that the Imperial Russian Government will give due attention to the foregoing considerations, which have also been addressed to the Chinese Government, and to express to your excellency the hope that such measures of procedure may be adopted as will allay the apprehensions of the Government of the United States.

I avail myself, etc.,

Charlemagne Tower.