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Political ControlThe 18 political units
into which the South Sea region is divided show almost every kind of colonial
government and every degree of self-rule. But they share in common the fact of
being under an outside control, as the American colonies were before the Declaration
of Independence. The American StakeBefore the present war, the
United States territories in the South Seas added up to about 6,800 square miles
in land area, or nearly the size of the state of New Jersey. They had a population
of close to half a million. Hawaii, easily the largest unit, dominates the
northeast zone of the Pacific and is by far the most developed of any of the South
Sea groups. It is an organized territory with a status very like that of a state
in the Union, though with somewhat greater federal supervision by way of the Department
of the Interior. There is strong sentiment among residents of this territory to
have it become the forty-ninth state, and both our major political parties are
on record as favoring statehood for Hawaii in the future. Guam and American
Samoa, the two small outlying territories, are controlled by the Navy, with the
commandants of the local naval stations as their governors. Wake Island and several
islets in the Phoenix and Line groups south of Hawaii are also under United States
sovereignty. As already noted, Canton and Enderbury are under joint American-British
control. 
The
Former Japanese IslandsThe islands formerly held by Japan are small in
land area, but cover a large strategic zone. The Japanese Nanyo, or South
Sea mandate, comprising the Marianas (other than Guam), the Palaus, the Carolines,
and the Marshalls, adds up to only 830 square miles. Before the war the mandate
had a population of about 50,000 Micronesian islanders and perhaps 80,000 Japanese
settlers, the, latter chiefly on Saipan and a few other principal islands. Contrary
to popular ideas that there are “countless” islands in this territory,
it actually has about a hundred atolls and islets, of which some seventy-five
are inhabited. Japan has also held the tiny but strategic Bonin and Volcano
islands, and isolated Marcus. These have no aboriginal inhabitants, but in 1830
a few whites and Hawaiians settled in the Bonins. Almost a half century later
Japan annexed the islands, and thousands of Japanese have gone there since. Some
of the descendants of the earlier colonists are still distinguishable. The
British IslandsThe largest political stake in the South Seas is held by
Australia. It controls two great territories just to the north of the continent
of Australia-Papua and the mandate of New Guinea. It also runs the affairs of
the valuable little phosphate island of Nauru, which is a joint mandate of Great
Britain, Australia, and New Zealand. New Zealand holds several island territories
in the central Pacific. Largest is the mandate of Western Samoa, made up of the
former German part of Samoa. The native Samoans have had the strange experience
of having their islands developed along two very different lines of policy, one
by American naval authorities and the other by the New Zealanders, a fact which
many Samoans resent. New Zealand also controls the scattered Cook islands, the
Tokelaus, and a few other islands. In New Zealand itself there are about a hundred
thousand Polynesian Maoris, who elect their own representatives directly to the
Dominion parliament. Great Britain has two crown colonies in the islands,
Fiji and the Gilbert and Ellice colony; the latter includes the valuable phosphate
island called Ocean, and also the British Phoenix and Line islands. Britain also
controls the Solomons as a protectorate and the native Kingdom of Tonga as a protected
state whose Polynesian monarch is Queen Salote (Charlotte). British sovereignty
also extends to several small islands, notably Pitcairn, on which the mutineers
of the Bounty finally settled and where their descendants live today. All
these possessions of Great Britain are governed through the British “High
Commission of the Western Pacific,” founded in 1875 to look after British
interests in the South Seas. This body has its headquarters at Suva, with the
governor of Fiji serving at the same time as the high commissioner. Britain and
France together control the New Hebrides as a “condominium.” They
have separate British and French administrations to deal with their own nationals
and an over-all joint government headed by a high court, which includes personnel
from neutral nations, to run general affairs. This system has a Rube Goldberg
touch, and has proved cumbersome and not very effective. Other National
StakesFrench colonial holdings, other than in the New Hebrides, fall into
two groups. In the west the large and rich island of New Caledonia, the Loyalty,
Wallis and Horne islands (northeast of Fiji), and a few small islands are under
a French high commissioner of the western Pacific. In the east are the “French
Establishments in Oceania,” consisting of the scattered Society, Tuamotu,
Austral, and Marquesas groups. The Dutch hold the western or “Indonesian”
half of New Guinea. This is part of the Netherlands Indies and is normally controlled
from Batavia. Finally, Chile has Easter island, nearest of the South Sea islands
to South America. This island is famed for its huge stone statues, once considered
mysterious relics of a lost civilization. They are now known to be a local form
of the Polynesian temple, which has plain or carved stones where the gods and
ancestors come to sit during religious ceremonies. Today, Easter island is mainly
a sheep ranch, and has a native and part-native population of about five hundred. |