On 18 December 1916, the British Admiralty again requested naval assistance from Japan. The new Japanese cabinet under Prime Minister
Terauchi Masatake was more favorably inclined to provide military assistance, provided that the British government back Japan's territorial claims to the newly acquired German possessions in the South Pacific and Shandong. When Germany announced the resumption of unrestricted submarine warfare on 1 February 1917, the British government agreed. Two of the four cruisers of the First Special Squadron at Singapore were sent to
Cape Town,
South Africa, and four destroyers were sent to the Mediterranean for basing out of
Malta, headquarters of the Royal Navy's Mediterranean Fleet. Rear-Admiral
Kōzō Satō on the
cruiser and 10th and 11th
destroyer units (eight destroyers) arrived in Malta on 13 April 1917 via
Colombo and
Port Said. Eventually this Second Special Squadron totaled three cruisers (
Akashi, , , 14 destroyers (8 , 4 , 2 ex-British
Acorn-class), 2 sloops, 1 tender (
Kanto). The 17 ships of Second Special Squadron carried out escort duties for troop transports and anti-submarine operations against attacks from German and
Austro-Hungarian submarines operating from bases along the
eastern Adriatic, the
Aegean Sea, from
Constantinople, thus securing the vital eastern Mediterranean sea route between the
Suez Canal and
Marseille, France. The Japanese squadron made a total of 348 escort sorties from Malta, escorting 789 ships containing around 700,000 soldiers, thus contributing greatly to the war effort, for a total loss of 72 Japanese sailors killed in action. A total of 7,075 people were rescued by the Japanese from damaged and sinking ships. This included the rescue by the destroyers
Matsu and
Sakaki of nearly 3,000 persons from the troopship , which was hit by a German torpedo on 4 May 1917. No Japanese ships were lost during the deployment but on 11 June 1917
Sakaki was hit by a torpedo from the Austro-Hungarian submarine
U-27 off Crete; 59 Japanese sailors died. With the
American entry into World War I on 6 April 1917, the United States and Japan found themselves on the same side, despite their increasingly acrimonious relations over China and competition for influence in the Pacific. This led to the
Lansing–Ishii Agreement of 2 November 1917 to help reduce tensions. On July 9, Commander
Kyōsuke Eto, military attaché with the
Royal Navy, was killed in the disaster. In late 1917, Japan exported 12
Arabe-class destroyers, based on
Kaba-class design, to France. The British under Admiral
George Alexander Ballard gave strong praise to the high operational rate of the Japanese squadron, and its quick response to all British requests. In return, the Japanese absorbed British anti-submarine warfare techniques and technologies and gained invaluable operational experience. After the end of the war, the Japanese Navy brought back seven German submarines as prizes of war, which greatly contributed to future Japanese submarine design and development. ==Events of 1918==