FRANCE AND GERMANY
RHINELAND DISCUSSIONS Press Association —By Telegraph—Copyright PARIS, February 2. M. Briand, replying in the Senate to Dr Stresemann, said that he welcomed a dialogue across the frontier as permitting decisive explanations and disposing of misunderstandings. The Locarno Treaty contained promises, not certainties. Dr Stresemann, at Locarno, had a tendency to receive rather than to give. Germany must realise the difficulties that preceded a healthy, mutual understanding guaranteeing the Rhineland for all other nations. Germany might be assured that France was not in the Rhineland for her own pleasure, and he was always willing to discuss matters with Germany, whether at the League meetings or within the scope of the League. The Senate unanimously passed a vote of confidence in M. Briand.—A. and N.Z. Cable.
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Evening Star, Issue 19782, 4 February 1928, Page 5
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127FRANCE AND GERMANY Evening Star, Issue 19782, 4 February 1928, Page 5
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