NO FEAR OF AGGRESSION
Mr Bingham, Hie American ambassador, in a speech recently, said: "We of the United States and of the British Commonwealth of Nations have the most precious heritage among all the nations of this earth—a heritage of freedom, a right of the individual to order and justice-^-and I believe that a tremendous and valuable contribution to the peace of the world has been made by tbe British Empire and ourselves patiently rearming. "The British nation and ourselves patiently, sincerely, and earnestly sought to bring other nations of the world in the pathway of peace. We did it so sincerely that we did it not only by precept but by example. Tbey would not listen to us. While we waited and hoped and laboured, they built up these great armaments. For what? For aggression. "No nation requires bombing aeroplanes, great mobile artillery, ' and haavy tankp unless tbey intend to plupder and murder their neigbbourg. We of my country and British Commonwealth, realising that argument, suasion, and example have all been in vain, have determincd that we must prqtect our own. "All that is being done here and all that is being done in my country. is absolutely defensive. No nation on the earth has any reason to apprehend or to fear aggression from tbe British or the citizens of the United States. We seek peace, we seek amity, we seek friendly relations with the peoples of the earth, and that is as it should he, but we who have the most priceless, and most precious heritage of all nations are determined that we will hold our own, " There^ore, those who contrihute to that co-operation and that understanding between those twp great democracies are serving England and are serving the United States. I say it with all revprence that hecause they are serving the 'cause of peace they are serving the God of Peace,"
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Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Issue 170, 5 August 1937, Page 4
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315NO FEAR OF AGGRESSION Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Issue 170, 5 August 1937, Page 4
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