THE GREEK POSITION.
“The simple truth about the Greek situation is that the King and his court are pro-German,” observes the New York Tribune, “that he, as commander-in-chief of the army, has been able to put his friends, xviio share his pro-German sentiments, in control, but that otherxvise Greece is pro-Ally, overwhelmingly. Constantine’s policy has xvrecked his country’s future and produced civil xvar. If the Allies only had a little more courage it would long ago have* cost him his throne. But it should seem that the British, who are being accused by the Germans of displaying a, cynical disregard for the rights of a “little nation,’ are actually holding up the whole-Allied policy of coercion. Once mure Viscount Grey is disclosed as tin* champion of Ihe same genteel methods that resulted in the ruin of Seiwia and the loss of the Balkans.”
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MH19161223.2.22
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Manawatu Herald, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 1654, 23 December 1916, Page 4
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143THE GREEK POSITION. Manawatu Herald, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 1654, 23 December 1916, Page 4
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