AERIAL WARFARE
(Press. Assn.-
BRITISH DISARMAMENT PLAN NOT FAVOURED BY AMERICA CIVIL AVIATION CONTROL
-By Teiegraph — Copyrlglit).
Rec. Felx 17. London, February 16. When the General Gommission of the Disarmament Conference considered the British proposals for the abolition of military aviation and the control of civil aviation the UndefSecretary for Foreign Affairs, Captain R. A. Eden, maintained that unless air "development were regulated it would "bring starlc tragedy in its train." International control of civil aviation, he said, was necessary . to* make possible the abolition of aerial, armaments and the removal of the air-bombing menace. ; The American delegate, Mr. H. Gibson, said its peeuliar geographical position made the application of the proposed control neither feasible nor desirable in the United States. A committee of eighteen members was appointed to draw up the ques- j tions of principle eontained in the j original proposal and the subsequent I amendments.
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Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 2, Issue 460, 18 February 1933, Page 5
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148AERIAL WARFARE Rotorua Morning Post, Volume 2, Issue 460, 18 February 1933, Page 5
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