SAITO HOPEFUL
EVENTUAL SUCCESS fy Cable.—Press Association.—Copyright Red. 11 a.xn. GENEVA, Thursday. Admiral Saito, Japan, explained that the Japanese agreed to the British figures for 10,000 ton cruisers, and also
the British plan for submarine limitation. There still remained the apparently insoluble Anglo-American differences, mainly in regard to cruisers, and especially gun calibre, on which the Japanese views were not entirely in accord with the British,* therefore the Japanese made a compromise—the plan which was rejected. Admiral Saito concluded by regretting the absence of a definite agreement, but he declined to view the outcome of their efforts as a failure or breakdown, for. he was convinced that attempts to limit extravagance in competition by formal agreement, as they are limited in practice by common sense, will continue, and will eventually succeed. —A. and N.Z.Sun.
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Sun (Auckland), Volume 1, Issue 115, 5 August 1927, Page 13
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134SAITO HOPEFUL Sun (Auckland), Volume 1, Issue 115, 5 August 1927, Page 13
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