OUTLAWRY OF WAR
“INTERESTING BUT IMPRACTICABLE”
U.S. VIEW OF BRITISH POLICY
By Cable. — Pre M Association. — Copyright. Reed. 0.50 a.m. WASHINGTON, Wednesday. Official circles are not impressed with regard to the British proposals for the resumption of the Anglo-American naval discussion, or the negotiation of a treaty to outlaw war. “Interesting, but impracticable,” is the official view, which emphasises the United States’s recent vain moves toward both objectives in the discussions at Geneva with France. It is believed unlikeiy that the United States will enter into an anti-war pact with any country alone, or with any group, unless it includes Britain, France, Italy, Germany, and Japan. Even then the Secretary ot State, Mr. F. B. Kellogg, believes that America is only willing to renounce war as an instrument of national policy, without adopting the term “outlaw,”- —A. and N.Z. ’ ‘
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Bibliographic details
Sun (Auckland), Volume I, Issue 274, 9 February 1928, Page 1
Word Count
139OUTLAWRY OF WAR Sun (Auckland), Volume I, Issue 274, 9 February 1928, Page 1
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