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WOULD HAVE BEEN MADNESS.

IF BRITAIN STOOD OUT. LORD HALDANE'S VIEW OF WAR AND ITS MEANING. Lord Haldane, in an interview, published in the Chicago Daily News, asks for America's forbearance whjlja Britain fights for life. "If we appear to go beyond some of the sules in the books," he is reported as saying, "we shall not violate the dictates of humanity and turn back the clock cf civilisation. Germany's submarine warfare to belligerents and neutrals alike is without analagy, and we are compelled to meet it. If \vc had recourse to the full rigours of conventional blockade, could confiscate all ship s and cargoes seeking to invade the blockade, but instead \v e want to spare neutrals inconvenience and injury." The Agadir incident, continued Lord Haldane, compelled Britain to face the possibility of war.Relatlons afterwards improved. ft KAISER JOINS IN. During the visit to Germany, which he subsequently undertook, he conferred with the German Imperial Chancellor, Dr. von Bethmann Hollweg, and saw the Kaiser. He assured the German leaders that Britain was prepared to enter into the most binding agreement that in no circumstances would she be a party to aggression against Germany, but he came away with an uneasy feeling. Air the

time Germany was piling up armaments. The Kaiser had been opposed to war, but it appeared that he settled into the war mood in 1913. As M. Paul Cambon's dispatch to M. Pichon showed the Prussian spirit temporarily gained ascendancy and the rest followed naturally. "TOUCHED OUR HONOUR." The present war, Lord Haldane proceeded, should end s,ecret diplomacy and political manipulation and should also be followed by a great moral advance. The world had been too luxurious. If Germany were beaten the nations in future would not be likely to pin faith on armaments. The present war should rid the world of at least part of the burden of armaments. He was not sure that Britain would have remained out of the war, if Germany had respected Belgium's neutrality., "Belgium touched our honour," remarked Lord Haldane, "France our feelings and interests. Having regard to the German theories of world-con-quest it would have been madness for Britain to have sat with hands folded while Germany removed all Continental obstacles to her siege of the British Empire, but the attack on Belgium gave us no choice. We had to r'esist the violation of her treaty or have been disgraced."

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TAIDT19150408.2.32

Bibliographic details

Taihape Daily Times, Volume 7, Issue 182, 8 April 1915, Page 7

Word Count
401

WOULD HAVE BEEN MADNESS. Taihape Daily Times, Volume 7, Issue 182, 8 April 1915, Page 7

WOULD HAVE BEEN MADNESS. Taihape Daily Times, Volume 7, Issue 182, 8 April 1915, Page 7

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