THE AFTERMATH.
Tho following important comment on tho Balkan situation was made by the London "Times'' last week and cabled to the Sydney "Sun" : —"The Times," in a special article, says that "perhaps the most dangerous sign in the present crisis is the premonitory news that Russia is unofficially hacking the Balkan allies. The predom-
inant position of Austria becomes more and more marked as the armies of Servia, Bulgaria, and Montenegro march south and east. If tlic.se armies, and the nations -behind them, ■arc exhausted in the course of war. Austria will stand on velvet and will be able to shape events as she may please. The war wiil be serious and .distressing enough, but the aftermath will be more serious still, and miay, cpncojivtably, 'revolutionise the situation of the Continental Power*. The article, continues:—"Nothing short of a Europe guarantee of drastic reforms is likely to 'stop the war. European diplomacy is apparently unable to mobilise as. speedily as the Balkan armies."
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Wairarapa Age, Volume XXXI, Issue 10713, 17 October 1912, Page 4
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163THE AFTERMATH. Wairarapa Age, Volume XXXI, Issue 10713, 17 October 1912, Page 4
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