POST-WAR WORLD
PRINCIPLES OF ATLANTIC CHARTER DISCUSSED BY MR NASH. DAYS OF ISOLATION OVER. (By Telegraph—Press Association.) WELLINGTON This Day. The co-operation necessary to build the post-war world and the implications of the Atlantic Charter on the international polices of the future were discussed by the New Zealand Minister to Washington, Mr Nash, in an address last night. He said the determination of post-war policies in the light of the Atlantic Charter was imperative if the world was to progress. Perhaps the most important implication of the Charter was that no nation could in future ensure its safety by thinking solely of its own progress. “My firm belief, which is the belief of all the leaders of the United Nations whom I have met, is that the day of isolation, whether economic or political, is finished,” said Mr Nash. “International co-operation in every sphere is essential for the future wellbeing of the world. In the immediate post-war years it may be necessary to exercise force to defeat any policies that would endanger the peace. This will be the duty of the United Nationsunited to win the war and united to preserve the peace and to promote the progress so desired in the future.”
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Wairarapa Times-Age, 3 May 1943, Page 3
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203POST-WAR WORLD Wairarapa Times-Age, 3 May 1943, Page 3
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