BRITAIN AND AMERICA
REMOVAL OF MISUNDERSTANDING TIIE RESULT OF AGREEMENTS United Press Assn.— Elec. Tel. lopyright LONDON, May 11 “The United States is very gun-shy at the hr ment of anything savouring of diplomatic moves,” the American Ambassador, Mr J. P. Kennedy, told the British Chamber of Commerce. “The British are naturally suspicious, they tell me, of Yankee shrewdness. Americans are most suspicious of the natural British stability. ‘‘The Anglo-American pact must be judged byMts benefits- In all the 15 agreements which the United States has already made it has been asserted that the agreement meant ruin to everyone. It has not happened yet. “Unless we solve our economic problems Britain and the United States are not going to be much longer very good countries in which to live.” Mr Herbert Morrison, M.P., on returning from America, asserted that a great deal of friendship for Britain was being poisoned by the fear that Britain was tending to reproduce prewar blunders.
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Waikato Times, Volume 122, Issue 20496, 12 May 1938, Page 9
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160BRITAIN AND AMERICA Waikato Times, Volume 122, Issue 20496, 12 May 1938, Page 9
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