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"NO PHONEY PEACE."

At Conclusion Of War With I Germany. M. RETNAXTD'S BROADCAST. (Received 2.30 p.m.) PARIS, April 4. M. Reynaud, Prime Minister, in a broadcast, said the French were determined not to follow the war, which is in no way phoney, by a phoney peace. He supposed phoney meant ersatz. Germany would be unable to sell an ersatz peace to the Allies. Tliere was no question of another treaty, but peace and nothing else. . . m . "Ersatz," literally interpreted, means amends, compensation, damages, reparation; set off, equivalent; substitution, or synthetic.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/AS19400405.2.97

Bibliographic details

Auckland Star, Volume LXXI, Issue 81, 5 April 1940, Page 8

Word Count
90

"NO PHONEY PEACE." Auckland Star, Volume LXXI, Issue 81, 5 April 1940, Page 8

"NO PHONEY PEACE." Auckland Star, Volume LXXI, Issue 81, 5 April 1940, Page 8

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