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PEACE TREATY FOR JAPAN

U.S. PEIPING TALKS HELD UNLIKELY

(Rec. 10.30 p.m.) NEW YORK, April 15. The United States would not attempt to negotiate a Japanese peace treaty with Communist China because it wanted a treaty, the “New York Times” said to-day. After the long delays in Europe over the Austrian and German treaties, it would be folly to invite another veto fiasco in the Far East. There was no ground for the faintest hope that the Chinese Communists and their Russian advisers would agree to the provisions of the proposed treaty, the newspaper said. The United States had submitted a treaty draft to the Chinese Nationalists instead of Peiping. Britain could not expect the United States to act otherwise simply because London had tried with no conspicuous success to recognise Peiping.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/CHP19510417.2.78

Bibliographic details

Press, Volume LXXXVII, Issue 26398, 17 April 1951, Page 7

Word Count
132

PEACE TREATY FOR JAPAN Press, Volume LXXXVII, Issue 26398, 17 April 1951, Page 7

PEACE TREATY FOR JAPAN Press, Volume LXXXVII, Issue 26398, 17 April 1951, Page 7

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