MILITANT JAPAN
WORLD TRADE THREAT
NAVAL PAKITY DEMAND,
OTHER POWERS PERTURBED
ANTI-BRITISH TARIFF WAR
onlted P«s» Association—By Electric T«l». eraph—Copyright. (Received June 10, 1 p.m.) LONDON, June 9. The "Sun" representative says that the Japanese demand for naval parity with England and America, coupled with the trade threat, will bring the Pacific more importantly into world problems than ever before. ' It is not expected that Japan will press for parity until the 1935 Conference, but her breaches of the Washington Treaty are causing th» utmost perturbation. Japan undertook not to attack China, not to seek a variation of 5-5-3 ratio, and not to fortify the Pacific, but she abused, the agreement by attacking China, then demanded naval parity with England and America, and is now ruthlessly assaulting world trade. , The British Government is anxious and the position is being constantly discussed in London and Tokio, so far without signs of a solution. The "Daily Mail's" Tokio corres-' pendent says that as a result of India's tariff on non-British cotton goods Japan has virtually declared a tariff war against Britain. The Japanese Foreign Office indicates that it will neither support nor oppose the boycott. The Foreign Office and Ministries of Finance and Commerce 'are reported- to have conferred, and decided to seek an emergency ordinance for retaliatory tariffs on Empire goods, probably enforcing them in July. #It is in* tended to levy prohibitive duties specifically on Australian wool and wheat, Canadian timber and wheat, English machines and steel, and Indian cotton and iron.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXV, Issue 135, 10 June 1933, Page 13
Word Count
252MILITANT JAPAN Evening Post, Volume CXV, Issue 135, 10 June 1933, Page 13
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