Thank you for correcting the text in this article. Your corrections improve Papers Past searches for everyone. See the latest corrections.

This article contains searchable text which was automatically generated and may contain errors. Join the community and correct any errors you spot to help us improve Papers Past.

Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

EUROPEAN CRISIS

BRITAIN'S UNCERTAINTY

DUE TO PUBLIC OPINION

PLEDGES REFUSED

Mr. Sisley Huddleston, in a "Contemporary Review" article on "France Faces Germany," says:—

From the official point of view the real gravity of the present crisis lies in the threat of a German fortification of Rhineland. It is not a direct threat to France; it is a threat to Russia— which France has chosen to regard as a threat against itself. Fortifications are necessarily immobile and defen-

Without minimising their significance as a jumping-off place, it may rightly be said that the French fortifications ■ —known as the Maginot Line—and. the eventual German fortifications, will neutralise each other. If the Maginot i Line is as strong as it is claimed to be, Germany will find it difficult to invade France. But a demilitarised R'hlneland would have permitted France to carry out its duties to Russia by invading Germany. A remilitarised Rhineland means that France will be confined to its own territory. It will be "contained." It can no longer effectively go to the assistance of Russia. The Franco- j Russian Treaty is singularly diminished in military value. Here is the j key to the perturbation caused by the remilitarisation of Rhineland. . . . French opinion is inclined "to judge Great Britain harshly. It is taken for granted that, either in pursuance of British interests or British prestige, Great Britain deliberately smashed the Stresa front, which might have held Germany in check, by insisting, for the first time, on sanctions against Italy; and then, when other nations at the behest of Britain had made economic sacrifices, and given Mediterranean pledges of mutual assistance, declined to proceed resolutely to the execution of the terms of the Locarno Pact and of the Covenant itself (see Article XI) against Germany. FAILURE TO UNDERSTAND. Good diplomacy, they urge (and by "they" I mean the bulk of the French people) would have settled the Abyssinian affair without fighting, or at any rate after a comparatively harmless military parade. Without condoning Italy, the average Frenchman fails to understand why Europe was divided, at a moment when unity was indispensable, in face of the "German menace, for the sake of Abyssinia. There is an almost unanimous belief in France that Great Britain must share the responsibility with Italy for providing Herr Hitler with his opportunity of challenging the victors of the Great War and of preparing the next war. For my part, I should wish to make it clear that I do not accept this view in so far as it implies a policy of despair. It is surely better not to anticipate as inevitable a German aggression either in the East or the West. It is surely better to seize every chance of removing Germany's legitimate grievances and of entering into negotiations which may avert the war which many people in diplomatic circles now predict for the end of 1937 or the early part of 1938. Nothing could be more fatuous than to behave like Gribouille. It is, .however, my function, irrespective of my personal opinion, to indicate plainly the French opinion, which is that Great Britain has done Europe an immense disservice in invoking sanctions against Italy and in treating Germany with excessive indulgence. THE CHIEF POINT. Dr. George Glasgow, who writes every month in the "Contemporary Review" on "Foreign Affairs," deals with the situation from a different angle and thus concludes his survey:— At the present time both Russian and French opinion show less interest in Herr Hitler's proposals about Western Europe than in their implications about Central Europe. The countries of. Central Europe—-Austria, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, Rumania in particular—are deeply concerned in the matter. To make clear what is the attitude of British opinion it is necessary first of all to state, the case as seen from Paris and Moscow. Those two centres argue in this way: The internal financial and economic position of Germany is so bad that it is indispensable, if Herr Hitler is to maintain his position, that he should continue to score spectacular "successes" abroad. His reoccupation of the Rhineland served its purpose on1 March 29, when the election took place. What next? It is necessary, in Herr Hitler's personal interests, that Germany should expand, should obtain new territories for raw materials and for markets. It is unlikely that Russia will be his immediate objective, because Russia is enormously strong in a military sense and because there is a vast and powerful Slav bloc between Germany and Russia. ' "In the west, there is Holland, with her important colonial possessions. But in the west also there is the certainty that any German aggression would be met by prompt action on the part of Great Britain. It is therefore considered likely that Herr Hitler's main present thought is concentrated on the old dream of Mitteluropa; and that therefore his next objective will be Austria. IF AUSTRIA GOES. Supposing, for the sake of the argument, that he succeeds, by the method of internal Nazification of Austria, in virtually annexing that country, and no action is taken by Great Britain? What then will be the position of Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, and Rumania? Would not the opportunity afforded by the Henlein Party in Czechoslovakia provide him with his next temptation? And would not the oilfields of Rumania be an, added temptation? The treaty relationship between Czechoslovakia, France, and Russia would no doubt lead to French nnd Russian action against Germany in such a contingency. And would not such a contingency have the inevitable indirect effect of implicating Great Britain? If so, why docs not the British Government give a specific undertaking to meet the contingency? The crowning point of the Franco-Rus-sian argument is that if a united French, British, and Russian undertaking could be announced to the effect that a German aggression hi Central Europe would be promptly met by armed resistance on the part o£ thoso three Powers, then it is reasonably certain that Germany would never commit any such aggression.

Such is the argument. It is met by «ilenco. on the part of the British Government and of British opinion, alike. It is true that the British Govern.mint's commitment under the Covenant of the League of Nations would by itself, if strictly carried out, provide all the commitment desired byFrench and Russian diplomacy. But it Is a well-known fact that in present circumstances the Covenant of the League of Nations cannot be regarded by the potential victims of aggression as a l-eliable safeguard.

What, then, is the true explanation of British reluctance to take the firm

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19360716.2.66

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXXII, Issue 14, 16 July 1936, Page 9

Word Count
1,088

EUROPEAN CRISIS Evening Post, Volume CXXII, Issue 14, 16 July 1936, Page 9

EUROPEAN CRISIS Evening Post, Volume CXXII, Issue 14, 16 July 1936, Page 9

Help

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert