DIRECT SACRIFICES
THE DEMOCRACIES
U.S. REFLECTIONS
END NOT YET IN SIGHT
,NEW YORK, September 29.
Americans welcomed the news of the Munich settlement with a sense of the deepest relief, but mingled with the sense that the democracies have made direct and indirect sacrifices, the end of which is not yet in sight.
"If the Munich agreement should prove the beginning instead of the end of war clouds and wars in Europe arising from the current application of self-determinism, and if war is demonstrated to have been postponed instead of averted, and the judgment of the contempprary world and of history will be different," says the chief Washington correspondent of the "New York Times." i
It is too early to say that peace has been firmly .established by the concessions the democratic Powers
have made.
"In view of minority questions still affecting several nations in Europe, the moods and methods of Hitler and Mussolini, and the constant need for dictators to win victories, it might be well to await the events of the next few months before too much credit is claimed for those statesmen who made contributions to a settlement of the Czech crisis."
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXXVI, Issue 80, 1 October 1938, Page 9
Word Count
195DIRECT SACRIFICES Evening Post, Volume CXXVI, Issue 80, 1 October 1938, Page 9
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