JAPANESE WAR
NEW PLANS OF ALLIES
I HOLDING POLICY ENDED I (By Telegraph—Press Association -Copyright t NEW YORK. June 25. There is in high Allied quarters, a new sense of importance of the Japanese war, says Joseph Harsch in the "Christian t Science Monitor." This change has come partly from a basic transformation of the European situation, partly from a growing feeling of danger of letting Japan go unchallenged too long:. Out of this combination has emerged a strategic plan for the Far East which does not challenge the priority of Germany as the enemy to be first defeated, but which elevates Japan almost to parity with Germany as an enemy which must be vigorously challenged at an. early date. Mr. Harsch says that it is now possible to approach the Japanese problem with the' weapons which are now available or will become available within the next six months. What is coming may still be long delayed, but it is definitely no longer a picture of merely having a holding front from Attu around the long Pacific arc to India,
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXXXV, Issue 150, 26 June 1943, Page 5
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180JAPANESE WAR Evening Post, Volume CXXXV, Issue 150, 26 June 1943, Page 5
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