TO ASSURE PEACE
CO-OPERATION WITH RUSSIA LONDON, June 27. Mr. Joseph Davies, who recently returned from a visit to Moscow as President Roosevelt's special representative, told a New York audience that co-operation with Russia was essential if victory was to be assured and the peace won. Despite the red ] heat of war, there was no indication of the development of a purely militaristic mind or purpose in the Soviet Union. The Russians were essentially' civilians. There could be no final victory without the Soviet, and no postwar peace could be effective without Russia. Renter's Moscow correspondent says that the United States Ambassador there, Admiral Standley, paid a tribute to the co-operation between. Russia, Britain, and America, and expressed the opinion that it was reaching a maximum effort. "It must not cease with the defeat of Germany, but must be continued till the defeat of Japan, and must be maintained after the war," he declared.
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Evening Post, Volume CXXXV, Issue 151, 28 June 1943, Page 5
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154TO ASSURE PEACE Evening Post, Volume CXXXV, Issue 151, 28 June 1943, Page 5
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