U.S. FOREIGN POLICY
Inference* from Speech by Mr. Cordell Hull NEW PEACE PACT (Received 18, 10.30 a.m.) . WASHINGTON, Sept. 16. Diplomatic circles profess to see a radical change in American foreign policy from inferences drawn from an address Mr. Cordell Hull, Secretary of dtata, delivered at a meeting of the “Good Neighbour League.” in which he indicated that the Kellogg-Briand Pact should be superseded by a now international peace pact. The implications that the Administration had veered toward a strong collective security policy was erased, however, when the Secretary added that the nation had no desire to enter agreements supportable by force, but w filed to be friends with all nations and allies of none.
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Bibliographic details
Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume XXVI, Issue 236, 18 September 1936, Page 5
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115U.S. FOREIGN POLICY Hawke's Bay Tribune, Volume XXVI, Issue 236, 18 September 1936, Page 5
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