ANGLO-RUSSIAN DISPUTE
SOVIET MINISTER’S VIEWS. NO FURTHER CONCESSIONS. Press Association—By Tclegnvph-'Copyright PARIS, May 29. M. Radek, interviewed by the Matin's Berlin correspondent, said: “We have gone as far as possible jn making concessions to England. We have forgone the question of prestige, for with a country and a people like ours there is none. We leave prestige to tho British Foreign Office, which is largely composed of men who are inveigling Poland to fight us. Their policy is to employ the Polish armies to turn us back from the East. France would not favour the plan, for when we had swept over Poland and Germany we would be in the neighbourhood of the French armies, and such proximity might lead to' unpleasant friction.”—A. and N.Z. Cable.
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Otago Daily Times, Issue 18876, 31 May 1923, Page 7
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126ANGLO-RUSSIAN DISPUTE Otago Daily Times, Issue 18876, 31 May 1923, Page 7
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