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THE EUROPEAN SITUATION

GENERAL FRBYBEEG’S VIEW

Speaking at the civic reception tendered him ,in .Auckland on TuesdayGeneral Freyberg said it was not .true that the Germans were short of food or that they were just wailing to cut the throats of their political leaders. The German could not bo dismissed as an inconsiderable factor in the European tangle. The speaker did not think that HenHitler could remain inactive when the good weather commenced in the spring and summer, and in the meantime the Germans were spending their time building submarines and mines. They would later concentrate their attack on key positions in England with a view to disorganising her war effort. The. British nation at present was united in a way that it had never been united before. . a

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/PATM19400105.2.24

Bibliographic details

Patea Mail, 5 January 1940, Page 3

Word Count
129

THE EUROPEAN SITUATION Patea Mail, 5 January 1940, Page 3

THE EUROPEAN SITUATION Patea Mail, 5 January 1940, Page 3

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