BRUTAL WAR.
EFFECT OF ANGLOFRENCH PACT. POLAND’S ANXIETY. £v Telegraph—Press Association—jCo ay right Reuter's Telegrams (Received February 27. 10.30 a.m.) WARSAW. February 26. Poland’s anxiety regarding the possibility of th<* conclusion of an AngloFrench guarantee pact in the event of the rejection of the Geneva Proctoeol has been voiced by 4he Foreign Minister, M. Skryncki, who expressed the opinion that the conclusion of such n pact, to the prejudice of the Franco-Polish Alliance, was impossible. The pact apparently disposed to guarantee peace in the English Channel while leaving the whole of the rest of the word at the mercy of events. The eflect would not he a guarantee of peace, but of brutal war. An AngloFrench guarantee pact could only be understood as an element in a vast edifice, in which the Franco-Polish pact would also take its place. The best thing would be to establish a general guarantee of security based on a general combination. Any other solution would bring Europe to suicide.
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Bibliographic details
Star (Christchurch), Issue 17474, 27 February 1925, Page 7
Word Count
164BRUTAL WAR. Star (Christchurch), Issue 17474, 27 February 1925, Page 7
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