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NAZI NERVES

SOMETHING MORE PROMISED COMING ALLIED PEAK Rugby, May 17. Sir Stafford Cripps, speaking at i Bristol about the British determination to defeat their enemies with the helo of their friends, referred particularly to Australia and Russia, and commented on the possibility of the formation of a second front. Australia, he said, was under great stress in the face of possible invasion, but the British authorities hoped that the splendid results of the Coral Sea battle would discourage the Japanese attempt to attack Australia. At the same time, Britain must do her utmost to help Australia, which had done great work for Britain. Alter referring to the support of Russia, the United States, and China, Sir Stafford said that Britain had done her utmost to help Russia with supplies and armaments. “Already the Germans are getting uneasy at the militant offensive spirit of the British and American people in the matter of a second front, which the Prime Minister welcomed in his recent broadcast,” he said. “The Germans will, I believe, show something more than nervousness when our two Governments translate that militant spirit into offensive action, as they certainly will do the moment they judge it opportune.” Sir Stafford said that when he got to know Marshal Timoshenko in Russia he found that he had the qualities of a great leader, and the Germans around Kharkov no doubt were also of that opinion. The muchheralded German offensive had been turned into a Russian offensive. Referring to American production, he said that the output of all classes of offensive material would soon become overwhelming. The Americans had a full task in dealing with Japan, but just as Britain was helping them in the Pacific, they were helping to deal with the other Axis partners. The Allies were also being helped by the great V army on many scattered fronts, and by guerrillas. Sir Stafford Cripps said he would continue to work for self-Government and self-determination for India. Growing Air Strength Referring again to the offensive spirit of the Allies, he said that the whole of Britain felt that the long defensive period necessitated by the fall of France was nearing its end and that the time had come to prepare to take the offensive in the decisive stage of the war. “Let us remember,” he said, “that our advance will not be easy or uninterrupted. The power of our enemies, though diminished, is by no means spent. We shall yet meet with crushing difficulties and maybe painful defeats in some theatres, but. behind all there will be growing, day by day, that vast air strength which will sooner or later—it must be sooner in some fields—give us overwhelming superiority. But our air strength and that of our American allies has not nearly reached its peak and power. There is every reason for hope and confidence in the future, but none for easy optimism or stupid complacency.” Speaking of the future, Sir Stafford Cripps said that the war had proved that the common aim was of sufficient importance to make everybody work together. Poverty, ill health, unemployment, and bad housing were some of the principal enemies of the whole human race, and he believed there was a large body of people who were prepared to wage as ruthless and total war on these enemies as on Hitler and Mussolini. Nothing must be allowed to stand in the way of that fight. Changed Outlook Just as Bristol had been torn by the ravages of war, so, too, had much of the pre-war outlook gone, to be replaced by a deeper and more significant vitality which sought to prove itself in terms of actual social economic experience. “Without that driving power of moral, religious, or ethical force which is patent in our people to-day,” he declared, "we will not be able to accomplish victory in war or peace. We must dedicate and sacrifice ourselves and our personal interests not only in the effort to defeat and destroy our Nazi and Fascist enemies, but also to wipe out those foul enemies of poverty, disease, unemployment, and bad housing which have destroyed so many of our people in the past, and which, unless we overcome them with every weapon we possess, will destroy them again and even more terribly in the future.”—B.O.W.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/WC19420519.2.65

Bibliographic details

Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 86, Issue 115, 19 May 1942, Page 5

Word Count
718

NAZI NERVES Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 86, Issue 115, 19 May 1942, Page 5

NAZI NERVES Wanganui Chronicle, Volume 86, Issue 115, 19 May 1942, Page 5