Abstract

Editorials

March 5, 1930 issue

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Unless something radical is done, and done quickly, to straighten out the extraordinary situation at London, the London conference is likely to go down in history as one of the most disastrous attempts at international cooperation in which the U.S. has ever engaged. Two problems in particular, both of grave seriousness, confront the U.S. delegation. The first is to insure the attainment of one of the two main purposes for which the conference was called, namely, the actual reduction of existing naval armaments. The second is to avoid entangling the U.S. in a European security pact.

See Also:

WORLD politics; UNITED States -- Foreign relations; EUROPE -- Politics & government; INTERNATIONAL relations; UNITED States; EUROPE
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