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The War Prevention Policy of the United States1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 May 2017

Frank B. Kellogg*
Affiliation:
Of the United States

Extract

It has been my privilege during the past few months to conduct on behalfof the Government of the United States negotiations having for their object the promotion of the great ideal of world peace. Popular and governmental interest in the realization of this ideal has never been greater than at the present time. Ever since the World War, which spelled death to so many millions of men, spread desolation over so much of the Continent of Europe and shocked and imperiled neutral as well as belligerent nations, the minds of statesmen and of their peoples have been more and more concerned with plans for preventing the recurrence of such a calamity.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of International Law 1928

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Footnotes

1

An address delivered before the Council on Foreign Relations at New York City, March 15, 1928. Printed from text supplied by the author.

References

2 Up to April 9 negotiations for arbitration treaties similar to the treaty with France had been initiated with the governments of the following additional countries: Portugal,Denmark, Austria, Hungary, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Poland, The Netherlands,Switzerland, Lithuania, Latvia, and Finland. (State Department press notice, April 9,1928.)

3 Up to April 9 negotiations for concilation treaties similar to the Bryan treaties had been initiated by the government of the United States with tne governments of the following countries: Japan, Germany, Austria, Hungary, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Poland, Lithuania, Latvia and Finland. (State Department press .notice, April 9, 1928.)

4 As a result of a conversation of the Secretary of State with the French Ambassador on April 7,1928, the United States and France agreed upon the immediate submission to Great Britain, Germany, Italy and Japan of the entire correspondence which has passed between the United States and France on the subject of a multilateral anti-war treaty, for the consideration and comment of those Powers. (State Department press notice, April 7, 1928.)