Word: anglo
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...most important feature of the Treaty in the eyes of Senator Lodge--one which Senator Reed confessed yesterday he had "overlooked"--is the provision which terminates the Anglo-Japanese Alliance when ratifications of this Treaty are-exchanged. The Alliance has undoubtedly been the cause of much ill-feeling and suspicion. It has been played up by certain American papers and used to foster hatred of both signatories. Its abrogation would do much to clear the air in the Pacific...
...Anglo-Japanese Alliance has been scrapped. This was a menace to the stability of the Far East because under its protection and by its moral support--although against the wish of the British Government--Japan (at least militaristic Japan) has made aggression after aggression on China. It was the Anglo-Japanese Alliance which was the real cause of the bitter Shantung controversy, for it was this alliance which gave Japan the opportunity of seizing Shantung. In place of the Anglo-Japanese alliance is the now well-known Four Power Treaty between Great Britain, the United States, France, and Japan...
...quote from Mr. Abbott's article printed yesterday in the CRIMSON, "By this treaty no new rights are created, and no rights are acknowledged which have not been acknowledged already. . . . It commits no nation under any condition to a policy of resistance." It is obviously a substitution for the Anglo-Japanese Alliance. The country will surely admit the necessity for a full and frank discussion of treaties, but, if the Senate balks much longer over this one, patience will cease to be a virtue...
...first removing the cause of war. President Harding is to be commended in emphasizing the importance of the Far Eastern question, and it is significant that he attacks this problem with much greater boldness. He comes out definitely for the open door in China and the abolition of the Anglo-Japanese alliance...
...only thing we can do is to so forcefully convince the Japanese delegates of the impropriety of their course that they will compel their government at home to substitute for the present imperialistic policy aspirations for the industrial development of Japan and trade abroad. In the forthcoming conference Anglo-American cooperation must and will be predominant...