The Great Adventure at Washington: The Story of the Conference |
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Page xiii
... . FRANCE AND ENGLAND AND THE SUB- MARINE VIII . FRANCE AT WASHINGTON IX . THE FOUR - POWER TREATY X. JAPAN AND CHINA . XI . " UNIQUE IN HISTORY " 166 • 188 • 202 237 269 THE GREAT ADVENTURE AT WASHINGTON The Story of the Conference.
... . FRANCE AND ENGLAND AND THE SUB- MARINE VIII . FRANCE AT WASHINGTON IX . THE FOUR - POWER TREATY X. JAPAN AND CHINA . XI . " UNIQUE IN HISTORY " 166 • 188 • 202 237 269 THE GREAT ADVENTURE AT WASHINGTON The Story of the Conference.
Page 31
... China , Holland , and Portugal ; and then the session ended with a formal motion to meet again three days later . III I might close this account of the opening meeting with any one of a dozen incidents that crowd my recollection . I ...
... China , Holland , and Portugal ; and then the session ended with a formal motion to meet again three days later . III I might close this account of the opening meeting with any one of a dozen incidents that crowd my recollection . I ...
Page 36
... Chinese women were who wore their na- tive dress , than the one who had discarded her native costume for the latest of Paris fashions , and the like . Occasionally , there were faint echoes of the old diplomacy that had just been kicked ...
... Chinese women were who wore their na- tive dress , than the one who had discarded her native costume for the latest of Paris fashions , and the like . Occasionally , there were faint echoes of the old diplomacy that had just been kicked ...
Page 79
... Chinese dele- gation tells me that M. Briand reminds him very much of a famous actor and operatic performer in China , a cele- brated figure whose stage name is Tsiao Chiaou Tien , meaning , in the flowery language of China , " The ...
... Chinese dele- gation tells me that M. Briand reminds him very much of a famous actor and operatic performer in China , a cele- brated figure whose stage name is Tsiao Chiaou Tien , meaning , in the flowery language of China , " The ...
Page 203
... China . We were all following what the Conference was doing on these subjects , and did not realize that such a thing as the Anglo - Japa- nese Alliance , and the effort to find some way of terminating it , was " in the works . " Every ...
... China . We were all following what the Conference was doing on these subjects , and did not realize that such a thing as the Anglo - Japa- nese Alliance , and the effort to find some way of terminating it , was " in the works . " Every ...
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The Great Adventure at Washington, the Story of the Conference Mark Sullivan,Joseph Cummings Chase No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
accept agenda American delegates Anglo-Japanese Alliance asked attitude audience auxiliary craft Balfour Baltimore Sun Briand Briand's speech Britain Britain and Japan building called capital ships China course despatch diplomacy diplomatic dominance ence expressed fact feeling felt ference four-power treaty France France's French delegates Germany give Government happened Harding Harding's homelands of Japan Hughes plan Hughes's speech impression Italian Italy Japa Japanese knew land armament later League of Nations limitation of armament Lord Lee Lord Riddell matter ment mercantile shipping merely mind Mutsu nations naval armament naval experts naval strength newspaper occasion official Paris phrase political position President proposed public session ratio replied rôle Sarraut Schanzer scrap seats secret session seemed Senator Lodge speak spirit spoke submarines talk thing tion tonnage tons took twenty-one demands United Viviani wanted Washington Conference weeks Western Western world words
Popular passages
Page 249 - To provide the fullest and most unembarrassed opportunity to China to develop and maintain for herself an effective and stable government...
Page 6 - Four general principles have been applied: (1) That all capital ship-building programs, either actual or projected, should be abandoned; (2) That further reduction should be made through the scrapping of certain of the older ships; (3) That in general regard should be had to the existing naval strength of the Powers concerned; (4) That the capital ship tonnage should be used as the measurement of strength for navies and a proportionate allowance of auxiliary combatant craft prescribed.
Page 5 - One program inevitably leads to another, and, if competition continues, its regulation is impracticable. There is only one adequate way out, and that is to end it now.
Page 4 - The world looks to this conference to relieve humanity of the crushing burden created by competition in armament, and it is the view of the American Government that we should meet that expectation without any unnecessary delay.
Page 7 - States proposes, if this plan is accepted — (1) To scrap all capital ships now under construction. This includes 6 battle cruisers and 7 battleships on the ways and in course of building, and 2 battleships launched.
Page 199 - It has stood the strain of common sacrifices, common anxieties, common efforts, common triumphs. When two nations have been united in that fiery ordeal they cannot at the end of it take off their hats one to the other and politely part as two strangers part who travel together for a few hours in a railway train.
Page 116 - ... could better its relative position unless it won in the race which it was the object of the Conference to end. It was impossible to terminate competition in naval armament if the Powers were to condition their agreement upon the advantages they hoped to gain in the competition itself. Accordingly, when the argument was presented by Japan that a better ratio — that is, one more favorable to Japan than that assigned by the American plan, should be adopted and emphasis was placed upon the asserted...
Page x - Whether it was spoken or not, a hundred millions of our people were summarizing the inexcusable cause, the incalculable cost, the unspeakable sacrifices, and the unutterable sorrows, and there was the ever-impelling question: How can humanity justify or God forgive? Human hate demands no such toll; ambition and greed must be denied it.
Page 6 - I am happy to say that I am at liberty to go beyond these general propositions, and, on behalf of the American Delegation acting under the instructions of the President of the United States, to submit to you a concrete proposition for an agreement for the limitation of naval armament.
Page 11 - slightly staggered and deeply disturbed expression" on his face, reminding one of a "bulldog, sleeping on a sunny doorstep, who has been poked in the stomach by the impudent foot of an itinerant soap-canvasser seriously lacking in any sense of the most ordinary proprieties".