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INTERNATIONAL: Sound & Adequate?
With London's airport fogbound last week British Foreign Secretary "Flying Sam" Hoare left for Paris by train & boat instead of plane. Ninety minutes after his arrival Sir Samuel was closeted with Premier Pierre Laval and the permanent experts who make British and French foreign policy, Sir Robert Vansittart and M. Alexis Leger, plus their sub-experts on Ethiopia, Mr. Maurice Peterson and Count Rene de Saint-Quentin. The tension and excitement were terrific. Upon the table lay in draft form on crisp sheets "The Deal."
The recent British General Election was fought and won on a plane of loftily denying the simultaneous diplomatic work which went steadily forward to make The Deal for peace between Italy and Ethiopia (TIME, Oct. 14). Last week 24 days had passed since Britons voted. The Deal, involving dismemberment of Ethiopia to the extent of Italy's securing approximately half of Haile Selassie's Empire, was briskly approved in Paris last week by Sir Samuel Hoare who had just finished announcing in the House of Commons that to be "acceptable" any terms of peace must satisfy Italy, the League and Ethiopia (see p. 21). To make Emperor Haile Selassie more satisfied than he otherwise might have been, Dictator Mussolini opened up last week for the first time with 200-lb. air bombs (see p. 21). Premier Laval, who months ago as Foreign Minister sold Il Duce a free hand in Ethiopia so far as France is concerned (TIME, Jan 14), was glad to have The Deal approved last week by the British Foreign Secretarydisavowal of whom by His Majesty's Government would be an international scandal of the first magnitude but he realized that the Rt. Hon. Stanley Baldwin is a character who is accustomed to act from feeling and intuition with the casualness of a friendly sheepdog.
The Quai d'Orsay switchboard operator was told to get Stanley Baldwin on the telephone. She reported that the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom was not to be reached by telephone even on the joint request of His Majesty's Principal Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs and the President of the Council of Ministers of France. There was nothing unusual in this. Mr. Baldwin often refuses to use the telephone. Instinct and experience warned him that he would be better able to make up his mind as to the justice and wisdom of dismembering Ethiopia after he had read and heard the first reactions of news-organs and British political henchmen to the startling events in Parisstartling to millions who balloted under the distinct impression that His Majesty's Government intended to preserve, protect and defend through the League of Nations the territorial integrity of Ethiopia. Neither Squire Baldwin nor any member of the British Cabinet ever promised to do this. In respect to Ethiopia they merely promised to be sound and adequate.
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