15 DECEMBER 1944, page 10

Marginal Comment

By HAROLD N1COLSON I TRUST that I shall not be considered intrusive if I add a marzinal comment to what is written elsewhere regarding last Friday's debate upon the situation in......

I Believe That The British Public Will In The End

teturn to that sure instinct which has inspired the principles of our foreign policy from the days of Canning to the days of Grey and Arthur Henderson. Our departure from that......

Yet Behind The Perplexity Engendered By The Confusing...

have occurred in Athens, there was a deeper perplexity which was concerned, not with any local or momentary crisis, but with one of the most fundamental principles of British......

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Our aim in Greece is to secure conditions in which the Greek people shall have occasion to choose both the Government and the Opposition that they desire. I am not among those......

The Recurrence Of This Principle In Our Foreign Policy Is

due to something far more important than any ideological sympathy ; it has a basis far more realistic than any natural affinity to countries who possess and maintain political......