| Ray Stannard Baker - Paris Peace Conference - 1922 - 544 pages
...reunion with their native land. The proposal of the Polish Commission that we should place 2,100,000 Germans under the control of a people which is of...judgment, lead sooner or later to a new war in the East of Europe. What I have said about the Germans is equally true of the Magyars. There will never be peace... | |
| Francesco Saverio Nitti - World War, 1914-1918 - 1922 - 338 pages
...proposal of the Polish Commission that we should place 2,100,000 Germans under the control of a people of a different religion and which has never proved...judgment, lead sooner or later to a new war in the east of Europe. What I have said about the Germans is equally true about the Magyars. There will never be peace... | |
| Harold Henry Fisher, Sidney Brooks - Food supply - 1928 - 466 pages
...nationality was being violated. He pointed to the fact that over 2,000,000 Germans would be placed under the control of a people "which is of a different...never proved its capacity for stable self-government." His argument was applicable only to Danzig and one or two small sections, but by inference it was applied... | |
| John V. Denson - 570 pages
...bombs in Europe's future. Of Germany's border with Poland, David Lloyd George himself predicted that it "must in my judgment lead sooner or later to a new war in the east of Europe." Wilson's pretense that all injustices would be rectified in time — "It will be the business... | |
| Deborah Dwork, Robert Jan Pelt - History - 2002 - 476 pages
...and which has never proved its capacity for stable self-government throughout its history must . . . lead sooner or later to a new war in the East of Europe."70 And so it did. It did not lead to the Holocaust, but it did figure centrally in the opening... | |
| Deborah Dwork, Robert Jan Pelt - History - 2003 - 468 pages
...future very precisely. "In my judgement," he said, the Poles' proposal "that we should place 2,100,000 Germans under the control of a people which is of...stable self-government throughout its history must . . . lead sooner or later to a new war in the East of Europe.""0 And so it did. It did not lead to... | |
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