Show NEWS ilu BEHIN HN TH THEN E I 1 by PAUL MALLON RI released ei oy by w betm union ALL SMALL NATIONS MUST BE GIVEN VOICE washington the democratic beroa seroa senators t chirruped chirrup ed choruses of do dc anunciation nuncia hia c tion at governor dewey upon his demand for far small mail nations P protection in the postwar world then suddenly they went quiet tom connally t their heir foreign role rela dumn ions chairman had bad said at first that dewey had staged a attack upon the dumbarton coni conference fee A few days later he was beaming benignly upon the republicans and saying in a senate so speech a ech they had been exceptionally cooperative on foreign policy the change is attributable to state secretary hull mr me hull was wag the first to realize indeed he seems carn the only one now firmly to insist that S a peace impose imposed d b by y a majority 1 will I not endure even among the united nations th that at thea the opposition Plit antion will one day get into power here perhaps soon that unity at home as well a as among the nations of the world I 1 is essential if a anything n y t h n g c constructive n tt is t to eventuate n t ma he has been the leading m caf force c e f for or r restraint e s t r a L nt i in n an emoni emotional a 1 corid 1 d debate KEEP ON HIGH PLANE but the matter is constantly being pushed off the plane he wants into politics politic mod and lon confusion fusion comes now the foreign policy association tor for instance thinking to defend him against dewey in an involved and circuitous collection of assertions it seems to conclude dewey is wrong and ad small nations can only be protected ze te ted through domination by the big four powers furthermore two columnists who are supposed to be outstanding international experts have entered a radio debate which whirls the whole nean issue into vortex the ousted hull assistant M mr welles welle and mr hull a can constant t at kibitzer mr M lipp lippmann ann whose r recommendations on ad international affairs airs have never been followed by any government in any instance a as far back as my memory runs though he be sells th them sm to the public three times limes a wee week k a and nd in books annually these two as a I 1 say have become hopelessly involved in such technicalities cali ties as the respective degree of sovereignties sovereign ties of japan and germany on postwar these developments development tk take a simple im ale proposition and stretch 1 1 it to monstrous moni 1 incongruities the pro proposition post I 1 before e re all ail these stretch men took hold of it was and add still is this protection 0 N OF SMALL S M ALL dewey it urged III ed that the interests of small arnall nations be better protected and suggested a specific we way to do it he recommended that thy the D dumbarton 1 it oaks oak conference keep the military horld ald setup separate from I 1 economic agreements he and mr I 1 duties dulles in their conferences started searching for a way in which small nations would not be over ridden by the power of the big four and they hit upon this formula their reasoning is rather obvious A small nation is a small nation and no one me proposes to make them all big the military might of the world will remain after the war largely with russia a and nd th the e united states not with sai small all nations and not even witti britain and china so no pe peace can an change ing that also at a R russia asio and the united states state will have the greatest political politic I 1 power p as in the world this is a fat ct ot of geography industry raw materials manpower it cannot be altered by the peace either now mr hull pre proposed posed to protect the small nations by safeguarding the r sovereignty this is largely a negative guarantee but a powerful one it would transfer the american conception of individuality to the world no private telephone or back office appendages were involved in the hull dewey front page jockeying on an world place peace th the participants spoke all they had to say in headlines but the refined politics the subtle parry and thrust were neglected in the reports although these estabI established chad dew dewey e y in a new international chikae character 1 e r and will be of mes inestimable importance in the campaign the administration a campaign policy has been to play dewey to t the he public as a barefoot boy in international mt int t ter affairs without experience e n a 0 or r ability for far leadership to 71 tea tear d down own t this I 1 a conception has been a most difficult t technical anal task hull pr proposes poses there will be no mo ma evoly of raw mate material call and economic a mid and financial do domination m byr by the h big four but dew dewey y says uan th this hull h hope pe is too vague indeed financial domination almeady has been bee hinted b by y the breton woods ad conference although 1 t agh the oil agreement might jas possibly inbi develop more a I 1 in tie line in hull policy 1 dewey polley goes e farther and says the ane hull way will n not at he be effert effective ne tb that it coill a more 0 re certain ta in way to accomplish the result 1 is I to keep the a arrangements men for far world security separate i |