The Peace Negotiations by Robert Lansing
page 55 of 309 (17%)
page 55 of 309 (17%)
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the Council provided the request contains a written statement of the
subject to be discussed. "The archives of the Council shall be open at any time to any member of the Council, who may make and retain copies thereof. "All expenses of the Supervisory Committee and Secretariat shall be borne equally by all powers signatory or adherent to this convention." As indicated by the caption, this document was intended merely "for discussion" of the principal features of the organization. It should be noted that the basic principle is the equality of nations. No special privileges are granted to the major powers in the conduct of the organization. The rights and obligations of one member of the League are no more and no less than those of every other member. It is based on international democracy and denies international aristocracy. Equality in the exercise of sovereign rights in times of peace, an equality which is imposed by the very nature of sovereignty, seemed to me fundamental to a world organization affecting in any way a nation's independence of action or its exercise of supreme authority over its external or domestic affairs. In my judgment any departure from that principle would be a serious error fraught with danger to the general peace of the world and to the recognized law of nations, since it could mean nothing less than the primacy of the Great Powers and the acknowledgment that because they possessed the physical might they had a right to control the affairs of the world in times of peace as well as in times of war. For the United States to admit that such primacy ought to be formed would be bad enough, but to suggest it indirectly by |
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