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aite so enthusiastic in making sure we will develop it in the
g ht way. The present greatest problem we are faced with
i= to ensure the safety of the Empire, and, above all, the
+ fotection of our great trade routes. (Hear, hear.) Australia,
sf ®ing so far away, has a vital interest in the security of her
f vn shores. You, I suggest, as the controllers of great
1 dmmercial interests in this country, trading over the seven
& las, have a similar interest with Australia in ensuring that
1 Iritain’s sea power is maintained at the requisite strength—
I, 1ear, hear and applause)—and in ensuring the safety of our
- feat sea-going commerce, which is the lifeblood of this
1 ountry and of the whole Empire. (Hear, hear.)
= I do not want at great length to go into the position
T lat we find ourselves in to-day, but I would remind you that
+ 1© world is not safe at the present moment. There are
gf °Me people who think the League of Nations has made
+ 2 safety of everybody secure. Nobody believes in
1°16 League of Nations more than I do; no one is more
st hthusiastic to see the great ideals it was created for realised ;
+ ut one has to look at the world as it is and it is impossible
+2 look round and imagine that everyone is secure, that we have
gf tached that point where dependence can be put on the
4 -€ague of Nations to save us, and that we can abandon any
lea of protecting ourselves by the strength of our own right
£°Im. (Hear, hear.) It is imperative that we should have
+ be requisite and necessary Force to protect our own great
| Nterests. There is no aggression in that; that is only ordinary
itudence and sanity ; but for the last few years we have
1 ertainly allowed our defensive forces to reach a point where
1 t must be a matter of very great anxiety to anybody who
+ Oves the Empire, and doubts must at times cross our minds
ts Vhether we are doing quite enough to ensure our own safety.
+ do ask every one of you to give very serious consideration
{ O these questions of ensuring the Empire's defence, and,
1 bove all, I ask you to remember what we have owed in the
Fast to the British Navy and to remember that we are probably
1 10Ing to owe just as much to it in the future. (Hear, hear
{ Ind applause.) I would also ask you to look at those
g-luestions of defence as being matters of Empire-wide signifi
+ 1ance. None of us are entitled to look only at those questions
+ rom the point of view of one isolated piece of an Empire
§ Which is stretched over the whole surface of the globe.
ii saw the other day that a suggestion was made that the
F drovision of an adequate Air Force in Britain was of far
+ jreater importance than the securing of a base in the Pacific.
1: agree there is nothing more vital than that Britain should be
otected against any possible menace from the air, but I
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