ABSTRACT

T H E time has come for a drastic revision of British policy on the North-West Frontier of India in order to reach at last a constructive and permanent peace.

There has grown up in recent years, among thoughtful men and women, a strong conviction as to the utter futility of war of any kind as a means of settling international disputes. The northern nations of Europe and America stand quite definitely for the principle involved in the Kellogg Pact, which represents a new world order of friendly people bent on settling their differences by persuasion rather than by force. Over against this, we watch with anxious eyes the persistence of war on the North-West Frontier of India.