What is needed is, that states should not be able to attack other states and in twenty-four hours to seize the possessions of others.
This practical idea was expressed by Maxime du Camp, and to this the conclusion of the article is reduced.
M. du Camp's propositions are these:
"(1) A diplomatic congress ought to meet every year.
"(2) No war can be declared sooner than two months after the incident provoking it. (The difficulty will be to determine which incident it is that provokes the war, because with every war there are a very large number of such incidents, and it would be necessary to decide from which incident the two months are to be counted.)
"(3) War cannot be declared before it is submitted to the vote of the nations preparing for it.
"Military action cannot begin sooner than a month after the declaration of war."
"War cannot be begun ... must ..." and so forth.
But who will see to it that war cannot be begun? Who will see to it that men must do so and so? Who will compel the power to wait until the proper time? All the other powers need just as much to be moderated and placed within bounds and compelled. Who will do the compelling? and how?—Public opinion.—But if there is a public opinion which can compel a power to wait for a given time, the same public opinion can compel the power not to begin the war at all.