And I believe Mr. Arnold is right in his view that an International Clearing House is bound to come. Business, finance and commerce are now so truly international that there is a manifest need of it. As a strong proof of this let me remind you that when this war broke, forty per cent. of the securities of the world were held internationally.
HOW ENGLAND AND FRANCE PREVENTED WARS
Now economic pressure is not a new thing in the world. It has been used before by one nation against another and usually with tremendous effectiveness. When Philip was organizing the great armada the merchants of London persuaded the merchants of Genoa to withhold credit and moneys from the Spanish King. The result was that the armada was delayed for over a year, and then the English were prepared to meet the shock. What could be done three centuries ago for a year to delay a Power so great as Spain then was could be done in this century far more effectively. And it has been employed in this century. When the German Emperor dispatched the gunboat to Agadir bringing on the acute crisis with France, I happened to be in Paris. On the fourth day of the crisis I was having luncheon at the Grand Hotel with a young French banker of the Credit Lyonnais. I remarked on the fact that the crisis was becoming less acute and inquired the reason. “We are withdrawing our French investments from Germany,” was the rejoinder, “and that economic pressure is relieving the situation.” As we all know, it not only relieved the situation but it served as a definite means to prevent a war that seemed imminent. Now I submit that a force which England could use against Spain in the Sixteenth Century and that France could use against Germany in the Twentieth Century—in each case let me remind you a single nation was applying force against another single nation and that nation its enemy—I submit that that force can be applied by all nations collectively against another nation that refuses to settle in a World Court a justiciable issue.
THREE WAYS TO APPLY ECONOMIC PRESSURE
Economic pressure could be applied in three ways:
First: To compel nations to submit justiciable questions to the World Court.
Second: To compel nations to submit to the decrees of the World Court.
Third: To serve as a penalty against an offending nation for breaking a Hague Convention.
A nation that should decline to take justiciable questions to the World Court, after having agreed with other nations to do so, would manifestly become an outlaw. Why shouldn’t other nations immediately declare an embargo of non-intercourse with an outlaw nation, refusing to buy from that nation or sell to that nation or have any intercourse whatsoever with that nation? In this connection I should like to read the resolution that I offered yesterday.
Believing that commerce as the organized business life of the world is interdependent because international, and believing that it can become a great conservator of the world’s peace, therefore be it