-54- 669, Eighteenth from London there is a tolerable life appointed for their peoples. Take Finland, take Italy: These peoples have not all been massacred and enslaved. On the contrary so far as Italy is concerned there are moments when one has almost wondered whether it was they who had unconditionally surrendered to us or whether we were about unconditionally to surrender to them. This at least I can say on behalf of the United Nations to Germany:' "If you surrender now nothing that you will have to endure after the war will be comparable to what you are otherwise going to suffer during the year 1945". Peace though based on unconditional surrender will bring to Germany and Japan an immense, immediate amelioration of the suffering and agony, which now lies before them. We the Allies are no monsters but faithful men trying to carry forward the light of the world trying to raise from the bloody welter and confusion in which mankind is now plunged a structure of peace of freedom of justice and of law which system shall be an abiding and lasting shelter for all. That is how I venture to set-before the committee today the grave issue called "unconditional surrender" which at Hon. Gentleman opposite referred to--as he was quite entitled to do--the other day at question time. I now come to the second of the main questions which lie before |