Italy, and Cecil plan, territory, See also Fiume; Great Powers.
Japan, and Cecil plan, in Council of Ten, See also
Great Powers;
Shantung.
Judicial settlement of international disputes, Lansing’s
plan,
subordinated in Wilson’s draft,
Lansing on diplomatic adjustment and,
Lansing urges as nucleus of League,
in Lansing’s resolution of
principles, Lansing’s appeal
for, in Covenant, arbitrators of
litigant nations, difficulties in
procedure, cost, elimination from
Covenant of appeal from arbitral
awards, how effected, Lansing’s
appeal ignored, in Cecil plan, See
also Arbitration; Diplomatic
adjustment.
Jugo-Slavia, and Anglo-Franco-American alliance, port,
erected, See
also Fiume.
Kato, Baron, and Shantung,
Kiao-Chau. See Shantung.
Kiel Canal, internationalization,
Koo, V.K. Wellington, argument on Shantung,
Labor article, in Wilson’s original draft, in Treaty,
Lansing, Robert, resignation asked and given, divergence
of judgment
from President, reasons for retaining
office, reasons for narrative,
imputation of faithlessness, personal
narrative, subjects of
disagreement, attitude toward duty
as negotiator, policy as to advice
to President, President’s
attitude towards opinions, method of
treatment of subject, conference
on armistice terms, selected as a
negotiator, opposition to President
being a delegate, President’s
attitude toward this opposition,
and Commission of Inquiry, arrival
in Paris, and balance of power,
and paramount need of speedy peace,
opposition to mandates, opposition
to French alliance treaty, signs
it, personal relations with President,
memorandum on American
programme (1918), has projet
of treaty prepared, Wilson resents it,
on lack of organization in American
Commission, and lack of
programme, and American Commission
during President’s absence, on
Wilson’s modus vivendi
idea, opposition to secret diplomacy, effect
on Wilson, and Fiume, and Shantung,
Bullitt affair, views on Treaty
when presented to Germans, and ratification
of Treaty See also
American Commission; League; Wilson.
Latvia Wilson and autonomy
League of Nations principles as subject of disagreement
as object of
peace negotiations as reason for
President’s participation in
Conference Wilson’s belief
in necessity American support of idea,
earlier plans and associations divergence
of opinion on form
political and juridical forms of
organization Wilson’s belief in
international force and affirmative
guaranty affirmative guaranty in
Fourteen Points Phillimore’s
report preparation of Wilson’s original
draft, House as author Lansing not
consulted, reason Lansing’s


