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Excerpts of the President's News Conference

September 16, 1924

I don't know as I can make any comment on the progress of the campaign, other than to say it is going on satisfactorily. I haven't any speaking engagements other than what are known. I think next month I am going to speak at Philadelphia on the 25th, and before the Holy Name Society here on the 21st. Those have no special significance. If I get cornered up by people wanting me to make speeches, and it is represented to me that on this occasion I am the only individual that can save the progress of civilization, and that unless I am to do it civilization is going to fail and I shall be responsible for it, when that proposal is made to anyone it is rather difficult for them to say they won't make a speech.

I don't know as I can comment any on the statement that I think Chairman Butler made in relation to my making speeches in the West. I have tried to make it plain that I have no plan about it. I shouldn't want you to be surprised, or to draw any particular inference from my making speeches, or not making speeches, out there. I don't recall any candidate for President that ever injured himself very much by not talking.

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Here is another inquiry about the guns on the American battleships —elevation. Nothing new developed in relation to that. I think I made my position quite clear the other day. We want to maintain all the rights we have under the treaty, but as a matter of policy I doubt whether at the present time I would want to advocate any expenses that aren't absolutely necessary on battleships. An additional reason has developed in relation to that within the last week, by reason of the return of the American fliers from around the world. I have read a great many times in the course of a short life that battleships are to become extinct. They never have. And I should hesitate some to put a lot of reliance on that kind of a statement now and to adopt that policy. But it was reported to me that one result of this world flight has been a demonstration of future ability to carry on warfare through the air and that it made the position of the large battleships very much different than it has been in the past. The statement was that we couldn't go to Europe now as we went in 1917 and 1918, and that it would be impossible to pursue the policy that we had adopted of transporting troops and munitions on account of the development of aerial navigation. Now, I should have to take that into consideration before I want to authorize much of an expenditure on large battleships. Also it is to be considered that we have 6 or 8 battleships under the treaty that will come up to be scrapped in the course of a not very long time in the future, 6, 8 or 10 years. It is a question of whether we want to expend a lot of money on those battleships that will be scrapped in that time. Those are the only differences that have occurred to me in the situation between now and what it was the other day.

PRESS: Mr. President, doesn't that make your position in relation to the next disarmament conference stronger by not bringing our forces up to the stipulation in the treaty?

PRESIDENT: I have seen considerable discussion to the effect that our Navy was way below the treaty limit. I should want to have quite a careful inventory and analysis made of our Navy before I subscribed strongly to that. You gentlemen are all familiar with the military policy. It seems to be the classic one of securing an appropriation for either the Army or the Navy. That policy doesn't have very much effect around this office, nor I assume on the Congress, suggesting that our Army is running down in materials and personnel, and that the Navy is just ready to drop into the sea. I couldn't go into details, but my belief is that the Navy at the present time is in perfect condition, pretty efficiently manned, entirely well equipped, and that it is able to shoot a little better than it was ever before. Now, I don't want anything said that will deter the Congress from making an adequate appropriation. I want to see the policy of the budget maintained. I want to maintain it and the only way that it can be broken down is through the action of the Congress. I want to try to have the Executive Department maintain that policy, and just at the present time before I should want to approve of a very enlarged appropriation for any department I should want to make a very careful survey of the department to see that every possible efficiency is being secured out of the present appropriation.

PRESS: Mr. President, are we to understand that this is the reason for Mr. Wilbur's coming back to Washington so hastily?

PRESIDENT: I wouldn't say that. Some of the press, I thought, rather overemphasized that. I want to see him about matters in the Navy and so I sent him a telegram asking him to return. It didn't portend any crisis, or anything of that kind.

PRESS: Mr. President, could you give us any information about the estimates?

PRESIDENT: For my own information I asked the Bureau of the Budget to find out how much we were spending for aviation, and the figures are $32,174,000 total; for the Army $12,435,000; the Navy $16,150,000; then the Advisory Board has $450,000; and the Post Office Department $2,750,000. [Stenographers's note: The President left out a figure.] That doesn't, of course, in the Army and Navy, represent the pay of the personnel.

PRESS: Those are figures for the current fiscal year?

PRESIDENT: Last year, I believe. I think the salary of the officers and men is all in addition. I think that is the largest amount that is expended by any government, with the possible exception of France. I rather doubt if they are making as large an expenditure as that. I wouldn't want to be too certain of that. Their expenditures on account of differences in prices and so on are somewhat different from ours.

PRESS: Mr. President, do you have the figures showing the increase?

PRESIDENT: I don't know. I don't imagine there is an increase over the preceding year. The total is $32,174,000, which is a fairly large sum to expend on aviation. It is not so very long ago that the appropriation for the Navy didn't exceed that amount.

PRESS: Mr. President, what is the basis of these figures—to see whether it shall be increased or decreased for the next year?

PRESIDENT: NO, but I have seen some newspaper comment about the amounts that we were proposing to expend on aviation, and for my own information I sent out to find out what the amount was. It may be that we ought to expend more than that. It may be that that is adequate. I merely mentioned that as the only element that I thought of that would come into consideration at the present time in relation to expending a lot more money on battleships. The round-the-world flight to some minds has demonstrated that the position of the battleship has become one that is obsolete. I rather think that there would be a little lack of logic in spending a lot of money on battleships and at the same time spending a lot of money on aviation. I am not quite sure about this, but if the battleship has become obsolete because aviation has become powerful, it seems to me that we had better stop spending very much money on battleships and more on aviation.

PRESS: Mr. President, will that idea be carried out in the budget?

PRESIDENT: I don't know that the idea has developed far enough yet. I wouldn't want to pass judgment on it. Of course that is a matter for the experts of the Army and the Navy. They haven't made any formal report to me, but I am just speaking about this as to what seems to me rather an inevitable result. If battleships become obsolete we wouldn't want to spend a lot of money on them, and if aviation becomes more efficient perhaps it is reasonable to spend more money on aviation.

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I haven't any plan or policy about the settlement of the French debt at present. That is all provided for by statute law, and I suppose that the only representation I would be entitled to make about it is that which I am ordered to make by law. That states in what way it may be settled, the rate of interest, and length of time the matter is to run. Of course, in addition to that we have a Commission. Mr. [Edward N.] Hurley is a member of the Commission and a very efficient member. If the Commission, after conference with representatives of another country, should recommend to me that we should go to Congress and ask to make a settlement with a country on terms different from that provided by law, very likely I should undertake to secure consent from Congress. That was what was done with the British debt. It wasn't settled exactly in conformity with the terms of the law. The law had to be varied to meet the.conditions. I couldn't pass any judgment before the event on anything that they might want to oppose. I should give great weight to the opinion of the Commission and undoubtedly would adopt any suggestion or recommendations that they might make to me, and make it my own recommendation, so far as it might be necessary, to present to the Congress.

PRESS: If there were a modification of the terms now enjoyed by Great Britain we would have to modify their terms at the same time, wouldn't we?

PRESIDENT: I don't see why.

PRESS: Mr. President, you couldn't expect them to pay in harsher terms than Italy, for instance, if you should make the rate of interest lower?

PRESIDENT: Well, Great Britain now is paying, and one or two other nations are paying. Some nations are not paying any. There is a difference in conditions now, and those conditions might continue.

PRESS: Isn't there something in the statute which provides that settlement must be made with all countries on the same basis?

PRESIDENT: Well, you may be right about that. I didn't have it in mind that the statute did provide that there must be the same terms between the nations. Perhaps it does. My recollection was that there was an original statute passed creating this Commission and directing them under what terms and conditions they should make settlement. When they came to make their settlement with the British they found the British couldn't comply with those terms, and therefore submitted a new proposal to the Congress who passed a special law. Now it may be that in that special law it is provided to apply the same terms to all countries.

PRESS: If it didn't, Mr. President, you couldn't expect Great Britain to pay harsher terms than others.

PRESIDENT: Of course, the British are paying now. The others are not paying anything. It doesn't at all follow that because France or Italy or some other country can't pay but $50,000,000 a year and we have to extend their payments over 75 years, that the British are not abundantly able to pay their amount in 62 years. It is a question of the ability of each country. There is great force, though, in what you say about treating everybody alike. I should like to do that. I doubt very much if the British would make any complaint about any settlement that we might make with any others. They have made their settlement on what they thought they could do. What we have constantly kept in mind in that policy is that the debt that is due to us from one country hasn't any direct connection with the debt that might be due to us from another country. That is why we have not mixed up the German indemnity in any way with our own debt.

Source: "The Talkative President: The Off-the-Record Press Conferences of Calvin Coolidge". eds. Howard H. Quint & Robert H. Ferrell. The University Massachusetts Press. 1964.

Calvin Coolidge, Excerpts of the President's News Conference Online by Gerhard Peters and John T. Woolley, The American Presidency Project https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/node/349070

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