Office of the Chancellor
To: Weatherby Swann, Prime Minister of His Majesty's Government of Anglyn
Subject: Concerning the Tangaloan Revolution
With the utmost interest, the Commonwealth of Cantigny looks upon the events taking place in Tangaloa with stern eyes. This debate has and continues to be a question of democracy and peace for Oceania, which Cantigny upholds as chief amongst its interests and goals. Given our disposition in Oceania as the largest force for a sustained climate of common liberty and security, Cantigny is charged with protecting the integrity of all Oceanic Peoples. The year is 2011, the age of Global Empire's has reached its end, and what confronts us now is a choice between draining oceans of blood, or securing an ocean of peace.
Cantigny reiterates its initial call for a serious assessment of what precisely the Tangaloan People want and need from their Government. Not unlike the situation in Bombaim, Anglyn has offered the free world sparse assurance that Tangaloa has any future besides one as a vassal. Advancing the freedoms of these islands should be regarded as the highest honour, and our rightful duty to ensure the revolution succeeds: with oceans of blood, or an ocean of peace.
Forward Cantigny,
Felix Ilchester
Chancellor of the Commonwealth
To: Weatherby Swann, Prime Minister of His Majesty's Government of Anglyn
Subject: Concerning the Tangaloan Revolution
With the utmost interest, the Commonwealth of Cantigny looks upon the events taking place in Tangaloa with stern eyes. This debate has and continues to be a question of democracy and peace for Oceania, which Cantigny upholds as chief amongst its interests and goals. Given our disposition in Oceania as the largest force for a sustained climate of common liberty and security, Cantigny is charged with protecting the integrity of all Oceanic Peoples. The year is 2011, the age of Global Empire's has reached its end, and what confronts us now is a choice between draining oceans of blood, or securing an ocean of peace.
Cantigny reiterates its initial call for a serious assessment of what precisely the Tangaloan People want and need from their Government. Not unlike the situation in Bombaim, Anglyn has offered the free world sparse assurance that Tangaloa has any future besides one as a vassal. Advancing the freedoms of these islands should be regarded as the highest honour, and our rightful duty to ensure the revolution succeeds: with oceans of blood, or an ocean of peace.
Forward Cantigny,
Felix Ilchester
Chancellor of the Commonwealth