campaign by proclaiming: 'There could be no foreign policy of the Commonwealth. The foreign policy belonged to the Empire' (The Courier Mail, 1901). The British Government generally concurred, with Prime Minister Herbert Asquith insisting in 1911 that grave matters such as the declaration of war 'cannot be shared' (Hooper, B., Henderson, D., Gray, I., Hennessey, J. & Lewis, R. , 1996 ). This was demonstrated in both World War I and World War II. When World War I broke out Prime Minister Joseph Cook said…
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