American Diplomacy in the Far East, 1941: Official Press Releases of the U. S. Department of State on the Sino-Japanese Situation During the Year 19411942 - China - 503 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 83
Page 44
... Peace and security for the United States with advocacy of peace and limitation and reduction of armament as universal interna- tional objectives ; ( 2 ) support for law , order , justice , and moral- ity and the principle of non ...
... Peace and security for the United States with advocacy of peace and limitation and reduction of armament as universal interna- tional objectives ; ( 2 ) support for law , order , justice , and moral- ity and the principle of non ...
Page 83
... peace , as we understand peace , but literally does not believe in peace . That group uses the word , it is true - at it was used by the aggressor at the time of the Munich arrangement in 1938. Peace to that group is merely a convenient ...
... peace , as we understand peace , but literally does not believe in peace . That group uses the word , it is true - at it was used by the aggressor at the time of the Munich arrangement in 1938. Peace to that group is merely a convenient ...
Page 490
... peace and economic advancement , a world whose foundations will not soon tremble again , whose walls cannot be toppled down , the time is already here for the scholars and thinkers to start to work on the contribution which the American ...
... peace and economic advancement , a world whose foundations will not soon tremble again , whose walls cannot be toppled down , the time is already here for the scholars and thinkers to start to work on the contribution which the American ...
Contents
Address by the President | 23 |
Remarks by Assistant Secretary Berle | 33 |
Statements by the Secretary of State before the House | 44 |
Copyright | |
34 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
aggression aggressor agreement American Consulate American Government American republics assurances Atlantic attack authorized Axis powers belligerent Britain British Chargé d'Affaires China Chinese citizens Congress conquest continue cooperation danger December 11 December 9 declared defense democracy Department economic effort Embassy Emperor of Japan ernment Europe existence export Foreign Affairs freedom French French Indo-China Germany and Italy Government of Japan hereby Hitler Indochina informed inter-American interests Islands issued Japanese Government Lend-Lease Lend-Lease Act letters of credence materials ment military Minister of Foreign nations naval Navy Nazi Neutrality Act November officers Pacific area Panama peace Philippine present President Roosevelt press December principles proclamation purpose relations Released resistance resolution seas Secretary Hull ships solidarity Soviet Socialist Republics Soviet Union statement struggle supplies territory tion trade Tripartite Pact Union of Soviet United vessels Washington Western Hemisphere White House York