Ideas and Diplomacy: Readings in the Intellectual Tradition of American Foreign Policy |
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Page 178
every school boy must see , that to form a new union with any foreign power , would be , ipso facto , a dissolution of our present Union . Now , I would say to an imbecile President , and a demented cabinet , that they have not the ...
every school boy must see , that to form a new union with any foreign power , would be , ipso facto , a dissolution of our present Union . Now , I would say to an imbecile President , and a demented cabinet , that they have not the ...
Page 688
Finally we made it clear that we could not negotiate and conclude treaties of peace with governments which , as in Rumania , failed to provide those freedoms which , in conjunction with the Soviet Union and Great Brtiain , we had ...
Finally we made it clear that we could not negotiate and conclude treaties of peace with governments which , as in Rumania , failed to provide those freedoms which , in conjunction with the Soviet Union and Great Brtiain , we had ...
Page 819
It has avoided this in its dealings with the Soviet Union . Dulles has recently replied to the obvious query as to why the United States does not treat the Soviet Union as it treats China , by saying that the United States would not ...
It has avoided this in its dealings with the Soviet Union . Dulles has recently replied to the obvious query as to why the United States does not treat the Soviet Union as it treats China , by saying that the United States would not ...
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Contents
EVOLUTION OF THE NATIONAL INTEREST | 3 |
can Continent 1760 | 18 |
The French Interest in American Independence 1778 | 27 |
Copyright | |
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