Ideas and Diplomacy: Readings in the Intellectual Tradition of American Foreign PolicyNorman A. Graebner |
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Page 42
... demand most exorbitant ransoms for them . If we could even send a force sufficient to burn a town , their unfeeling ... demands , for long and severe repentance . I hope , therefore , we shall think of nothing but treating with them ...
... demand most exorbitant ransoms for them . If we could even send a force sufficient to burn a town , their unfeeling ... demands , for long and severe repentance . I hope , therefore , we shall think of nothing but treating with them ...
Page 97
... demand , he added that he considered the demand as exorbitant , and had told the First Consul that the thing was impossible ; that we had not the means of raising that . The Consul told him that we might borrow it . I now plainly saw ...
... demand , he added that he considered the demand as exorbitant , and had told the First Consul that the thing was impossible ; that we had not the means of raising that . The Consul told him that we might borrow it . I now plainly saw ...
Page 188
... demand the exclusive sovereignty over the whole territory in dispute , and thus to render war almost inevitable . In the present enlightened and Christian age , war ought to be the very last alternative of nations , and should never be ...
... demand the exclusive sovereignty over the whole territory in dispute , and thus to render war almost inevitable . In the present enlightened and Christian age , war ought to be the very last alternative of nations , and should never be ...
Contents
EVOLUTION OF THE NATIONAL INTEREST | 3 |
The American Interest in the Removal of France from the North Ameri | 18 |
The French Interest in American Independence 1778 | 27 |
Copyright | |
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