Ideas and Diplomacy: Readings in the Intellectual Tradition of American Foreign PolicyNorman A. Graebner |
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Page 28
... establish and defend their independence and the freedom of their commerce ; if , therefore , England offers them both ... established without our concurrence . It follows from this that the glory , the dignity and the essential interest ...
... establish and defend their independence and the freedom of their commerce ; if , therefore , England offers them both ... established without our concurrence . It follows from this that the glory , the dignity and the essential interest ...
Page 269
... established a blockade of the Southern ports early in the war to limit the Confederacy's access to Europe's industrial produc- tion . The British eventually manufactured and sold commerce raiders to Southern agents , but they defended ...
... established a blockade of the Southern ports early in the war to limit the Confederacy's access to Europe's industrial produc- tion . The British eventually manufactured and sold commerce raiders to Southern agents , but they defended ...
Page 298
... establish our- selves upon a basis , not only honorable , but safe and perpetual . . . . 8 | Seward's Argument Against ... established their independence beyond any question of doubt . Until that moment arrived , the government of the ...
... establish our- selves upon a basis , not only honorable , but safe and perpetual . . . . 8 | Seward's Argument Against ... established their independence beyond any question of doubt . Until that moment arrived , the government of the ...
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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