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 202
Nor is there anything in the history of the country , to induce the hope that , under its present control , it will ever attain that position , and serve those ends , in the great scheme of the world's civilization , for which ...
Nor is there anything in the history of the country , to induce the hope that , under its present control , it will ever attain that position , and serve those ends , in the great scheme of the world's civilization , for which ...
Page 616
In presenting the present trend of my thoughts on this general subject I have constantly in mind the fact that the shaping of our policy vis - à - vis Japan must depend upon the broader viewpoint of ...
In presenting the present trend of my thoughts on this general subject I have constantly in mind the fact that the shaping of our policy vis - à - vis Japan must depend upon the broader viewpoint of ...
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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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