Ideas and Diplomacy: Readings in the Intellectual Tradition of American Foreign PolicyNorman A. Graebner |
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Page viii
... interests , measured always against the traditional interests of other countries . Each nation , according to the realist image of the world , is suspended in a multistate system in which all members are engaged in a continuing struggle ...
... interests , measured always against the traditional interests of other countries . Each nation , according to the realist image of the world , is suspended in a multistate system in which all members are engaged in a continuing struggle ...
Page 428
... interest that could be adjusted diplomatically . In a struggle for prestige there could be no solution but war . Such a war , he predicted , would affect the interests of the United States at many points . Thus the challenge to American ...
... interest that could be adjusted diplomatically . In a struggle for prestige there could be no solution but war . Such a war , he predicted , would affect the interests of the United States at many points . Thus the challenge to American ...
Page 435
... interests of humanity , or in our own vital interest , to act in a manner which will cause offense to some other power . This is a lamentable necessity ; but when the necessity arises we must meet it and act as we are honorably bound to ...
... interests of humanity , or in our own vital interest , to act in a manner which will cause offense to some other power . This is a lamentable necessity ; but when the necessity arises we must meet it and act as we are honorably bound to ...
Contents
can Continent 1760 | 18 |
3 | 27 |
John Adams at the Court of St Jamess June 1785 | 33 |
Copyright | |
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