Foreign Relations of the United States: 1969-1976, V. 1: Foundations of Foreign Policy, 1969-1972Government Printing Office NOTE: NO FURTHER DISCOUNT FOR THIS PRINT PRODUCT--OVERSTOCK SALE --Significantly reduced list price while supplies last This volume is part of a subseries of volumes of the Foreign Relations series that documents the most important issues in the foreign policy of the administration of Richard M. Nixon. The subseries will present a documentary record of major foreign policy decisions and actions of President Nixon's administration. This volume documents the intellectual assumptions underlying the foreign policy decisions made by the administration. President Nixon had a strong interest in foreign policy and he and his assistant for National Security Affairs, Henry Kissinger managed many of the more important aspects of foreign policy from the White House. Nixon and Kissinger shared a well-defined general perception of world affairs. The editors of the volume sought to present a representative selection of documents chosen to develop the primary intellectual themes that ran through and animated the administration's foreign policy. The documents selected focus heavily upon the perspectives of Nixon and Kissinger but also include those of Secretary of State Rogers, Secretary of Defense Laird, Under Secretary of State Richardson and others. High school students and above may be interested in this volume for research on U.S. foreign policy and the Richard Nixon administration. Additionally, political scientists, and international relations scholars may also be interested in this volume. High School, academic, and public libraries should include this primary source reference in foreign policy, social studies, and U.S. history collections. |
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... cooperate with the Department of State Historian by providing full and complete access to records pertinent to foreign policy deci- sions and actions and by providing copies of selected records . Many of the sources consulted in the ...
... cooperation and support of the National Archives and Records Administration . The following list identifies the particular files and collections used in the preparation of this volume . The declassification and transfer to the National ...
... cooperate with us in our foreign policy objectives , and the shocking mismanagement and waste in many of the aid programs have all combined to create a new spirit of isolationism in the United States which is becoming stronger in both ...
... a pattern of rapidly increasing cooperation in cultural and economic affairs , the Asian nations have been unwilling to form a military grouping designed to forestall the Chinese 12 Foreign Relations , 1969–1976 , Volume I.
... cooperation in economic , cultural and social matters , and its members have voiced strong feelings that , as ... cooperative basis . One can hope that even India might final- ly be persuaded to give its support , having itself been the ...