International Relations, 1914 Up-to-date |
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Page 605
... China . No other country , including Britain , could in the circumstances have acted differently . Chinese suzerainty over Tibet , although seldom exercised , had always been recognised , and when the Peking Government in 1950 decided ...
... China . No other country , including Britain , could in the circumstances have acted differently . Chinese suzerainty over Tibet , although seldom exercised , had always been recognised , and when the Peking Government in 1950 decided ...
Page 606
... Chinese rule at Lhasa . With the end of the Moghul rule in China the Chinese suzerainty over Tibet disappeared . Subsequently a special relationship was established in 1904 between the British Government in India and Tibet as a result ...
... Chinese rule at Lhasa . With the end of the Moghul rule in China the Chinese suzerainty over Tibet disappeared . Subsequently a special relationship was established in 1904 between the British Government in India and Tibet as a result ...
Page 619
... Chinese note showed that there was a very big gap between the positions taken up by China and India and there did not appear to be any meeting ground . He said that there was no possibility of his meeting the Chinese Prime Minister just ...
... Chinese note showed that there was a very big gap between the positions taken up by China and India and there did not appear to be any meeting ground . He said that there was no possibility of his meeting the Chinese Prime Minister just ...
Contents
Diplomatic Background of the First World | 1 |
Peace Settlement | 13 |
Far East | 28 |
15 other sections not shown
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Africa aggression agreed agreement Algeria alliance Allied American Arab armaments armed forces army Article Asia Assembly atomic attack August Austria Baghdad Pact Belgium Britain British Charter China Chinese Commission Committee Commonwealth Communist Conference Congo cooperation countries Court Covenant Czechoslovakia December declared defence delegate disarmament dispute economic Egypt Eisenhower established Europe European Foreign Ministers France French Geneva Germany Government Hitler Hungary independence India International Law Iraq Italy Japan Japanese July Kashmir League of Nations ment Middle East military mutual NATO negotiations Nehru November nuclear obligations observed occupied October Organization Pact Pakistan parties peace and security peace treaties Poland political Portugal President Prime Minister principles proposed question recognised regard relations reparations Republic resolution result Rumania Russia Security Council September settlement signed South sovereignty Soviet Union Syria territory tion Treaty of Versailles troops Turkey United Arab Republic United Kingdom United Nations vote weapons West