Papers Relating to the Foreign Relations of the United States, Volume 1U.S. Government Printing Office, 1942 |
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Results 6-10 of 100
Page xxxiv
... British Ambassador's note of June 27 , with comments . 64 June 28 ( 20 ) June 30 June 30 ( 44 ) June 30 45 ) July 2 ( 53 ) July 2 ( 26 ) July 4 ( 58 ) To the Chairman of the American Delegation ( tel . ) Information that it is ...
... British Ambassador's note of June 27 , with comments . 64 June 28 ( 20 ) June 30 June 30 ( 44 ) June 30 45 ) July 2 ( 53 ) July 2 ( 26 ) July 4 ( 58 ) To the Chairman of the American Delegation ( tel . ) Information that it is ...
Page xxxv
... British revise their figures downward , and that the American delega- tion has promised hearty cooperation in this demand . To the Chairman of the American Delegation ( tel . ) Conversation between the Secretary of State and the British ...
... British revise their figures downward , and that the American delega- tion has promised hearty cooperation in this demand . To the Chairman of the American Delegation ( tel . ) Conversation between the Secretary of State and the British ...
Page xxxvi
... British may ask for short adjournment at Geneva in order to study the points raised in that conversation . From the British Embassy Explanation of attitude of British Government at Geneva , in order to dispel apparent misunderstanding ...
... British may ask for short adjournment at Geneva in order to study the points raised in that conversation . From the British Embassy Explanation of attitude of British Government at Geneva , in order to dispel apparent misunderstanding ...
Page xxxvii
... British effort to force other navies to accept same type of cruisers as themselves , regardless of individual requirements ; reiteration by British of unacceptability of tonnage figures of Japanese . From the Chairman of the American ...
... British effort to force other navies to accept same type of cruisers as themselves , regardless of individual requirements ; reiteration by British of unacceptability of tonnage figures of Japanese . From the Chairman of the American ...
Page xxxviii
... British delegation is aware that the largest size of cruiser is most suited to U. S. needs ; belief that restric ... British - inspired . 106 106 July 14 ( 163 ) July 15 ( 99 ) July 16 ( 166 ) July 16 ( 50 ) July 16 ( 100 ) To the ...
... British delegation is aware that the largest size of cruiser is most suited to U. S. needs ; belief that restric ... British - inspired . 106 106 July 14 ( 163 ) July 15 ( 99 ) July 16 ( 166 ) July 16 ( 50 ) July 16 ( 100 ) To the ...
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Common terms and phrases
accept adopted agree agreement Ambassador in Chile American Delegation Gibson American Government arbitration Argentina Article Bolivia Bridgeman Britain British Empire Chargé Colombia Commission of Jurists Committee Conference Congress considered contracting convention countries cruisers Date and number Department Department's desire diplomatic disarmament discussion Dominican draft Foreign Affairs Foreign Relations French further Geneva instructions Italy Japan Japanese delegation July July 12 June June 20 KELLOGG League of Nations limitation of armaments limitation of naval loan Majesty's Government matter meeting memorandum ment Minister naval armament Navy negotiations Nicaragua October October 17 opinion p. m. Received Pan American Union Paraphrase parties Peru plenary session position possible powers Preparatory Commission present President printed private international law prohibitions proposed provisions question regard reply representatives Republic request restrictions Rio de Janeiro ships statement submitted suggested Telegram The Chairman Telegram The Secretary tion tonnage tons total tonnage United vessels Washington treaty