Foreign Policy and the American Spirit: Essays |
Contents
What Is Distinctively American about the Foreign Pol | 3 |
The American Attitude towards War | 16 |
Open Diplomacy and Its Critics | 37 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
accepted action administration Adolf Hitler affairs aggression ambassador in Japan Ameri American diplomacy American foreign policy American government American opinion American policy arms attitude believe Britain British cent certainly Charles Evans Hughes China collective security conflict Congress Constitution course Covenant criticism danger deal declared democracy democratic diplomacy diplomatic Dominican Republic economic Europe European example fact force Foreign Relations French Geneva Protocol Germany historians Hitler Hughes ibid idea important interest intervention Japan Japan Grew Japanese League League of Nations lend-lease less matter ment militarists Monroe Doctrine negotiations neutrality never Nicaragua partisan peace Pearl Harbor perhaps period point of view political position possible practical Prince Konoye principle problem Professor Perkins proposal Protocol public opinion question regard reparations revisionist role seems Senate sense Seward speech spirit struggle thing tion Tokyo treaty tripartite pact true United victory vote Woodrow Wilson