Executive Sessions of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Volume 3

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Página 293 - Act of 1949, as amended) shall be supplied to any nation in order to further military effort unless the President finds that the supplying of such assistance will strengthen the security of the United States...
Página 500 - Aye." Opposed, "No." The "ayes" seem to have it. The "ayes" have it, and the bill is reported out.
Página 299 - ... (3) fulfill the military obligations which it has assumed under multilateral or bilateral agreements or treaties to which the United States is a party; (4) make, consistent with its political and economic stability, the full contribution permitted by its manpower, resources, facilities, and general economic condition to the development and maintenance of its own defensive strength and the defensive strength of the free world...
Página 201 - Council-- (1) to assess and appraise the objectives, commitments, and risks of the United States in relation to our actual and potential military power...
Página 200 - Council is to advise the President with respect to the integration of domestic, foreign, and military policies relating to the national security...
Página 294 - President finds that the supplying of such assistance will strengthen the security of the United States and promote world peace...
Página 245 - That no equipment or materials may be transferred out of military stocks if the Secretary of Defense, after consultation with the Joint Chiefs of Staff, determines that such transfer would be detrimental to the national security of the United States or is needed by the reserve components of the armed forces to meet their training requirements.
Página 378 - If there is any provision that could be put in, without exposing it to a point of order, as far as I am concerned, as one member of the committee, I should be for it.
Página 256 - All in favor of the motion will say "aye,
Página 411 - Beyond pointing out these general truisms, I shall confine my discussion to the general areas of Asia. Before one may objectively assess the situation now existing there, he must comprehend something of Asia's past and the revolutionary changes which have marked her course up to the present.

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