| Dean Acheson - 1970 - 858 páginas
...past experience, would probably be incompatible with the economic stability and growth that over forty years Dr. Salazar created. The Salazar regime had...Salazar. But I doubt that Plato would have done so. 66. ONCE MORE UNTO THE BREACH THE THREE MONTHS between the Lisbon and Bonn meetings were a time of... | |
| Thomas Borstelmann - 1993 - 318 páginas
...Western authorities, Acheson concluded that "a convinced libertarian—particularly a foreign one—could understandably disapprove of Salazar. But I doubt that Plato would have done so." 79 American officials engaged in what they understood as mortal combat with the varied forces of worldwide... | |
| James A. Leach - 1999 - 316 páginas
...harsh suppression of individual liberties. A convinced libertarian—particularly a foreign one—could understandably disapprove of Salazar. But I doubt that Plato would have done so." coined the Portuguese regime into the Marshall Plan and the NATO organization. In 1974 the Portuguese... | |
| Michael Cox, G. John Ikenberry, Takashi Inoguchi - 2000 - 372 páginas
...23 After meeting the Portuguese dictator Salazar in early 19S0, Dean Acheson concluded that, while 'a convinced libertarian — particularly a foreign...one — could understandably disapprove of Salazar', he did not; and he doubted whether 'Plato would have done so' eitherI See Dean Acheson, Present At... | |
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