| United States. Department of State - 1929 - 1014 páginas
...to create a superstate possessing its own policing authority. "We are seeking," he said, "agreements and arrangements through which the nations would maintain,...adequate forces to meet the needs of preventing war and making impossible deliberate preparations for war, and to have such forces available for joint action... | |
| 1945 - 136 páginas
...create a super state possessing its own policing authority. "We are seeking," he said, "agreements and arrangements through which the nations would maintain,...adequate forces to meet the needs of preventing war and making impossible deliberate preparations for war, and to have such forces available for joint action... | |
| 1949 - 752 páginas
...make all necessary and effective agreements and arrangements through which the nations would maintain adequate forces to meet the needs of preventing war and of making impossible the preparation for war and which would have such forces available for joint action when necessary."... | |
| John Morton Blum - 1976 - 388 páginas
...postwar international organization. It was to maintain "peace and security," the statement read, but "we are not thinking of a superstate with its own police forces." Such infrequent and calculated banalities about foreign policy served two ends. They helped to quiet,... | |
| Townsend Hoopes, Douglas Brinkley - 1997 - 316 páginas
...peacekeeping machinery would work. At the same time, it sought to reassure the American people that "we are not thinking of a superstate with its own police forces and other paraphernalia of coercive power."12 Both the substance of the summary and the casual manner of its release shocked advocates... | |
| Robert C. Hilderbrand - 2001 - 344 páginas
...to reassure those who feared that the plans might be going too far. "We are not thinking," he said, "of a superstate with its own police forces and other paraphernalia of coercive power"; the world (like the United States) was not ready for that. Instead, the American planners were seeking... | |
| Patrick J. Hearden - 2002 - 454 páginas
...15 June the president released it to the press under his own name. "We are not," the paper declared, "thinking of a superstate with its own police forces and other paraphernalia of coercive power." Roosevelt and Hull were taking a middle ground. They advocated the establishment of a world organization... | |
| Jean E. Krasno - 2004 - 460 páginas
...and the American people. Senate concerns prompted Roosevelt to make this statement on June 15, 1944: We are not thinking of a superstate with its own police...preventing war and of making impossible deliberate preparations for war, and to have such forces available for joint action when necessary.g Thus Roosevelt... | |
| Nikolas Stürchler - 2007 - 23 páginas
...'effective agreement and arrangements through which nations would maintain, according to their capabilities, adequate forces to meet the needs of preventing war and of making impossible deliberate preparations for war and to have such forces available for joint action when 85 Joint Declaration by... | |
| Strobe Talbott - 2008 - 505 páginas
...mechanism even if it existed. Roosevelt carefully avoided depicting the UN as a supranational body. "We are not thinking of a superstate with its own...forces and other paraphernalia of coercive power," said Roosevelt in June 1944. "We are seeking effective agreements and arrangements through which the... | |
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