Pan-Americanism from Monroe to the Present: A View from the Other SideMR Press, 1968 - 192 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 22
Página 68
... less and less possible ; hunger spread while flour , cereals , fruits , and other foods were being burned , destroyed , or dumped into the sea in many places ; and Fascist armies marched , arrogantly leaving the first trails of blood ...
... less and less possible ; hunger spread while flour , cereals , fruits , and other foods were being burned , destroyed , or dumped into the sea in many places ; and Fascist armies marched , arrogantly leaving the first trails of blood ...
Página 72
... less effective for that rea- son - to the rebels threatening the regime which those author- ities represent . Therefore , such nonintervention is in itself one of the most cautious ways of intervening . " 11 Until 1935 , the inter ...
... less effective for that rea- son - to the rebels threatening the regime which those author- ities represent . Therefore , such nonintervention is in itself one of the most cautious ways of intervening . " 11 Until 1935 , the inter ...
Página 85
... less than enthusiasm . The United States began exerting pressure even prior to the Chapultepec conference to bolster " hemispheric defense " and did not let up after the war had ended . Toward the end of 1945 , the United States Defense ...
... less than enthusiasm . The United States began exerting pressure even prior to the Chapultepec conference to bolster " hemispheric defense " and did not let up after the war had ended . Toward the end of 1945 , the United States Defense ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Pan-Americanism from Monroe to the Present: A View from the Other Side Alonso Aguilar Monteverde Vista de fragmentos - 1968 |
Pan-Americanism from Monroe to the Present: A View from the Other Side Alonso Aguilar Monteverde Vista de fragmentos - 1968 |
Pan-Americanism from Monroe to the Present: A View from the Other Side Alonso Aguilar Monteverde Vista de fragmentos - 1968 |
Términos y frases comunes
action adopted affairs aggression agreement Alliance for Progress América Latina anti-Communist armed Bassols Bogotá Bolívar Buenos Aires Canal capital Caracas Caribbean Chile Colombia Communist Conferencia Congress of Panama Consultative Meeting continent continental Cuba Cuban Revolution danger declared defense democratic Dominican Republic economic established Fascism Foreign Ministers foreign policy freedom Guatemala Havana hemisphere Ibid imperialist independence industrial inter-American system interests intervention investments investors Isidro Fabela Jesús Silva Herzog Latin America Latin-American countries Latin-American governments liberation Marines measures Meeting of Foreign ment Mexican delegate Mexico military monopolies Monroe Doctrine national sovereignty oligarchies organization Pact Pan-American Conference Panamanian peace percent Política political President principle of nonintervention problems proposed Punta Punta del Este representative democracy Rio de Janeiro Rio Treaty Roosevelt San José Santo Domingo so-called social solidarity subordination territory threat tion trade Tricontinental Conference United States imperialism United States policy Venezuela violation violence Washington York