A Survey of United States-Latin American RelationsHoughton Mifflin, 1965 - 487 páginas Historical study of economic and political relationships. |
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Página 261
... Nicaragua , it offered to help organize a native con- stabulary . Nicaragua agreed , and in May , 1925 , the first steps were taken to develop such a force . However , the outbreak of civil war in which the United States was deeply ...
... Nicaragua , it offered to help organize a native con- stabulary . Nicaragua agreed , and in May , 1925 , the first steps were taken to develop such a force . However , the outbreak of civil war in which the United States was deeply ...
Página 324
... Nicaragua Next to Panama , the Central American country with which United States relations have been most intensive has been Nicaragua . This is attributable also to a canal factor- not a canal in being , but the fact that Nicaragua ...
... Nicaragua Next to Panama , the Central American country with which United States relations have been most intensive has been Nicaragua . This is attributable also to a canal factor- not a canal in being , but the fact that Nicaragua ...
Página 331
... Nicaragua , the only country to do so . The involvement of Mexico in Nicaragua's civil war was viewed with great concern by the United States government , for this was regarded as an attempt to extend Mexican influence over not only ...
... Nicaragua , the only country to do so . The involvement of Mexico in Nicaragua's civil war was viewed with great concern by the United States government , for this was regarded as an attempt to extend Mexican influence over not only ...
Contenido
The Land and People | 6 |
Agriculture Production | 14 |
Vital Statistics and Net Food Supply | 23 |
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Términos y frases comunes
action administration affairs aggression agreement Alliance for Progress American republics arbitration Argentina arms assistance Bogotá Bolivia Brazil Brazilian Britain British Buenos Aires canal Caribbean Castro cent Central American Chap Chile Chilean claims Colombia Commission Communist Company conference Congress Consultation cooperation Cuba Cuban December declared defense Díaz diplomatic Dominican Republic economic election exports fact force Foreign Ministers Guatemala Haiti Haitian Havana Ibid ican important independence Inter-American Security inter-American system interests intervention island Latin America Latin-American countries Latin-American nations loan meeting ment Mexican Mexican government Mexico City military million Monroe Doctrine negotiations Neighbor policy neutrality Nicaragua nonintervention organization Pan American Union Panama peace Perón Peru Platt Amendment political principle problem proposed protection recognition regime relations resolution Rio treaty Roosevelt Corollary Secretary Senate Soviet Spain Spanish territory threat tion trade U.S. Dept United States government University Press Washington Wilson World York Zone