Executive Sessions of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, 第 4 卷﹔第 12 卷U.S. Government Printing Office, 1982 |
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第 3 頁
United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations. MINUTES TUESDAY , JANUARY 12 , 1960 UNITED STATES SENATE , COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN RELATIONS , Washington , D.C. The committee met in executive session in its committee room ...
United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations. MINUTES TUESDAY , JANUARY 12 , 1960 UNITED STATES SENATE , COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN RELATIONS , Washington , D.C. The committee met in executive session in its committee room ...
第 7 頁
United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations. And finally , they undoubtedly fear that any continuing relax- ations of tensions could be dangerous to the structure of their power , both within the U.S.S.R. and ...
United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations. And finally , they undoubtedly fear that any continuing relax- ations of tensions could be dangerous to the structure of their power , both within the U.S.S.R. and ...
第 14 頁
United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations. their very great preoccupation with achieving their 7 - year plan goals . That means they have a lot of things to do at the same time . The conclusion of the United States ...
United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations. their very great preoccupation with achieving their 7 - year plan goals . That means they have a lot of things to do at the same time . The conclusion of the United States ...
第 22 頁
United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations. This report states : By 1970 the Soviet Union will probably have a huge industry , comparatively stronger than now , and in some fields greater than U.S. industry . Not a ...
United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations. This report states : By 1970 the Soviet Union will probably have a huge industry , comparatively stronger than now , and in some fields greater than U.S. industry . Not a ...
第 42 頁
United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations. The tenor of the letter was that Japan is trying to become a peaceful nation while the United States is doing everything to pre- cipitate it into a war state . Can you tell ...
United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Foreign Relations. The tenor of the letter was that Japan is trying to become a peaceful nation while the United States is doing everything to pre- cipitate it into a war state . Can you tell ...
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agree agreement Ambassador American believe bill BONSAL Castro Chairman Fulbright CLAIRE COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN Communist Congo CONGRESS THE LIBRARY course cover story Cuba Cuban D.C. The committee decision Department DILLON discussion DRYDEN DULLES fact FARLEY feel FOREIGN RELATIONS give going Government hearings HENDERSON intelligence Khrushchev Latin America LIBRARY OF CONGRESS MARCY matter mean meeting ment military missile motion NASA negotiations nuclear operation paragraph passport plane position President question reason record responsibility RUBOTTOM Russians Secretary GATES Secretary HERTER Senator AIKEN Senator CAPEHART Senator CARLSON Senator GORE Senator GREEN Senator HICKENLOOPER Senator HUMPHREY Senator LAUSCHE Senator LONG Senator MANSFIELD Senator MORSE Senator SPARKMAN Senator WILEY sentence session situation Soviet Union statement sugar summit conference talking tests thing tion treaty trying U-2 flights U-2 incident UNITED STATES SENATE vote William Fulbright word
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第 1 頁 - UNITED STATES SENATE, SUBCOMMITTEE ON DISARMAMENT OF THE COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN RELATIONS, Washington, DC The subcommittee met, pursuant to notice, at 10:20 am, in room S-116, the Capitol, Senator Albert Gore (chairman of the subcommittee) presiding.
第 737 頁 - Congress, to help our Latin American neighbors accelerate their efforts to strengthen the social and economic structure of their nations and improve the status of their individual...
第 269 頁 - I nor my Government has intended any. The actual statements go no further than to say that the United States will not shirk its responsibility to safeguard against surprise attack. In point of fact, these flights were suspended after the recent incident and are not to be resumed.
第 185 頁 - I reemphasize that these studies are without prejudice to our respective positions on the timing and interdependence of various aspects of disarmament.
第 504 頁 - The committee will stand at recess until 2:30 this afternoon. (Whereupon, at 11:55 am the committee recessed, to reconvene at 2:30 pm of the same day.) AFTERNOON SESSION Senator GURNET.
第 344 頁 - As the Secretary of State pointed out in his recent statement, ever since the beginning of my administration I have issued directives to gather, in every feasible way, the information required to protect the United States and the free world against surprise attack and to enable them to make effective preparations for defense.
第 289 頁 - As to the timing, the question was really whether to halt the program and thus forgo the gathering of important information that was essential and that was likely to be unavailable at a later date. The decision was that the program should not be halted.
第 749 頁 - I will say frankly that it is unacceptable that the Soviet political system should be given an opportunity to make secret preparations to face the free world with the choice of abject surrender or nuclear destruction.
第 191 頁 - ... report. If this is accepted in principle by the other nations which have tested nuclear weapons, then in order to facilitate the detailed negotiations, the United States is prepared, unless testing is resumed by the Soviet Union, to withhold further testing on its part of atomic and hydrogen weapons for a period of one year from the beginning of the negotiations. As part of the agreement to be negotiated, and on a basis of reciprocity...
第 447 頁 - ... his speech to the Supreme Soviet on January 14 and in his remarks during his visit to Indonesia and other countries in January. On February 4 the Warsaw Pact powers issued the first formal bloc-wide commitment to sign a separate GDR peace treaty. Thus Khrushchev's threatening Baku speech of April 25, though it was the most sweeping since February 1959, was only a harsher version of what he had been saying for months before.