Word: argentina
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...Ushuaia in Tierra del Fuego; until ordered back to Buenos Aires late last week by the authorities, he had been the only non-Argentine correspondent in the coastal area close to the Falklands after three British journalists were arrested there and charged with espionage. Says he: "Communications out of Argentina were the only real exasperation...
...Development Advisory Service (DAS), which HIID built on and incorporated when it was established in 1974, withdrew from Argentina following a military coup. The following year, similar events forced DAS out of Greece...
...United States will lose British popular support for America's nuclear policies and deployment, and for its European, its NATO and its Soviet policies." In fact, the U.S. has privately told both sides that if negotiations collapse, it will openly back Britain. But then it would lose Argentina's vocal support for U.S. Central American policy and alienate much of Latin America, even if Argentina does not follow through on its threats to seek Soviet political and economic support for its efforts to hold on to the islands...
...Argentina is a place where the rights of the individual are barely visible, if they exist at all. The Reagan Administration's rationale for smiling in that nation's direction in the past few weeks is an effort to keep the peace. Insofar as that effort protects America's true and worthy friends, more power to it. But the American public does not base its affections on anything quite so delicate. And the English should know this now. In the Wall Street Journal, Geoffrey Smith, a columnist with the Times of London, asked not plaintively but properly...
...have invoked the name of democracy in pursuing their foreign policies across the globe. But with Wilson, Roosevelt, and Kennedy, something was different. We could honestly say that the nations the U.S. supported were more just and free than those it opposed. Now, we call the brutal dictators in Argentina our friends, and slap in the face a Nicaraguan government seeking to end U.S. hostility and ease the violent tensions in all of Central America Reagan and his policy-makers are so determined to preserve democratic ideals from the Soviet peril that they have forgotten what those ideals...