Word: cordiality
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Admittedly Reagan has at least two good reasons to encourage cordial relations between the U.S. and the Philippines. Two important U.S. military bases are located on the Philippines, and, the Philippines is a haven for a wide variety of American business enterprises...
...addition to the two summits, Reagan will hold bilateral discussions with the leaders of his host countries. His reception in all four capitals should be cordial. Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher will surely express her gratitude that Washington has come down firmly on Britain's side in the war with Argentina. Mitterrand will restate his support for NATO's plan to modernize its nuclear forces. His enthusiasm has pleased the Reagan Administration, which initially had been wary of the Socialist President. West German Chancellor Schmidt finds himself more sympathetic to the Reagan Administration now that it has suspended...
President Reagan will be given a genuinely cordial welcome by his six fellow heads of state and government when he greets them at the annual economic summit meeting in Versailles. They warm to his friendly manner and they like the great country he represents, but when the greetings are over they will not allow him as much latitude as they did at last year's meeting. He had then been in office for only six months: his new Administration needed time to play itself in. Some of the Western leaders deliberately muted their doubts, and the theme music throughout...
Even at meetings chaired by past rent board chairman. "The atmosphere was never cordial," Cavellini says. But there were other chairmen Callaghan and who had "less of a short face." With previous chairmen, Cavellini says that both tenant and landlords "got more respect." "There is a certain impatience," he says of Callaghan, pausing to explain that he "doesn't want to make any personal attacks." But he says. "The chairman sets a tone." "Previous boards have been more courteous and treated both adversial parties with move respect...
Working behind the scenes to settle the crisis, the United States should put extra pressure on Argentina to withdraw and should not hesitate to threaten that nation with economic sanctions and bans on imports. As long as the United States has chosen to establish cordial ties with Argentina, it must use that economic lever age as a bargaining chip...