Word: dulleses
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Secretary Dulles, who as a chief legal architect of the U.N. Charter has all its provisions neatly cross-indexed in his mind, spotted a way around the yes-no dilemma. Under the charter, Dulles pointed out, Khrushchev could sit in the U.N. Security Council if he wanted to. Around that...
Cooler-Eyed Scrutiny. Next afternoon, while Dulles, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Nathan Twining and other top officials were meeting with the President in an overall review of the Middle East situation, Press Secretary James Hagerty hurried into Ike's office with the news, just off the White House...
Dulles set about drafting the week's second reply to Khrushchev, worked out the final details in an hour-long session with the President. The U.S. letter's net: 1) it was up to the Security Council to decide the meeting's "composition" and "conditions" under "established...
When Britain's Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd sat down with Secretary Dulles in Washington to work out a reply to Nikita Khrushchev's proposal for a quick day-after-tomorrow summit session on the U.S. intervention in Lebanon, the Canadians were already clamoring for a firm yes to...
Cashing In. Britain's "Yes-at the U.N." reply to Khrushchev was different only in emphasis from the joint line Dulles and Lloyd had earlier agreed upon: the British accented the mutual willingness to talk; the U.S. emphasized the qualifications. Britain's answer, phrased with the terse and...