Word: fascistically
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Borders. Joseph Stalin, the Russian whose say in Russia is final, said this week in an Order of the Day celebrating the 25th Anniversary of the Red Army: "The fact is that Fascist Germany is becoming more and more exhausted and weaker while the Soviet Union is more and more developing its reserves and becoming even stronger." Last October, when Allied military experts were declaring that Stalingrad was lost and Russian offensive power broken, Russians claimed they had in reserve 4,000,000 fully trained though not fully equipped men. They were prepared to throw this entire reserve into action...
Russians disclaim any intent to "Bolshevize" Europe. That, they say, would be politically inadvisable. But they declare: "We will not tolerate a pro-Fascist regime anywhere on the Continent"-and reserve the right to define pro-Fascist. Like Goebbels, though for different reasons, they find the "Red menace" a useful threat. They say: "If you western fellows want to prevent a social revolution in Europe you'd better march in before us rather than after...
...Washington of tall, thin Colonel Juan Beigbeder, emissary of Franco's Government in Spain. Ex-Foreign Minister, ex-High Commissioner of Spanish Morocco and present member of Franco's General Staff, he was welcomed by the State Department as a United Nations friend and an indicator that Fascist General Franco now expects a United Nations victory. His purpose: to discuss with U.S. military chiefs the situation in North Africa...
...difficult indeed to know what the liberals are striving for. Our very enemies, Germany and Italy, have that economic equality the liberals relish, while Russia, a joy to radical economists, is a tyranny. Why cannot the radicals demand abolition of all dictatorships, fascist and communistic? Leftists now want to leave the Russian system alone after the war. This is a compromise with idealism and shows a weak inconsistency in the radical camp. Can they expect a lasting peace with any dictatorship still rampant...
Allied policy toward this Spain in which the Nazis call the tune and Franco happily plays the Fascist fiddle has been one of cautious appeasement. In July 1939 the U.S. gave Franco a $13,350,000 loan to buy cotton, his most urgent need. When the cotton arrived, the Franco press gave it a couple of lines, praised it as a "work of the Caudillo...