Word: feud
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...sooner had Kennedy flown back to Washington after arranging a ceasefire in the Malaysia feud, than fierce fighting erupted once again. More than 60 Indonesian "volunteer" guerrillas launched three forays through the jungle into the Malaysian states of Sarawak and Sabah before they were driven back. Since Indonesian air force planes, along with Malaysian-based helicopters, had dropped thousands of leaflets announcing the truce, it was unclear whether the terrorists had deliberately violated the cease-fire or simply had not learned about...
...that would bring together Indonesia's President Sukarno, Malaysia's Prime Minister Tunku Abdul Rahman and Philippines President Diosdado Macapagal. But in view of Indonesian President Sukarno's un relenting "Crush Malaysia" campaign, there was widespread doubt over the chances of ending the bitter four-month feud. In London, where the U.S. Attorney General stopped off en route to Washington, Prime Minister Sir Alec Douglas-Home warmly thanked Kennedy for his efforts but was plainly skeptical of their success. Kennedy himself was not overoptimistic. "If the conference is not successful," he said bluntly, "everybody can go back...
MOSCOW, Jan. 23--Fidel Castro apparently has committed himself at last on Premier Krushchev's side in the Moscow-Peking feud after he was promised a better deal for Cuban sugar...
...Back in Russia the monstrous purge trials were under way. One after another, the old Bolsheviks took the stand, confessed monotonously to fantastic plots and implicated Trotsky. The more of them the maniacal Stalin murdered, the more he seemed to fear Trotsky. "The frenzy with which Stalin pursued the feud, making it the paramount preoccupation of international Communism, beggars description," writes Deutscher. "There is in the whole of history hardly another case in which such immense sources of power and propaganda were employed against a single individual...
...disinterested forcs is needed to persttade the British Greek, and Turkish troops toleve Cyprus and to prevent further killings. NATO, already damaged by the Greco-Turkish feud, would probably further weaken its position in the Middle East if it attempted to mediate between Greek and Turkish Cypriotes, Moreover, NATO has no right to intervene since Cyprus is not a NATO member, Because both Cypriote have expressed to deal with the United Nations, to some degree, a U.N. police forced is probably the best choice for the island...