Word: implementation
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...implement the new approach. Eisen hower had sent Congress a plan to reorganize the Department of Defense (see below). But he was not ready to answer in detail the question which correspondents tried to ask in a number of ways: How will the cuts affect the size and strength of the Air Force, the Army and the Navy? There would be more buildup than originally planned during 1954, the President said, but it is not yet possible to say what the final result will...
...Russians were extremely nice about the whole thing. It seemed to us they were going out of their way to implement their new peace offensive. We expect to get pictures from them of the Ibis' new resting place on a University of Moscow spire almost any day now," they said...
Israel. "We should announce to the Israelis that they cannot count upon our continued financial support unless they . . . entertain and implement some reasonable compromise with the Arabs, including respect for the decisions of the United Nations...
...speculation, there was no oversight and no deliberate affront in the way the Durkin appointment was handled. Taft was asked for recommendations, submitted some (including Connecticut's former Senator John A. Danaher). His suggestions were considered, and rejected. Ike thought that Durkin would give the Cabinet balance and implement the campaign promise that his administration would be "fair" to labor. The appointment was a characteristic Eisenhower effort to unify all the forces in his theater of operation. At the same time, it was a further demonstration that Ikemen felt no need to clear everything with...
...bears no love for the U.S. State Department, explained: "I do not mean to apologize for the intentions we ought to have as a sovereign people [to reunite divided Korea. But] these honorable and legitimate intentions of ours failed . . . The United States Government did not mean to support and implement these Korean aspirations for fear it might touch off the much dreaded third World War . . . Far from supplying us with heavy artillery and battle planes making an offensive action possible, the U.S. Government took special care to keep the R.O.K. in short supply of small ammunitions even . . . It is true...