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...Soviet Government can only express regret at Mr. Kellogg's fantastic attacks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RUSSIA: Naive Untruths | 1/31/1927 | See Source »

Thus read a statement released in English last week by the Soviet Foreign Office in reply to U. S. Secretary of State Kellogg's recent excuse to Congress (TIME, Jan. 24) that the U. S. Administration's policy toward Nicaragua and Mexico is based on the existence of "Red plots" in those countries...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RUSSIA: Naive Untruths | 1/31/1927 | See Source »

...International [world Communist propaganda bureau with headquarters in Moscow] appears to be so far from conducting such activities that I was amused to find the other day that only two out of the five principal officials in charge had any definite idea where Nicaragua was. . . . The statement of Mr. Kellogg contains naive untruths. . . . He is only following the example of the British Tories who counterfeited a letter supposed to have been written by a former director...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RUSSIA: Naive Untruths | 1/31/1927 | See Source »

King Pins Turn. To Mexicans it seemed last week that U. S. Secretary of State Kellogg reversed his Mexican policy twice and that President Coolidge gave his attitude toward Mexico a ponderous half-turn. The Secretary of State and the President began the week as exponents of the theory that there was a Bolshevist hobgoblin in Mexico and that the U. S. should say "BOO!" When the booing of this theory had subsided, Secretary Kellogg expressed himself upon a resolution introduced into the U. S. Senate by Senator Joseph T. Robinson calling for arbitration of the points at issue between...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MEXICO: Pin Week | 1/31/1927 | See Source »

...does not believe it "knows the facts". What the facts are which justify the so-called policy of the Administration in its semi-hostility to Mexico seems to be a question too erudite for common knowledge. Those that have been revealed, are not much more conclusive than were Kellogg's astounding accounts or a Central American "Bolshevist hegemony". They consist for the most part in a great many words about "American lives and property", which have all the carmarks of hedging." But, the chief executive cannot very well answer the arguments of professors of history, economics, and international...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE POLITIC PROFESSOR | 1/25/1927 | See Source »

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