Word: martially
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...appreciated the "great courtesy" that Andropov had shown toward himself and Bush, but "the thing we are really looking for . . . is the substance of change in behavior." As Shultz noted, no sooner had Brezhnev been laid to rest than "it was as though someone threw a switch and suddenly martial music and a long march-by of troops. That was mood music too, I thought...
...signs that Soviet negotiators are ready for "a process of give and take" in arms-control talks already under way in Geneva and Vienna, and human rights discussions in progress in Madrid. The U.S. would welcome other steps, like a Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan or an easing of martial law in Poland, he asserted, but these are not matters for direct talks between Washington and Moscow...
...nationwide strike called by the underground leaders of Solidarity to mark the second anniversary of the union's legal registration fizzled, thanks to the extraordinary security measures taken by Warsaw. Even the announcement of Walesa's release was more of a testament to the success of martial law than to any lessening of repression. As Urban put it last week: "The person of Lech Walesa no longer poses a threat, and there is no need to keep him in internment...
...Spokesman Jerzy Urban read a routine message of condolence to the Soviet Union on the occasion of the death of President Leonid Brezhnev. Then, droning on in his habitual monotone, Urban proceeded to recite an astounding letter of conciliation to General Wojciech Jaruzelski, the leader of Poland's martial-law regime, from Lech Walesa, the jailed leader of the outlawed Solidarity union. The message had been written from Arlamowo, a government-owned hunting lodge about 200 miles southeast of Warsaw, where Walesa has been detained since May. When Urban came to the end of the note, he smiled slightly...
...Afghanistan in late 1979, President Carter declared a partial embargo on grain exports and shipments of many types of technology to Moscow. Sixteen months later, Reagan lifted the grain embargo, saying that it was hurting American farmers more than the Soviet Union. In response to last December's martial-law crackdown in Poland, Reagan strengthened the ban against technology exports to the Soviets but let the grain trade continue...