Word: mistrusting
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...central component of de Gaulle's nationalism is a mistrust of international organization. The united Europea he envisions is not a system of closely integrated national entities. Rather it is an alliance of foreign policies that would be canalized through the government of the strongest--quite naturally France. In the meantime, France will flex her muscles where she likes. Last year's Franco-German friendship treaty has provoked the charge within the Atlantic Alliance and Common Market that France is seeking a "special relationship" with West Germany. Despite breast-beating denials in Paris, the terms of the treaty quite clearly...
...technique is bound to be more popular among the townspeople. With the CVSF, the volunteers worked and lived apart from the village. Association with the federal agency could only bring upon the Peace Corps the mistrust which the town folk feel toward a political organization and its paid technicians, who come to work on specific projects and hurry off as soon as they are finished...
...plains Justice Minister Haughey, that the censors have been told to go easy with the scissors, "or else our cinemas won't get any films at all." Another sign of the new liberality is a scheduled visit by the Bolshoi Ballet to Dublin this month, for Irish mistrust of the intri-guous Russians is so keen that they have yet to recognize the 45-year-old Soviet government...
Many British politicians and military experts share Montgomery's mistrust of the multilateral force (MLF) and its sponsor-the U.S. Indeed, though Prime Minister Harold Macmillan nominally agreed at Nassau last December to support the NATO force, his government has been hoping ever since that MLF would quietly capsize of its own complexity...
...insidious dangers-creeping dangers . . . that could present, in their ultimate form, almost as great a threat to a secure and free nation as an attempted military coup." In a column distributed to newspapers last month and then ordered killed by the Times News Service before publication, Baldwin said: "Weariness, mistrust, recrimination and mutual suspicion, particularly between many of the top civilian and military officials, prevail" in the Pentagon. Uniformed personnel feel, he said, that "top civilians in the Pentagon show too little warmth or sense of leadership, of loyalty down to their subordinates, or of the importance of the human...