Word: mutually
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...greatful for even less tangible signs of interest. Milton Eisenhower's one visit worked a remarkable change in South American attitude toward the United States. Argentina, for instance, turned overnight from hostility to equally fervid admiration. But, aside from the one Eisenhower bid, little has been done to increase mutual understanding. In spite of the Fulbright program and others, student, teacher, and labor leader exchange has been negligible. Technical assistance has been almost equally lacking. This is largely because neither the State Department nor the public in general seems to realize the growing importance of Latin America both...
...role provides, ostensibly, multilateral economic assistance, rather than the unilateral type of Point-Four or Marshall Plan aid. As such, it will be more palatable to the recipients of the aid. It contributes to that spirit of willing cooperation and mutual self-help between non-Soviet nations which is vital to free-world cohesion. In its new role NATO would accent multilateral, inter-regional economic assistance rather than attempt to defend absolutely the indefensible land mass of Western Europe. This should go far to better political and economic relations between the NATO states and other non-Soviet nations...
Finally NATO could become an agency for political consultation and mutual policy determination between non-Soviet states, a multilateral agency for multilateral direction of non-Soviet international affairs. This would satisfy many European critics who resent the U.S. directing world economic and military aid by itself. Mutual defense requires mutual consultation...
...industrial elite (technocrat commissars), or the bureaucracy. When it became clear to the party leaders a couple of years ago that this situation was unlikely to resolve itself for some time to come, and certainly not without great internal stress, they saw that what was needed for their mutual and collective protection was a long period of peace and security. This brought up the question of foreign policy...
...characterized the conflict as a "sterile" one between governments and not between peoples, and called on the Arabs and Israelis to address themselves "toward the betterment of their peoples through mutual cooperation and respect." She repeated the words of an Arab spokesman saying that the real enemy in the Middle East is "poverty and social backwardness...