Word: nehru
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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India's ways have often been misunderstood in this country, as her neutralism too often appeared basically pro-Russian. Many times the fault has lain with the United States, which sought to comprehend international politics in terms only of "for" and "against." But with the last week Nehru's India has behaved in a manner as inconsistent by her own standards as it is unfriendly by ours, and her U.N. voting record on Hungary is a disappointment most of all to those who had esteemed Nehru highly...
Official India had remained silent on Russian aggression in Hungary until November 6, while speaking out angrily and at length against the Anglo-French-Israeli invasion of Egypt. Then, addressing UNESCO, Nehru denounced both aggressions, saying "human dignity and freedom have been outraged. He subsequently repeated this position, and it seemed reasonable that his country would join in U.N. condemnation of Soviet outrages...
...talked on the telephone with British Prime Minister Anthony Eden, sent off messages on the cease-fire to France's Premier Guy Mollet and to India's Prime Minister Nehru; he met with his defense and diplomatic advisers to discuss the whole pattern of developments in Europe. But by 7:30 p.m. the President was engaged in the pursuit that occupied most citizens of the land. Dressed in sports coat and slacks, he sat down to dinner in the living room on the second floor of the White House with Mamie, his son. Major John Eisenhower, and John...
India's Jawaharlal Nehru, between dashing off a message of sympathy to Nasser and a message of thanks to Eisenhower, lodged a protest against Britain's bombing of Egypt. All week long he kept up a running fire of public expressions of indignation. "In all my experience of foreign affairs," he trumpeted, "I am not aware of a grosser case of naked aggression." After first astonishing diplomats by refusing to show similar indignation at the events in Hungary, Nehru this week cited both the Egyptian and Hungarian crises as instances of "human dignity and freedom outraged...
...great powers in Cairo, as soon as it seems safe or feasible. We do not mean that President Eisenhower should float like Cleopatra down the Nile on a bubble-top barge, nor that Egyptians should be induced to shout "Aisha Khrushchev," through the streets of Cairo, nor that Pandit Nehru should stage a passive demonstration. But the collective action of these figures would not fail to make a very strong impression upon the belligerents. This plan may seem wild and hallucinatory. But, in this case, it matches the situation...