Word: orsay
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...President's use of public platforms to make policy and by what Bonn calls his lack of clarity and precision. While the French and British are much less critical -at least for now-they feel that the President is not being totally realistic. Mused a Quai d'Orsay official: "There are no longer any great secrets in the world. But Carter will soon discover that to conduct foreign policy publicly is neither possible nor desirable." One danger is that revealing negotiating postures in such sensitive matters as SALT or the Middle East may force other nations into...
...French counterintelligence agency. They asked him to come to headquarters for a routine identity check. He did so without protest. Four days later the suspect was released-thereby touching off one of the most explosive international brouhahas in years. The affair triggered political repercussions from the Quai d'Orsay to the Nile, raised storms of outrage in Jerusalem and Bonn, severely embarrassed the government of French President Valéry Giscard d'Estaing and touched off outcries against the cynical expediency of French justice...
...policemen, thoughtfully provided by the Foreign Ministry, stood guard at the front door of his hotel. Along with the rest of the delegation, Abu Daoud was invited to the Quai d'Orsay, where he met with the Director for Middle East Affairs. That same evening he was taken into custody by the DST agents...
...Carter said he was "deeply disturbed," although he did not mention the incident in a telephone conversation with Giscard about an economic summit. The State Department expressed its "strong conviction that terrorists should be dealt with sternly by legal authorities." The protest was rejected by the Quai d'Orsay as "inadmissible comment on the acts of French courts...
...published his first volume of poetry in 1910, four years before joining the French foreign service. Dark-eyed, mustachioed Leger served as secretary of the French embassy in Peking and later as adviser to Foreign Minister Aristide Briand before becoming the highest permanent official at the Quai d'Orsay. He published his poems under a pseudonym to keep his official and poetic identities separate. In 1940 Leger fled to the U.S. rather than serve a French government that favored appeasement of Germany, and thereafter devoted himself to poetry. Though his output totaled a mere nine volumes, the influence...