Word: withdrawal
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...possibility of a deal with Russia that will relieve the allies of the oppressive stress & strains of rearmament. Others see it as a way to stall until the November elections show whether the next U.S. President will be a man who sticks in Europe or wants to withdraw...
...Senator Taft is as smart as he thinks he is, he must know that General Eisenhower can get a larger popular vote. If Senator Taft were as patriotic as he should be, he would withdraw in favor of Eisenhower, to make certain a Republican victory in November. Senator Taft should not be allowed to forget that hundreds of thousands of independents eager to vote for Eisenhower do not vote in Republican primaries...
Taft would not withdraw from Europe; he would keep there the six U.S. divisions already committed, and he would provide arms for allies. He would stay with the U.N. He would strive for a truce in Korea, then arm the South Koreans and pull out U.S. troops. But his basic point was that the U.S. could not match Russia in ground-force manpower. Nor must the U.S. "admit that our safety depends on begging bayonets from Germany or from France." The U.S. must be strong in its own right, and such strength lay, above all, in "control...
Chinese propagandists, unaware of the connotation that George Orwell gave the phrase, call their Russian guests "Big Brothers," and rely on the Russians to teach them how to expand and run their industry and transport. If the Russians do withdraw as promised, thousands of Big Brothers will undoubtedly remain behind -in the guise of technical advisers-to make sure that Manchuria does not stray from the Russian sphere. Kao Kang has, in effect, two bosses looking on, and so far, seems to be satisfying both...
This is the second major operational change within a year for WRRB. The Radcliffe station withdraw its connection with WHRB last spring...