| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Foreign Affairs - 1927 - 96 pages
...special interest in the maintenance of order and good government in Nicaragua at the present time. * * * The United States can not, therefore, fail to view...toward anarchy and jeopardizing American interests. * * * It has always been and remains the policy of the United States in such circumstances to take... | |
| 1927 - 898 pages
...all Central American countries can never be a matter of indifference to us. The United States cannot, therefore, fail to view with deep concern any serious...government in Nicaragua tending toward anarchy and jeopardising American interests, especially if such state of affairs is contributed to or brought about... | |
| Albert Bushnell Hart - 1928 - 852 pages
...officials had encouraged these expeditions. "The United States," continued the President, "cannot, therefore, fail to view with deep concern any serious...affairs is contributed to or brought about by outside influence or by any foreign power." Stimson Mission. — In April President Coolidge dispatched to... | |
| Taylor Cole - 1928 - 124 pages
...in the Central American State, President Coolidge's contention that "the United States cannot . . . fail to view with deep concern any serious threat...toward anarchy and jeopardizing American interests" contains other connotations for our purpose. It means that the use of the recognition power has been... | |
| Albert Bushnell Hart - 1928 - 852 pages
...officials had encouraged these expeditions. "The United States," continued the President, "cannot, therefore, fail to view with deep concern any serious threat to stability ind constitutional government in Nicaragua tending toward anarchy and jeopardizing American interests... | |
| David F. Schmitz - 1999 - 404 pages
...that "the United States can not . . . fail to view with deep concern any serious threat to stahility and constitutional government in Nicaragua tending...interests, especially if such state of affairs is contrihuted to or hrought ahout hy outside influences or hy any foreign power." w The American economic... | |
| David F. Schmitz - 2001 - 252 pages
...seriously affected, if not destroyed." Coolidge concluded, therefore, that "the United States cannot . . . fail to view with deep concern any serious threat...brought about by outside influences or by any foreign power."14 The American economic interest at the time amounted to almost $10 million in direct investments,... | |
| Kathy Sammis - 2000 - 132 pages
...all Central American countries can never be a matter of indifference to us. The United States cannot, therefore, fail to view with deep concern any serious...toward anarchy and jeopardizing American interests." Which US policy toward Latin America does this statement follow? 30 Focus on US History: The Era of... | |
| William Blum - 2003 - 476 pages
...maintenance of order and good Government in Nicaragua at the present time ... The United States cannot, therefore, fail to view with deep concern any serious...affairs is contributed to or brought about by outside influence or by any foreign power.1 In this manner did President Calvin Coolidge address the Congress... | |
| Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz - 2005 - 328 pages
...Brothers in 1909-1912. — Major General Smedley Butler, US Marine Corps The United States cannot, therefore, fail to view with deep concern any serious...affairs is contributed to or brought about by outside influence or by any foreign power. — President Calvin Coolidge, addressing Congress in 1927 Somoza... | |
| |