| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Armed Services - 1950 - 64 pages
...world's important reserves of tin — in Malaya, Indonesia, Bolivia, Belgian Congo and Nigeria — is in the hands of a relatively few British, Dutch, Belgian,...Bolivian corporations, with interlocking connections across national boundaries. Over the past 30 years, until even after the outbreak of World War II,... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Armed Services - 1952 - 36 pages
...before the Preparedness Subcommittee on Stockpiling of 1 in and Rubber, pages 1-6: "Senator JOHNSON. Despite its strategic importance, the United States...of the world greeted the Korean war as a signal for skvrocketing prices. Tin soared to two and a half times its pre-Korean price, and international speculators... | |
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