Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Foreign Affairs & Defence Social Affairs: A missed opportunity for V4 to rise above themselves


Frank Markovic, europeanpublicaffairs.eu

image from article, with caption: refugees

Excerpt:

The traditional consensual nature of the EU’s decision-making has been seriously compromised by the lack of overall agreement between those in favour – the majority of countries – and those opposed to the mandatory refugee quotas.

The Visegrad Four belonged to the small group of states that opposed the quotas from the very beginning. Their stance has come at a price. The vote on Tuesday is particularly damaging for the V4, not least because it has undermined the unity of the block.

Despite its numerous declarations of support to the common position on the issue of refugees – also emphasized during the Visegrad Group Summit in Prague on September 4 as well as during the last minute meeting of the V4 Ministers on the eve of the vote – Warsaw decided to vote in favour of the quotas and against the common position previously agreed upon by all four Visegrad countries.

This move took other V4 members by surprise. It raised doubts regarding whether the cooperation in the current format will survive and to what extent Poland desires to remain part of the group.

Despite the meeting of the V4 leaders in Brussels ahead of the EU Summit on Wednesday and despite them having agreed on a common position on the migration situation, it remains to be seen whether the V4 can not only talk the talk but equally walk the walk, and whether the reassurances of Poland’s PM Kopacz regarding the unity of the block will translate into action.

On top of that, the vote in the Council on Tuesday has also meant a significant, even if temporary, loss of credibility of the V4 countries vis-à-vis their EU partners. This is particularly true for Slovakia. A traditionally reliable partner, it has put up a resistance for which it has been criticised vehemently. ...

Leave aside the fact that Slovakia is a full member of the EU – something that certain older EU members are yet to get used to – and hereby is entitled to occasional dissent without facing threats and consequences that surpass the scope of the existing remedies in the EU Treaties. Slovakia, and the rest of the Visegrad Group, have failed in public diplomacy to effectively communicate messages in a manner that would be both consistent with the demands of the domestic audience and not perceived as obstructive by other EU countries. ...

Introduction to Public Diplomacy


charhar.china.org.cn, September 29, 2015

Introduction to Public Diplomacy 
First Chinese textbook on public diplomacy
Textbook used in nearly 20 colleges and universities
Training material for local public diplomacy associations
Publisher: Peking University Press
Editor-in-Chief: Han Fangming
Follow China.org.cn on Twitter and Facebook to join the conversation.

U.S. Turns to ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ Writer for Anti-ISIS Propaganda


Asawin Suebsaeng, thedailybeast.com

image from article

The State Department says it’s losing the information war to ISIS—and is tapping HBO, Snapchat, and a screenwriter with deep CIA connections to help turn things around.


The Obama administration is turning to HBO, Snapchat, and a controversial, Oscar-winning screenwriter to help them fight ISIS.
This year, the State Department convened a group of friends in the U.S. film industry, social media, and premium cable TV to brainstorm ways to counter jihadist propaganda.
In June, State Department officials and counterterrorism advisors traveled to Sunnylands (nicknamed the “Camp David of the West,” due to its history of being a super-exclusive vacation spot for celebrities and politicians) in Rancho Mirage, California, for a summit on how to effectively fight a propaganda and media war against extremist networks abroad. ISIS, for instance, has already mastered the art of ripping off Hollywood techniques to make recruiting and propaganda films, and basically has its ownTwitter army. The June meetings were essentially a sequel to a three-day summit convened by the White House in February on Countering Violent Extremism (CVE) through community-based strategies. 
Industry and government sources tell The Daily Beast that attendees included Mark Boal (Academy Award-winning screenwriter of The Hurt Locker and Zero Dark Thirty), and executives from HBO, Snapchat, and Middle Eastern broadcaster MBC. (Earlier this year, British Prime Minister David Cameron weighed the idea of banning Snapchat out of fear that terrorists send encrypted communications via the video messaging service.)
Boal’s participation, especially, seems like a perfect fit. Zero Dark Thirty, the 2012 Oscar-bait that dramatized the U.S. hunt for Osama bin Laden, was made with the help of the CIA and its press office—some would say too much help. The film is packed with falsehoods that push the CIA’s thoroughly debunked narrative that torture is what got Bin Laden. Additionally, Boal and ZDT director Kathryn Bigelow fêted CIA officers with gifts like tequila and pearls as they were offered unprecedented access to information on the OBL mission. (The female officer who partly inspired the movie’s main character said she had “developed a friendship” with the pair.)
And now he could be moving on to the State Department, presumably for less controversial, revisionist fare.

“U.S. filmmakers and social-media folks met with a bunch of international and regional filmmakers and broadcasters [at the Sunnylands estate],” a senior State Department official told The Daily Beast. “We had people who were at the top of their field. The goal was to continue the dialogue started at the [White House] summit.”
Sunnylands was in charge of pulling together the roster of talent, and invited the State Department to participate. One of the goals was to connect Middle Eastern filmmakers with influential Hollywood figures to start plotting “how to engage and empower storytellers [to] create alternative and positive narratives, and how to talk about youth empowerment,” according to the official, who works on these initiatives.
For instance, these filmmakers discussed producing content that promotes stories of young people living in the region who have rejected Islamist terror and work to improve their communities—entrepreneurial work, starting small businesses, launching NGOs, doing volunteer work, and so forth.

Lionel Commentary: The Propaganda Oscar
WPIX - New York
“It’s the best way to provide a counter-narrative to extremists,” the official said, suggesting that this kind of “positive” media—aired in the Middle East and elsewhere—could help push back against jihadist hype and ideally put a dent in the increase in terrorist recruitment.
Some counterterrorism veterans skeptical that the collaboration will amount to much. “Reaching out to Hollywood makes sense in principle,” Will McCants, a former State Department senior counterterrorism adviser who helped set up State’s anti-jihadist digital outreach, told The Daily Beast. “But this sort of thing usually ends up with executives from D.C. and Hollywood high-fiving each other and throwing around some cringeworthy ideas. What you’d want instead is the [government] guy in the trenches talking to the edgy independent filmmaker. That’ll get you closer to the sensibility ISIS is tapping into.”
(McCants recalls that during his time at State he was pitched by a company that wanted to fly Hollywood writers and producers to Kabul for at least a week to help craft a positive national narrative for the Afghans. The price tag for that was approximately $4 million.)
“This sort of thing usually ends up with executives from D.C. and Hollywood high-fiving each other and throwing around some cringeworthy ideas.”
Other recent attempts at this model—fighting Islamic extremist narratives through media and social media—have been going on for years with little discernible effect. The State Department has already tried trolling terrorists on its own on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, and online message boards, with unimpressive results at best. The department’s 2013 YouTube spoof of al Qaeda propaganda videos was widely panned, and a 2012 study on U.S. digital outreach, published in The Middle East Journal, found that these types of initiatives were doing little to curtail anti-American sentiment on the Internet in the Middle East. (A paltry 4 percent of posts expressed a positive view of the outreach, and only 4.8 percent exhibited happy thoughts about American foreign policy.)
“ISIS’s message is that Muslims are being killed and that they’re the solution,” Alberto Fernandez, coordinator at the State Department’s Center for Strategic Counterterrorism Communications, told The Atlantic this year. “We don’t have a counter-narrative that speaks to that. What we have is half a message: ‘Don’t do this.’ But we lack the ‘do this instead.’ That’s not very exciting. The positive narrative is always more powerful, especially if it involves dressing in black like a ninja, having a cool flag, being on television, and fighting for your people.”
The State Department also maintains the American Film Showcase, an exchange program run by the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs that aims to use cinema as a tool to foster cultural understanding. The program, which former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton once hailed as being part of “smart power diplomacy,” includes both documentaries and narrative films. 
“Through a cooperative agreement with the University of Southern California’s School of Cinematic Arts…in 2015-2016, [the Bureau] will send 50 films and more than 70 filmmakers and film experts to approximately 40 countries around the world,” Susan Pittman, a spokeswoman for the State Department’s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, told The Daily Beast. “It will also host workshops in Los Angeles for emerging filmmakers.”
One of the initiatives of the showcase includes a USC workshop in partnership with the State Department’s Special Representative to Muslim Communities that will provide TV-drama producers from several countries lessons on how to “improve narrative techniques and more effectively incorporate social causes into their programming,” according to Pittman. The bureau also plans to start a new six-week film-mentoring program with industry leaders in Los Angeles next year.
The State Department working with allies in Hollywood to undermine foreign enemies is hardly a new concept. In the early 1950s, the State Department collaborated with dozens of Hollywood filmmakers to create roughly 400 feature and short films highlighting the superiority of American civil society. The films targeted European and Asian rural audiences, and the project was described at the time as “the greatest celluloid propaganda drive ever attempted in foreign countries.”
And as the Obama administration’s shortcomings in the online arena in the ISIS war appear to persist, the White House is kicking off yet another CVE summit on Tuesday, which President Obama will be hosting while in New York City for the annual UN General Assembly.
“I will be participating in the global youth summit with dozens of organizations and young people from dozens of countries coming together on initiatives they have built [that started at the summit last February], Lisa Monaco, an adviser to President Obama on homeland security and counterterrorism, told reporters. “We’ve got a set of topics that we’ll be building on Tuesday morning…to address the whole life cycle of terrorist violence that we’re trying to go after with the whole of government approach.”
Deputy Secretary of State Tony Blinken said the summit will underscore the “partnership against violent extremism to [include] not only national governments, but also civil society, including women, young people, religious leaders, as well as the private sector and local community leaders, and also multilateral groups.”
“We are going to keep trying to foster greater involvement of the technology sector that is developing a digital strategy for promoting private countering-violent-extremism efforts, and also greater philanthropic support for these private efforts,” Alejandro Mayorkas, deputy secretary of Homeland Security, told reporters.
The State Department’s latest CVE back-and-forth with Hollywood—which would ideally help fill the void for the “do this instead”—is still in an embryonic stage. Any potential future partnerships or collaboration with, say, HBO, Snapchat, or Boal have yet to be announced. As for whether or not this will actually lead to progress in a media war against the Islamic State, that’s an entirely open question. But since ISIS propagandists have been so keen to adopt the flashy editing techniques of Hollywood and horror movies, perhaps it’s a sign that Hollywood might as well help others fight back.
HBO, Snapchat, and Boal did not respond to The Daily Beast’s requests for comment.
—with additional reporting by Kimberly Dozier and Noah Shachtman

Quotable: “Horrified but baffled” by ISIS


publicdiplomacycouncil.org

Tuesday, September 29th 2015


Last month The New York Review of Bookstook the unusual step of publishing a book review, “The Mystery of ISIS,” by “Anonymous,” identified only as an individual with “wide experience in the Middle East” who was “formerly an official of a NATO country.”  The August 13, 2015, review focused on what has attracted 20,000 foreign fighters to join Daesh. 

“. . . commentators still prefer to focus on political, financial, and physical explanations, such as anti-Sunni discrimination, corruption, lack of government services in captured territories, and ISIS’s use of violence. Western audiences are, therefore, rarely forced to focus on ISIS’s bewildering ideological appeal,” the anonymous reviewer wrote.  Contradictions and dilemmas abound. “We are not only horrified but baffled.”

The books under review were ISIS: Inside the Army of Terror by Michael Weiss and Hassan Hassan and ISIS: The State of Terror by Jessica Stern and J.M. Berger.  Here are some excerpts from the review:

Nor have there been any more satisfying explanations of what draws the 20,000 foreign fighters who have joined the movement. At first, the large number who came from Britain were blamed on the British government having made insufficient effort to assimilate immigrant communities; then France’s were blamed on the government pushing too hard for assimilation. But in truth, these new foreign fighters seemed to sprout from every conceivable political or economic system. They came from very poor countries (Yemen and Afghanistan) and from the wealthiest countries in the world (Norway and Qatar). Analysts who have argued that foreign fighters are created by social exclusion, poverty, or inequality should acknowledge that they emerge as much from the social democracies of Scandinavia as from monarchies (a thousand from Morocco), military states (Egypt), authoritarian democracies (Turkey), and liberal democracies (Canada). It didn’t seem to matter whether a government had freed thousands of Islamists (Iraq), or locked them up (Egypt), whether it refused to allow an Islamist party to win an election (Algeria) or allowed an Islamist party to be elected. Tunisia, which had the most successful transition from the Arab Spring to an elected Islamist government, nevertheless produced more foreign fighters than any other country.

Nor was the surge in foreign fighters driven by some recent change in domestic politics or in Islam. Nothing fundamental had shifted in the background of culture or religious belief between 2012, when there were almost none of these foreign fighters in Iraq, and 2014, when there were 20,000. The only change is that there was suddenly a territory available to attract and house them. . . . We are left again with tautology—ISIS exists because it can exist—they are there because they’re there.

* * * * *

Part of the problem may be that commentators still prefer to focus on political, financial, and physical explanations, such as anti-Sunni discrimination, corruption, lack of government services in captured territories, and ISIS’s use of violence. Western audiences are, therefore, rarely forced to focus on ISIS’s bewildering ideological appeal. I was surprised when I saw that even a Syrian opponent of ISIS was deeply moved by a video showing how ISIS destroyed the “Sykes-Picot border” between Iraq and Syria, established since 1916, and how it went on to reunite divided tribes. I was intrigued by the condemnation issued by Ahmed al-Tayeb, the grand imam of al-Azhar—one of the most revered Sunni clerics in the world: “This group is Satanic—they should have their limbs amputated or they should be crucified.” I was taken aback by bin Laden’s elegy for Zarqawi: his “story will live forever with the stories of the nobles…. Even if we lost one of our greatest knights and princes, we are happy that we have found a symbol….”

But the “ideology” of ISIS is also an insufficient explanation. Al-Qaeda understood better than anyone the peculiar blend of Koranic verses, Arab nationalism, crusader history, poetic reference, sentimentalism, and horror that can animate and sustain such movements. * * * * *

. . . five years ago not even the most austere Salafi theorists advocated the reintroduction of slavery; but ISIS has in fact imposed it. Nothing since the triumph of the Vandals in Roman North Africa has seemed so sudden, incomprehensible, and difficult to reverse as the rise of ISIS. None of our analysts, soldiers, diplomats, intelligence officers, politicians, or journalists has yet produced an explanation rich enough—even in hindsight—to have predicted the movement’s rise.

We hide this from ourselves with theories and concepts that do not bear deep examination. And we will not remedy this simply through the accumulation of more facts. It is not clear whether our culture can ever develop sufficient knowledge, rigor, imagination, and humility to grasp the phenomenon of ISIS. But for now, we should admit that we are not only horrified but baffled.

US soft power

Lynne Weil, thehill.com
image from

What do Fulbright fellows in Kenya, the broadcasts of Radio Free Asia, and the Foreign Press Center near the United Nations have in common?  All are facets of U.S. public diplomacy, which advances national security by informing, engaging and influencing the views of people around the world.
Public diplomacy (PD to its friends) is one of the less celebrated but more intriguing investments in U.S. foreign policy.  For decades, it has earned lasting allies for our country and helped multitudes understand and embrace our core values, including human rights, freedom of information, strong civil society and education for all. 
And yet just 3.5 percent of what we spend on civilian international affairs – which altogether is about 1 percent of the federal budget, so we’re talking about a fraction of a sliver – goes to such programs. This modest down-payment on America’s future deserves recognition and prudent stewardship.
Promoting both is the job of the bipartisan U.S. Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy, which Congress is considering reauthorizing before its mandate lapses this week.  Its members, appointed by the White House and confirmed by the Senate, work with a lean team of expert employees to assess PD’s effectiveness, recommend policies and programs and write up its findings for the president, Congress and the public.
The commission has just released an assessment of all PD efforts at the State Department and the Broadcasting Board of Governors. The comprehensive report drills down on some timely issues such as push-back against Russian propaganda in the former Soviet states and the use of communications to combat violent extremist groups.  It raises questions about resource allocation and makes 28 big-picture recommendations, plus nearly three dozen program-specific proposals for places to improve.
Here are some of top takeaways:
  • PD efforts worldwide are short-staffed and under-funded.  At the same time, a risk-adverse State Department personnel system often quashes innovation that could lead to more creative use of existing resources.  But the commission commends Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs Richard Stengel, who came on board early last year, for encouraging career staffers to take more calculated risks and “get caught trying.”
  • State Department “American spaces,” ranging from curated bookshelves in local university libraries to brick-and-mortar cultural oases – many offering everything from movie nights to training in civil society tools to uncensored Internet use – are valuable, especially in countries that restrict access to information.  Yet they face budget and security challenges; the report calls for explicit congressional support for keeping these facilities open and accessible. 
  • Progress has been made within the past year to develop more rigorous research and evaluation – particularly at State, which recently created a new position to oversee this area.  The commission proposes further expanding the Office of Policy, Planning and Resources (R/PPR) and increasing research operations at both State and the BBG.  Both need strong data so they can better gauge what resonates with their audiences and provide solid metrics to make decisions on how best to allocate their funds.
  • The report highlights the BBG’s boost in programming during the past year in response to crises in Ukraine and the surrounding region through VOA and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty.  It calls for more, along with other PD efforts, throughout the former Soviet states to counter Russian influence.  At a time when Moscow is choking off ideas from outside – targeting media, NGOs, cultural institutions and other traditional sources – the commission urgently pushes for more funding, staffing and creative programming of all kinds.
  • Similarly, it endorses recent PD efforts at countering violent extremism (CVE) through messaging and other means, and urges coordination across all government agencies engaged in this fight.  It also recommends that congressional staffers specializing in defense and foreign affairs collaborate more closely to examine CVE efforts and see where PD fits in.
  • The commission roundly applauds the White House-led creation of academic and professional exchange programs for people from previously underserved regions, including Africa and Southeast Asia, and flags them for longer-term support.
At 360 pages, 50 alone dedicated to the executive summary, the new PD report is a hefty read.  But it’s well worth a look, and it underscores that in spite of some shortcomings, much of the way our country exerts its “soft power” is well worthwhile.
The commission itself merits maintaining, too.  Let’s hope Congress agrees, and either gives it a nod in a spending measure for Fiscal Year 2016 by Wednesday or in an authorization bill soon. 
Weil had the public diplomacy oversight portfolio on the staff of the House Foreign Affairs Committee from 2003-2010, served as a senior advisor to the under secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs at State from 2010-2012, and was director of Communications and Public Affairs for the BBG from 2012 to last year.

Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Facebook comments on Putin at the UN/CBS interview (JB comment slightly edited)

[A facebook "friend"]: Putin's speech was obviously written by someone afraid to say anything the least bit imaginative. I found it to be full of the usual cliches and a bit tedious. In fact, many correspondents had thought up a drinking game beforehand where everyone was forced to take a drink when Putin repeated one of his 25 usual cliches. The game started off ominously when Putin mentioned both the anti-Nazi coalition and Yalta in the first minute. The game was called off midway because the dri...
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Read the full text of the Russian president's remarks at the U.N. General Assembly.
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Classic Quotable: Ambassador Lincoln Gordon’s pushback against Washington micromanagement


publicdiplomacycouncil.org

Monday, September 28th 2015

Foreign Service Officers vexed by the micromanagement of Public Diplomacy by Washington will be interested in these comments, made in 1965, on “The Washington-Field Relationship” by U.S. Ambassador to Brazil Lincoln Gordon (1913-2009).  Gordon was later President of Johns Hopkins University

Understanding this tendency, the U.S. Information Agency accepted “field driven programs” as one of its fundamental organizing principles.  The first sentence below deserves equal billing with Edward R. Murrow’s comments on crashes and landings.

There is in Washington a widespread tendency to regard the field missions as the eyes and arms of United States policy, but taking no part in the function of the brain.  It should be obvious, of course, that policy toward any country cannot be determined exclusively by the field mission there.  The relationship between the United States and any other country in today’s world is not merely a bilateral matter.  It must be placed within a framework of regional and global policy and strategy.

At the same time, the field mission has the great advantage over Washington of being in intimate contact with the whole spectrum of relationships—political, economic, psychological and military; and the ambassador is better placed than any single Washington officer to weigh together the various elements in a broad country strategy.

It follows that the field mission should be called upon to think in strategic terms, and to recommend policies actively to Washington, rather than merely serving as observer, reporter and executant.  This is equally true of the component operating units in the aid, information and military fields.  At the same time, in order to maintain a regional and global unity, the field mission should be kept abreast of the evolution of Washington policies, with ample opportunity to comment on them and to participate in their formulation.  Much has been done in recent years to improve this relationship.

Hat tip:  Foreign Service Journal.

Monday, September 28, 2015

Blast from the Past: An Addendum to Nicholas Cull's "'Public Diplomacy' Before Gullion"


image from

Cull article at

From a search for "public diplomacy" in elephind.com. Many thanks to Maristella Feustle for alerting me to this finding aid.

[Pls. pardon the imperfections in the entries; clearer texts are of course available in the finding aid itself.]

Page 1 [Newspaper Page] — The daily dispatch. — 6 February 1856
... s they conceive, a certain impres sion upon us, they have alio to set an example to their own people, and there are few examples so catching as those of public diplomacy. Could Ge neral Fierce and his Government succeed in persua ding the citizens in the Unicn that they had avoid ed a just settlement by dilatory pleas aud ...
Publication Title: Daily Dispatch, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Virginia, United States
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Page 1 [Newspaper Page] — The Daily Dispatch — 6 February 1856
... , as they conceive, a certain impression upon us, they have alio to set an example to their own people, and there are few examples so catching as those of public diplomacy. Could General Fierce and his Government succeed in persuading the citizens in the Unicn that they had avoided a just settlement by dilatory pleas aud evasive answers, they ...
Publication Title: Daily Dispatch, The
Source: Library of Virginia
Country/State of Publication: Virginia, United States
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Untitled Article [Newspaper Article] — Pittsburgh Daily Gazette and Advertiser — 7 February 1856
... , a* they conceive, a certain impression open us, they have also to set, an exampto to their own people, aid there are few examples so catohisg. as those of public diplomacy. _Coold _General Fierce and his Government eucceed in persuading the cltiiens of the Union that they had avoided • just settlement by dilatory pleas and evasive unaware, they ...
Publication Title: Pittsburgh Daily Gazette And Advertiser
Source: Pennsylvania State University
Country/State of Publication: Pennsylvania, United States
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Page 2 [Newspaper Page] — Wheeling daily intelligencer. — 11 February 1856
... s they con ceive, a certain impression upon us, they have also to set an example to their own people; and there are lew examples so catching as those of public diplomacy. Could Gen. Pierce and his Government succeed in persuading the citizens in the Union that they have avoided a just set tlement by dilatory picas and evasive answers, ...
Publication Title: Wheeling Daily Intelligencer
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: West Virginia, United States
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THE PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE. (From the Times, 15th January.) [Newspaper Article] — The Argus — 18 April 1856
... , as they conceive, a certain impression upon us, they havo also to set an examplo to their own people, and there are few examples ko catching as those of public diplomacy. Could General Pieice and his Govern- ment succeed iu persuading lhe citizens in the Union that they had avoieled a just set- tlement hi elilatory pleas and evasive ...
Publication Title: Argus, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: Vic, Australia
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The Advertiser. ADELAIDE: SATURDAY, APRIL 12, 1862. [Newspaper Article] — The South Australian Advertiser — 12 April 1862
... s involved in the dispute, has been discussed in its many momentous rela lations. The bearing of the question upon manufactures and commerce has engaged the attention of the commercial public. Diplomacyhas been studied deeply, and the mutual obli gations and responsibilities of neighboring states closely canvassed in coanectioa with the all absorbing subject. Finally, and with reference to ...
Publication Title: South Australian Advertiser, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: SA, Australia
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Untitled Article [Newspaper Article] — Pittsburgh Daily Gazette and Advertiser — 9 February 1869
... d whom the Treasury would await as a matter of course; no publicist of such eminent ability and wide experience, in foreign and domestic affairs, that the charge of our public diplomacy is assigned to him by the unanimous voice of his countrymen. Perhaps Adams or Motlet would be more acceptable in the State Department than any others of the ...
Publication Title: Pittsburgh Daily Gazette And Advertiser
Source: Pennsylvania State University
Country/State of Publication: Pennsylvania, United States
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Page 2 [Newspaper Page] — The Independent. — 21 July 1896
... v tho controll ing powers in tho amicable arrange ment Speculation and gossip may be rife but investigations will bo usoles3 until tho time comes when facts can bo mado public Diplomacy is somewhat of n differ ent scionco from tho ability of buy ing in a cheap morkot and soiling the samo goods at a higher rato It requires ...
Publication Title: Independent, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Hawaii, United States
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Page 3 [Newspaper Page] — The Wheeling daily intelligencer. — 13 December 1899
... . Macrum has been on ~ very friendly terms with the Trans- \ vaal government, but that haa been his personal affair and something which ha would no( drag into public diplomacy ~ carelessly. His position ts not very H well understood at present and It can- (| not be until ho has reothed this coun- tt try and explained ...
Publication Title: Wheeling Daily Intelligencer, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: West Virginia, United States
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Page 2 [Newspaper Page] — Akron daily Democrat. — 13 December 1899
... r throat nud lung; disease. Hold by all druggists for 25 eta. 8 government, hut that lias boon his per sonal affair nnd something which hq would not drag Into public diplomacy carelessly, IHsjiosltlou Is not vory well understood at present nnd It cannot bo until he -has reached this country nud eiplaluod for hlmielf. Ms suggestions will undoubtedly bo ...
Publication Title: Akron Daily Democrat
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Ohio, United States
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Macrum's Successor [Newspaper Article] — Los Angeles Herald — 13 December 1899
... r from Kruger." "Mr. Macrum has been on very friendly terms with the Transvaal government, but this has been his personal affair and something which he would not draw Into public diplomacy carelessly. His position Is not well understood at present and it cannot be until he has reached this country and explained it lor himself. His suggestions' will undoubtedly ...
Publication Title: Los Angeles Herald
Source: California Digital Newspaper Collection [UC Riverside]
Country/State of Publication: California, United States
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Page 8 [Newspaper Page] — The Washington times. — 8 July 1901
... t and Pccnirlranta Arenue THE MORE YOU SAY THE LESS PEOPLE REMEMBER ONE WORD SAPOLIO MAR THE COMMISSIONERS i The Secretaries Who Stand Be- i I tween Them and the Public Diplomacy One of the Chief Ile aulHiten for the 1oHition Hotv Ciillert Are Trenteil at the District ltuildiiiK Kierlenecs Itelnteil Public business at the District Building is much expedited ...
Publication Title: Washington Times, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: District of Columbia, United States
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Page 3 [Newspaper Page] — University Missourian. — 21 October 1908
... s the ideal of our transportation. In the fifth division, including the seventeenth and eighteenth chapters, the author considers the history and ideals of our external relations our policy of public diplomacy, influence in Asia, lack of consideration of weaker nations, and general ideal of interna tional peace and our history of xvar and order the power of our army ...
Publication Title: University Missourian
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Missouri, United States
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Page 41 [Newspaper Page] — The times dispatch. — 5 May 1912
... t provided by the code." And one of the most valuable, is courtesy. As an in? dividual quality it is indispensable to any man, in business, In private life, in public diplomacy. There is nothing that costs so littie and goes so far as cour? tesy in the every-day affairs of life--of daiiy routine. The American National Bank OF RICHMOND, ...
Publication Title: Times Dispatch, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Virginia, United States
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Page 11 [Newspaper Page] — Times Dispatch — 5 May 1912
... t provided by the code." And one of the most valuable, is courtesy. As an in? dividual quality it is indispensable to any man, in business, In private life, in public diplomacy. There is nothing that costs so littie and goes so far as cour? tesy in the every-day affairs of life--of daiiy routine. The American National Bank OF RICHMOND, ...
Publication Title: Times Dispatch
Source: Library of Virginia
Country/State of Publication: Virginia, United States
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Page 10 [Newspaper Page] — The times dispatch. — 6 May 1912
... n and W. B. Llghtfoot And one of the most valuable, is courtesy. As an in? dividual quality it is indispensable to any man, in business, in private life, in public diplomacy. There is nothing that costs so little and ?oes so far as cour? tesy in the every-day affairs of life of daily routine. The American National Bank OF ...
Publication Title: Times Dispatch, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Virginia, United States
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Page 10 [Newspaper Page] — Times Dispatch — 6 May 1912
... n and W. B. Llghtfoot And one of the most valuable, is courtesy. As an in? dividual quality it is indispensable to any man, in business, in private life, in public diplomacy. There is nothing that costs so little and ?oes so far as cour? tesy in the every-day affairs of life of daily routine. The American National Bank OF ...
Publication Title: Times Dispatch
Source: Library of Virginia
Country/State of Publication: Virginia, United States
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Page 11 [Newspaper Page] — The sun. — 17 January 1915
... r and public services of I c pictue successor. I Socialists Vote on Plan to Keep U.S. Out of War Platform Resolution Offered )Iakc People. Women Included, Arbiters at Polls Public Diplomacy IJIXOOKS TO BK ITT OX The National Socialist party Is now en SorciI In iiddlnit lo Its platform n revolu tionary, recipe for keeping tho United States out ...
Publication Title: Sun, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: New York, United States
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SOME SECRET HISTORY KAISER'S CONFIDANT'S TRICKERY. LONDON, April 30. [Newspaper Article] — The Bathurst Times — 23 June 1915
... f an unscru pulous and palavering foe nice L»sir | many, The 'Times' to-day reveals a chapter of German high diplomacy ( which affords irrebuttable proof of the fallacy of public diplomacy. It con cerns the week-end before last Au gust Bank Holiday— the days when Germany, Belgium, France, and Russia were being plunged into v-ar, : and while yet ...
Publication Title: Bathurst Times, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: NSW, Australia
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... n have . you to offer, Mr. Reader? I think it ) is about time we stopped crying for the penny and went after the nickel, don't you? Edw. Freeman. PUBLIC DIPLOMACY. The de velopment of the diplomatic situa tion brings out the fact that there is entirely too much secrecy and back door pussyfoot work for a democrat ic ...
Publication Title: Day Book, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Illinois, United States
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Page 28 [Newspaper Page] — The Day Book — 3 May 1916
... n have . you to offer, Mr. Reader? I think it ) is about time we stopped crying for the penny and went after the nickel, don't you? Edw. Freeman. PUBLIC DIPLOMACY. The development of the diplomatic situation brings out the fact that there is entirely too much secrecy and backdoor pussyfoot work for a democratic republic. We are told ...
Publication Title: Day Book, The
Source: Illinois Digital Newspaper Collections (UIUC)
Country/State of Publication: Illinois, United States
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Page 17 [Newspaper Page] — El Paso Morning Times — 29 December 1917
... e ready for peace win ovrriiirow Ihe wall erected anil continually strength ened bv chauvinists. Meanwhile noth Ing can so contribute to shake the wall of arms as tbla new- public diplomacy. The Vorwaeria says: "The German government will ha seriously lo consider whether further negotiations are possible on the has! the Husslan program with due regard pi the preservation ...
Publication Title: El Paso Morning Times
Source: The Portal to Texas History
Country/State of Publication: Texas, United States
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Page 1 [Newspaper Page] — Fair play. — 19 January 1918
... o Is alto th duy of secret covenants ento.ed inn in the interest of particular 4otun ments and likely ut turau uulool.jd-foi moment to upjot tho pace of tu world. Public Diplomacy Necessary It is this happy lact, now clt'ai U tho view ot every public man iuo. thoughts do nut still linger lu an ag that is dead and ...
Publication Title: Fair Play
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Missouri, United States
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Page 2 [Newspaper Page] — Weekly journal-miner. — 23 January 1918
... e public mind. AUSTRIA-HUNGARY'S POSITION Mt f M M M M t M M t t to make definite statement of the objects of committed the I'niled States unreservedly open, public diplomacy, now and hereafter. the to war. Then he A writer and thinker the two are not always linked to- the principle of ttlier tells us m tne uecemuer ...
Publication Title: Weekly Journal-Miner
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Arizona, United States
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Page 2 [Newspaper Page] — Mexico Missouri message. — 24 January 1918
... s aluo ttu day of secret covenants entered inu in the interest of particular govern menu and likely at some unlooked-foi moment to up jet the peace of ill. world. Public Diplomacy Necessary. It is this happy fact, now clear to the view of every public man wno. thoughts do not still linger in an ag. that la dead and ...
Publication Title: Mexico Missouri Message
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Missouri, United States
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Page 1 [Newspaper Page] — The Daily Ardmoreite. — 11 February 1918
... e sub stantive items which must constitute th.- body of any final settlement. He is jealous of international action and of international counsel. He accepts, be says, the principle of public diplomacy but he appears to insist that it be con fined, at any rate in this case, to gen eralitles, and that the several particular questions of territory and ...
Publication Title: Daily Ardmoreite, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Oklahoma, United States
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Page 1 [Newspaper Page] — Evening public ledger. — 11 February 1918
... s irjid blm to no nractlcal conclusions. Ho refuses to apply them OtHthelubstantlvo items which must ' .-2 V 1 i-l r l..lA.Hntlniinl ilo accepts, ho says, tho principle of public diplomacy, but he appear to iut that It bo confined, at uii.vnite In tills case, to generalities and that tho wreral particular questions of territory anil hotrrrignly, Iho several ...
Publication Title: Evening Public Ledger
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Pennsylvania, United States
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Page 1 [Newspaper Page] — The Washington times. — 11 February 1918
... e Item which must con stitute the body of any final settle ment He Is Jealous of international action and of International counsel. IT accepts, he says, the principle it public diplomacy, but he appears to .nslst that It be confined, at any rate In this case, to generalities and that the several particular questions of territory and sovereignty, the ...
Publication Title: Washington Times, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: District of Columbia, United States
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Page 1 [Newspaper Page] — The Tacoma times. — 11 February 1918
... s which must con stitute the body of any final set tlement. He is jealous of internal action and of international counsel. He accepts, he says, the principle of I public diplomacy, but he appears Ito insist that it be confined, at I any rate in this case, to generali- I ties, and that the several particu lar questions of ...
Country/State of Publication: Washington, United StatesN KATO ON QUESTION OF MILITARY AID. [Newspaper Article] — Queensland Times — 29 December 1915
... s political party weapons, -if they. ,are really sincere in their 'desire to it tain diplomatic success. In the press of late much has been said' of what' ~is celled 'public diplomacy.' While this deserves consideration in theory, -yet certain limnis rshould be observed. Diplomacy often requii'es secrecy. It is a greet mistake, and may become a great danger, for ...
Publication Title: Queensland Times
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: Ipswich, Australia (Qld)
Page 1 [Newspaper Page] — El Paso herald. — 11 February 1918
... m to the Items which must constitute the body of any final settlement. He Is jealous of international action and interna tional counsel. He accepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but he appears to insist that it be con fined, at any rate in this case, to generalities; that the several particu lar questions of territory and sov ...
Publication Title: El Paso Herald
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Texas, United States
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Page 1 [Newspaper Page] — El Paso Herald — 11 February 1918
... m to the Items which must constitute the body of any final settlement. He Is jealous of international action and interna- tional counsel. He accepts he says the principle of public diplomacy but he appears to insist that it be con- fined at any rate in this case to generalities; that the several particu- lar questions of territory and sov- ...
Publication Title: El Paso Herald
Source: The Portal to Texas History
Country/State of Publication: Texas, United States
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Page 2 [Newspaper Page] — The evening world. — 11 February 1918
... e Items which must con "Stltuto tho body of any final settlement. Ho Is Jcnlous of International ""action and of International counsel. h "He accepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but ho appear- . to lnslit that It bo confine!, at any rate In this case, to generalities urn! ! that the Several particular queillons of territory and ...
Publication Title: Evening World, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: New York, United States
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Page 1 [Newspaper Page] — The Seattle star. — 11 February 1918
... e sub stantive Items which must constitute the body of any final settlement. He Is Jealous of International action and of International council. He accepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but he appears to insist that it be confined, at anjr rate in this case, to generalities and that the several particular questions of territory and sovereignty, the ...
Publication Title: Seattle Star, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Washington, United States
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Page 1 [Newspaper Page] — The Ogden standard. — 11 February 1918
... e items which must con stitute the body of any final settle ment. He Is Jealous of international action and of international counsel. Ho accepts, he says, tho principle of public diplomacy but he appears to insist that It bo contined, at any rate in this case, to generalities and that J thc several particular questions of ter ritory and ...
Publication Title: Ogden Standard, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Utah, United States
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Page 1 [Newspaper Page] — The sun. — 12 February 1918
... e Items which must constitute the body of sny final settlement. He Is Jealous ot International ac tion and of international council. Hs accepts, he says, the principle ot , public diplomacy, but he appears to 1 Insist it be confined, at any rate In this case, to generalities, and that the several particular questions ot territory and sovereignty, the ...
Publication Title: Sun, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: New York, United States
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Page 1 [Newspaper Page] — The Democratic banner. — 12 February 1918
... t constitute thc body of any final BCttlment. Ho is jealous of in ternational action and of international COUIlbCl. ' WON'T APPLY PRINCIPLE "He accepts, he said, the principle of public diplomacy, but ho appears to Insist that It bo confined, at any rate in this case, to tho generalities and not extend to tho bcveral particu lar questions of ...
Publication Title: Democratic Banner, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Ohio, United States
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Page 3 [Newspaper Page] — The Washington herald. — 12 February 1918
... s which must con stitute the body of any flnal set tlement. He is Jealous of Interna tional action and of International counsel. He accepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but he appears to Insist that It be con fined. at any rate in this ease, to generalities and that the several particular questions of territory and sovereignty, ...
Publication Title: Washington Herald, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: District of Columbia, United States
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Page 1 [Newspaper Page] — New-York tribune. — 12 February 1918
... v national action and of international eminent of France the "conditions" counsel. under which French territory shall He accepts, he says, the principle be evacuated; and only with Austria of public diplomacy, but he ap- what shall be done" with Poland, pears to insist that it be confined. In the determination of all ques at any rate in this case, ...
Publication Title: New-York Tribune
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: New York, United States
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THE SPEECH FULL OFFICIAL TEXT BROAD OFFER TO NEGOTIATE. AUSTRIA'S CONCILIATORY ATTITUDE. GERMAN MILITARISM THE OBSTACLE. WASHINGTON, Monday Night. [Newspaper Article] — The Bathurst Times — 12 February 1918
... c items that must constitute tlio body of any final settle ment. Ho is opposed to international action ami international counsel. Tlio Gorman Chancellor ndmits, lio says, tlie principle of public diplomacy, but apprars to insist that it not bo np pliod in his own ease of generalities and (hat tlio several questions of territory and s'ovoroignty — tlio several ...
Publication Title: Bathurst Times, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: NSW, Australia
THE GERMAN REPLY. [Newspaper Article] — The Register — 13 February 1918
... e substantive items which must constitute the body of any final settlement. He k jealous of international action and of international! counsel. He accepts, he says, tfae prin-' ciple of public diplomacy, but he appears to insist that it be confined, at any rate in this case, to generalizations, and that the several particular questions of territory and sovereignty, the ...
Publication Title: Register, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: SA, Australia
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AMERICA'S PEACE CONDITIONS RE-STATED BY WILSON IN REPLY TO CZERNIN AND HERTLING. 3 CONDITIONS—ALL DEMOCRATIC (Reuter.) [Newspaper Article] — Geelong Advertiser — 13 February 1918
... t con-' Kfcitufco the body of any final settlement. i Ho in jealous of international action, ! and of international counsel. He nc- ! eepts, lie ways, the. principle of public! diplomacy, but he appears to insist that , it be confined, at any rate in this case, i <o generalities, and that tho several par- i ticular questions of ...
Publication Title: Geelong Advertiser
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: Vic, Australia
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PRESIDENT WILSON'S REPLY To Austro-German Peace Speeches AMERICA'S ATTITUDE OUTLINED. Important Problems Discussed Determination to Fight to Victory. WASHINGTON, Feb. 11. [Newspaper Article] — The Daily News — 13 February 1918
... h must constitute the body of any ? final settlement. He s jealous of inter national action and of international counsel. He accepts, he says, the prin * ciple of public diplomacy, but he appears to insist that it be confined, at any rate in this case,to generalities, snd that the several particular ques tions of territory ana sovereignty, the ...
Publication Title: Daily News, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: WA, Australia
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AMERICA'S ATTITUDE. A WAR OF EMANCIPATION. RIGHTS OF SMALL NATIONS. THE BASIS OF A GENERAL PEACE. WASHINGTON, Monday. [Newspaper Article] — The Brisbane Courier —13 February 1918
... t con stitute the bodv of any final settlement He is jealous of nitei nation ii iction and of internat onal counsel Ho accepts, he says the pi mernie ol public diplomacy, but ho ippears to insist tliat it bo con fined, at any j ito m th s ouse to generilities and thit the several pal hadar questions of ...
Publication Title: Brisbane Courier, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: Qld, Australia
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PRESIDENT WILSON'S SPEECH [Newspaper Article] — The North Western Advocate and the Emu Bay Times — 13 February 1918
... e items which must constitute the- body of any final settlement. He is jealous of interna tional-action and of international coun ?seL He accepts, he says, the princi ple of public diplomacy, but he appears *» insist that it be confined, at any xat« in this case, to generalities, and ?that the several particular questions of territory and sovereignty — ...
Publication Title: North Western Advocate And The Emu Bay Times, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: Tas, Australia
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WILSON ON PEACE REPLY TO ENEMY AMERICA'S BASIC TERMS. FREEDOM OF ALL PEOPLES. Will Fight On to Victory WASHINGTON, Feb. 12. [Newspaper Article] — The Argus — 13 February 1918
... o items which must constitute the body of any final settlement. He is jealous of inter national nclion, mid of international coun- sel. He accepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but he appears to insist that it be confined, at any rate in this caSp, to generalities, and that the several par- ticular questions of lerritoiy and sove- ...
Publication Title: Argus, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: Vic, Australia
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AMERICA'S WAR AIMS SPEECH BY PRESIDENT WILSON JUSTICE TO ALL NATIONS NO MORE SECRET COMPACTS REPLY TO BARON HERTLING WASHINGTON, February 11.[Newspaper Article] — The Mercury — 13 February 1918
... - stantivo ítoms which must constitute tho bodv of any final settlement Ho is jealous of intoi mtional action and of international counsel Ho accepts, ho says, tho principle of public diplomacy, hut ho appears to insist that it bo con lined, at iny late in this case, to gen- eralities, ind that tbo sevoial particu- lar questions of tornloij ...
Publication Title: Mercury, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: Tas, Australia
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PEACE PROPOSALS PRESIDENT WILSGN'S TO THE CENTRAL POWERS SPEECH FAVOURABLY RECEIVED. A WAR OF EMANCIPATION. "NO PEACE OF SHREDS AND PATCHES." NO ANNEXATIONS AND DAMAGES. GERMAN INCONSISTENCIES EXPOSED. Washington, Feb. 11. [Newspaper Article] — Kalgoorlie Miner — 13 February 1918
... e substantive items which must constitute the body of any final settlement. He* is jealous, of international action, and of ?.-?:?; international counsel; He ^accepts, he sa.vs, the principle of\ public diplomacy, but -he appears to insist that it be confined, at any rate in thits case, to generalities, and that the several ? particular questions of territory and I ...
Publication Title: Kalgoorlie Miner
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: WA, Australia
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PRESIDENT WILSON'S VIEWS. REPLY TO HERTLING AND CZERNIN Hertling's Speech Criticised. Peace of the World at Stake. (Reuter.)l [Newspaper Article] — Bendigo Advertiser — 13 February 1918
... e substantive items which must constitute the body of any tinal settle ment. lie is jealous of international action and of international counsel. He accepts, lie *ays. the principle of public diplomacy, but lie appears to insist that it.be confined, at any rate in this case, to generalities, and ' that the several particular questions of ter ritory and sovereignity, ...
Publication Title: Bendigo Advertiser
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: Vic, Australia
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THE WAR (Australian Cable Association Mes sages.) PRESIDENT WILSON. REPLIES TO HBRTLING AND CZBRNIN WASHINGTON, Tuesday. [Newspaper Article] — Leader — 13 February 1918
... t constitute the body and final set tlement. He is jealous ot internation al action, and the International council which lie accepts. He sayB that it is the principle of public diplomacy, bul appears to Insist-that it be confined, at any rate, in this case to gciier/il tles, and that several particular ques tions of territory and sovereignty, the several ...
Publication Title: Leader
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: NSW, Australia
REPLY TO ENEMY LEADERS GERMANY AND AUSTRIA CONTRAS­TED. President Wilson, said:— [Newspaper Article] — The Border Morning Mail and Riverina Times — 13 February 1918
... n tive items wiich must constitute the body of any final settlement. He ia jealous of international action, and of interna tional counsel. He accepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but he ap pears to insist that it be confined, at any rate in this case, to generalities, and that the several particular questions of territory and sovereignty, ...
Publication Title: Border Morning Mail And Riverina Times, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: NSW, Australia
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PRESIDENT WILSON'S VIEWS. REPLY TO HERTLING AND CZERNIN Hertling's Speech Criticised. Peace of the World at Stake. [Newspaper Article] — Bendigonian — 14 February 1918
... e substantive items which must constitute the body of any final settle- ment. He is jealous of international action and of international counsel. He accepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but he appears to insist that it be confined, at any rate in this case, to generalities, and that the several particular qutestions of ter- ritory and sovereignty, ...
Publication Title: Bendigonian
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: Vic, Australia
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Page 9 [Newspaper Page] — Burlington weekly free press. — 14 February 1918
... i i i . He refused to apply them to the ....... ,, ,, . ... i r '" " . ",,,, ; He accepts, he say the principle of public diplomacy, but he ap pears to insist It be confined at any rate In this case, to generalities and that the several particular questions of territory and sovereignty, the ...
Publication Title: Burlington Weekly Free Press
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Vermont, United States
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SPEECH BY PRESIDENT WILSON. REPLY TO GERMAN CHANCELLOR AMERICA'S AIMS AND INTENTIONS. WASHINGTON, February 11. [Newspaper Article] — Morning Bulletin — 14 February 1918
... o substantive -items which must constitute the body of any final settlement. He is jealous of international action und of in- ternational counsel. If« accepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but be appears to insist that it shall bc confined, At any rate in this case, to generalities and that the several particular questions of territory and sovereignty-thc ...
Publication Title: Morning Bulletin
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: Qld, Australia
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AMERICAN DETERMINATION. PRESIDENT WILSON'S SLOGAN. "WE SHALL NOT TORN BACK." Washington, Feb. 11. [Newspaper Article] — Western Mail — 15 February 1918
... s which must constitute the body ; of any. final settlement. He is jealous ot international action and of international j counsel H© accepts, he says, the- prin ciplc of public diplomacy, but he appears to insist that it be confined, at any rate <u this case, to generalities, and that toe several particular queutions of territory and sovereignty, the ...
Publication Title: Western Mail
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: WA, Australia
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Page 7 [Newspaper Page] — The Bourbon news. — 15 February 1918
... e items which, must constitute the body of any nal settlement. "He is jealous of international action and of international coun sel. He accepts, "he says, the prin ciple of public diplomacy, but he appears to Insist that it he confined, strany- rate in this case, to general ities that , the several particular questions of territory and sover .einty, ...
Publication Title: Bourbon News, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Kentucky, United States
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Page 1 [Newspaper Page] — The Bastrop Advertiser — 15 February 1918
... e items which must constl tute the body of any final settlement Me is Jealous of international aijtlon and of International counsel. He ac- cepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but he t> ppears to Insist that li be confined, at any rate In this case, to generalities, and that the «ev ernl particular questions of territory and ...
Publication Title: Bastrop Advertiser, The
Source: The Portal to Texas History
Country/State of Publication: Texas, United States
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A NEW ORDER BASED UPON RIGHT AND JUSTICE President Wilson's Reply to the Speeches of Hertling and Czernin [Newspaper Article] — The Farmer and Settler — 15 February 1918
... e HiMiii that must constitute the body ol nny final settlement, He is Jealous of In ternational action nnd of international counsel, lie accents (he snys) the prin ciple of public diplomacy, but no appears , to inslM that It be confined, at any rate iu this case, to generalities, and . that the several particular questions nf territory ' ...
Publication Title: Farmer And Settler, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: NSW, Australia
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A NEW ORDER BASED UPON RIGHT AND JUSTICE President Wilson's Reply to the Speeches of Hertling and Czernin [Newspaper Article] — The Farmer and Settler — 15 February 1918
... e HiMiii that must constitute the body ol nny final settlement, He is Jealous of In ternational action nnd of international counsel, lie accents (he snys) the prin ciple of public diplomacy, but no appears , to inslM that It be confined, at any rate iu this case, to generalities, and . that the several particular questions nf territory ' ...
Publication Title: Farmer And Settler, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: NSW, Australia
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Why America is Fighting. PRESIDENT'S REPLY TO THE TEUTONS. WASHINGTON, February 11.[Newspaper Article] — The Queenslander — 16 February 1918
... e substantive itema winch must con stitute the body of any final settlement. He M jealous of international action and of international counsel. He accepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but he appears to insist. that it .be con fined, at any rate in this case, /to generalities end that the several particular questions of territory and sovereignty— ...
Publication Title: Queenslander, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: Qld, Australia
SPEECH BY PRESIDENT WILSON. REPLY TO GERMAN CHANCELLOR. AMERICA'S AIMS AND INTENTIONS WASHINGTON, February 11. [Newspaper Article] — The Capricornian — 16 February 1918
... o substantive items which rau-t constitute the body of any filial settlement. He is jealous of international action and of in ternational counsel. Be accepts, he save, tbe principle of public diplomacy, but hv appears to insist that it shall be confined, at any rate in tliis case, to generalities and that the several particular questions of territory and sovereignty ...
Publication Title: Capricornian, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: Qld, Australia
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The War. [?]MERICA President Wilson Replies to Count Hertling A Great and Historic Utterance Adelaide, February, 12. [Newspaper Article] — Northern Territory Times and Gazette — 16 February 1918
... e items which must con- stitute the body of any final settle- ment. He is jealous of international action anr\ of frtternational counsel. He accepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy but he appears to ¡insist that i¿ be confined, at any rafe in this case, to generalisations and I hat the several particular questions of territory and sovereignty, ...
Publication Title: Northern Territory Times And Gazette
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: NT, Australia
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PRINCIPLES OF PEACE. STATED BY PRESIDENT WILSON. A BASIS FOR NEGOTIATIONS. ALL POWERS MUST JOIN IN SETTLEMENT. WASHINGTON, 11th February. [Newspaper Article] — Leader — 16 February 1918
... e substantive items which must constitute the body of any final settlement. He is jealous of interhaticnal action and of in ternational counsel. He accepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but he appears to insist that it be confined, at any rate in this case, to generalities, and that the several particular questions of territory and sovereignty, the ...
Publication Title: Leader
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: Vic, Australia
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ALLIED WAR AIMS REPLY TO GERMANY. SPEECH BY DR. WILSON. A MASTERLY UTTERANCE. WASHINGTON, February 11. [Newspaper Article] — Chronicle — 16 February 1918
... o fhe substantive Items vhich nrast constitute the body of any final eetUement. 'Ho ia jealous of International action and of imternationaJ counsel. He accepts, he says, tie principle of public diplomacy, but be appears to in sist that it be confined, at any rate in this case, to generalities and tlhat the several particular questions of territoi-y and sovereignty, ...
Publication Title: Chronicle
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: SA, Australia
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PRESIDENT’S ADDRESS TO CONGRESS ON PEACE [Newspaper Article] — Sausalito News —16 February 1918
... o the substantive items which must constitute the body of any final, settlement. lie is jealous of International action and of international counsel. He expresses, he says, the principles of public diplomacy, but he appears to insist that it be confined, at any rate in this case, to generalities, and that the several particular questions of territory and sovereignty, the ...
Publication Title: Sausalito News
Source: California Digital Newspaper Collection [UC Riverside]
Country/State of Publication: California, United States
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PEACE TERMS. PRESIDENT WILSON'S BASIS OF NEGOTIATIONS. AN ADDRESS TO CONGRESS. [Newspaper Article] — Barrier Miner — 17 February 1918
... b .çtantive items which must , constituti the body of any final settlement. H is jealous of international action and o international counsel. He accepts, h says,. the principle. of public diplomacy but he appears to insist that it be eda fined^ at any rate in this case, to gen éralities, and that the several partícula questions of territory and ...
Publication Title: Barrier Miner
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: NSW, Australia
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THE UNITED STATES AND THE WAR. GREAT SPEECH BY PRESIDENT. Washington, February 11. [Newspaper Article] — Border Watch — 19 February 1918
... o tho sub stantive items which'must constitute tho body of any final settlement. Ho is joalous of International action ami of International counsel, Ho accepts, ho says, tho principle ol' public diplomacy, but ho appears to insist that It bo con fined, nt nny rate in tills case,,to gen ei'ftllsjfltionH,'. and tlmt'tho-jevofnl par ticular questions o£ territory and sov ereignty, ...
Publication Title: Border Watch
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: SA, Australia
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Page 6 [Newspaper Page] — The Tomahawk. — 21 February 1918
... e items which must constitute the body of any final settlement. He is jeal ous of the international action and of international counsel. "He accepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but he appears to insist that it be confined, at any rate in this case, to generalities, and that the several particular questions of territory and sovereignty, the ...
Publication Title: Tomahawk, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Minnesota, United States
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Page 2 [Newspaper Page] — The Fulton County news. — 21 February 1918
... e subs'jmtive items which must constitute the body of any final settlement. He Is Jealous of international action and of international counsel. He ac cepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but he appears to Insist that it he confined, at any rate In this caw, to generalities and that the several particular questions of territory and sovereignty, the ...
Publication Title: Fulton County News, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Pennsylvania, United States
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Page 6 [Newspaper Page] — Meade County news. — 21 February 1918
... e Items which must consti tute the body of any final settlement. He Is Jealous of International action and of International counsel. He ac cepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but' he appears to Insist that It be confined, at any rate In this case, to generalities, nnd that the sev eral particular questions of territory and sovereignty, ...
Publication Title: Meade County News
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Kansas, United States
Page 7 [Newspaper Page] — Western liberal. — 22 February 1918
... e Items which must consti tute the body of any final settlement He is Jealous of International action and of International counsel. He nc cepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but he appears to Insist that It be confined, at any rate In this case, to generalities, and that the sev eral particular questions of territory and sovereignty, ...
Publication Title: Western Liberal
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: New Mexico, United States
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Page 1 [Newspaper Page] — Fair play. — 23 February 1918
... e Items which must consti tute the body of any Hual settlement. He Is Jealous of International action and of international counsel. He ac cepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but he appears to Insist that it be confined, nt any rate In this case, to generalities, and that the sev eral particular questions ot territory and sovereignty, ...
Publication Title: Fair Play
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Missouri, United States
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PRESIDENTS ADDRESS TO CONGRESS ON PEACE [Newspaper Article] — Mariposa Gazette —23 February 1918
... o the aubatantlve items which must constitute the body of any final settlement. lie is jealous of international action and of international counsel. He expresses, he says, the principlea of public diplomacy, but he appeara to insist (hat it be confined, nt any rata in thia case, to generalities, and that the aeveral particular questions of territory and sovereignty, the ...
Publication Title: Mariposa Gazette
Source: California Digital Newspaper Collection [UC Riverside]
Country/State of Publication: California, United States
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Page 2 [Newspaper Page] — Mexico Missouri message. — 28 February 1918
... e Items which must constl tote the body of any final settlement. He Is Jealous of International action and of International counsel. He ac cepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but he appears to Insist that it be confined, at any rate In this case, to generalities, and that the sev eral particular questions of territory and sovereignty, ...
Publication Title: Mexico Missouri Message
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Missouri, United States
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Page 6 [Newspaper Page] — The Hays free press. — 28 February 1918
... e items which must consti tute the body of any final settlement. He is jealous of international action and of International counsel. He ac cepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but he appears to Insist that it be confined, at any rate in this case, to generalities, and that the sev eral particular questions of territory and sovereignty, ...
Publication Title: Hays Free Press, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Kansas, United States
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Page 1 [Newspaper Page] — The Mahoning dispatch. — 22 March 1918
... e against any further discussion of peace until a victory has been won on which it can be based Evidently the Washington Senator is opposed to tho Wilson brand of public diplomacy and would prefer the secret methods of former days If hlB position Is correctly Interpreted he would deprive the President of the right of spreading the gospel of ...
Publication Title: Mahoning Dispatch, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Ohio, United States
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Page 5 [Newspaper Page] — New-York tribune. — 11 June 1918
... d no mask, so I gave him mine. You can't hate the devils when they are wounded." Knox Says Open Debate on Treaties Is Impracticable Chairman Hitchcock Also Opposes Borah's Public Diplomacy Amendment Extend Speech Limit Senate Makes Progress With Proposed Cl?ture Rule When Both Sides Yield WASHINGTON, June 10.?Secret diplomacy versus open diplomacy was Av\>-o% e^euag ai^ ui q^Suai ...
Publication Title: New-York Tribune
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: New York, United States
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STUDY OF THE GREAT WAR [Newspaper Article] — Sausalito News — 5 October 1918
... o the substantive items which must constitute the body of any final settlement. He is Jealous of international action and of International counsel. He accepts, he says, the principle of public diplomacy, but he appears to Insist tnat i. be confined, at any rate In this case, to generalities; and that the several particular questions of territory and sovereignty, the ...
Publication Title: Sausalito News
Source: California Digital Newspaper Collection [UC Riverside]
Country/State of Publication: California, United States
Page 4 [Newspaper Page] — The weekly tribune. — 15 November 1918
... e periodically ter rified 1-ranee and Europe, remarke that he played with France "like a cat with a mouse." Another Britsh diplo mat, writing of th;? contrast between the comparatively public diplomacy of Eritran, with its published volume of dplomat:c correspondence and the se cret diplomacy of Germanry said: "It is astonishing how cordially Bismarck hates our Blue Books." This ...
Publication Title: Weekly Tribune, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Missouri, United States
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Page 4 [Newspaper Page] — The Washington herald. — 5 January 1919
... - , tlons has a new solution been sug-| gested. Knit h f al to Ideal*. Ther?. we must say are the testr ing stones. Uy his speeches, by hi? public diplomacy we feel indeed that the President remains faithful to all his ideals, llut to what extent will they be translated into action | There is a hitch. The ...
Publication Title: Washington Herald, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: District of Columbia, United States
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[LAUNCESTON, TASMANIA.] The Examiner PUBLISHED DAILY. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1919. PEACE CONFERENCE AND PUBLICITY. [Newspaper Article] — Examiner — 22 January 1919
... s with the' United States have been threshed out in public. This practice has doubtless been responsible for the strong opinions hold by Press dent Wilson, who made open and public diplomacy the first plank in his peace programme, and his views have met with widespread support in the British f Empire. The contention is that as the old methods ...
Publication Title: Examiner
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: Tas, Australia
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MINERS AND OWNERS AGREE ON SEVEN HOURS DAY. THE MENACE OF BOLSHEVISM. INTERESTING STATEMENTS IN WEIMAR ASSEMBLY. GERMANY'S INGENIOUS PUBLIC DIPLOMACY. [Newspaper Article] — The Riverine Grazier — 15 April 1919
MINERS AND OWNERS AGREE ON SEVEN 'HOURS D£y. THE MENACE OF BOLSHEVISM. INTERESTING STATEMENTS IN WEIMAR ASSEMBLY. GERMANY'S INGENIOUS PUBLIC DIPLOMACY. A Socialist demonstration at Bre merhaven demanded vigorous me' thods to relieve the food scarcity in the Lower Weser region, including an alliance with the Soviets of Rus ...
Publication Title: Riverine Grazier, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: NSW, Australia
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Page 6 [Newspaper Page] — Richmond times-dispatch. — 17 April 1919
... s the dlWcultles involved In tho Irish-American situation, the special German problem, tho traditional American isolation. Ho lays stress upon the corisinten< Idealism of the President's public professions and hispublic diplomacy. "The Undefeated." t?y J. C. Snaith (D. Appleton Ai Co.), Is a simple, hti man story with big values, written In the same appealing vein that made "The ...
Publication Title: Richmond Times-Dispatch
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Virginia, United States
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Page SIX [Newspaper Page] — Richmond Times-Dispatch — 17 April 1919
... s the dlWcultles involved In tho Irish-American situation, the special German problem, tho traditional American isolation. Ho lays stress upon the corisinten&lt; Idealism of the President's public professions and his public diplomacy. "The Undefeated." t?y J. C. Snaith (D. Appleton Ai Co.), Is a simple, htiman story with big values, written In the same appealing vein that made "The Sailor" ...
Publication Title: Richmond Times-Dispatch
Source: Library of Virginia
Country/State of Publication: Virginia, United States
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Page 24 [Newspaper Page] — The evening world. — 1 May 1919
... s stnnd at tho Pence Confeicnco Tor o.il soutl principles of pence li.v been magnificent, wnllo ...,.,r.i in ih.. ivorlfl over tho Adrl latlc Is his flint great net of public diplomacy ngainst too vesieo im csts of Imperialism nnd war.' 1 1 HORSES BURN TO DEATH. i:miloycr lleneued by Klrrinen Mlnlile Is tlet myril. Kleven horses were burned to ...
Publication Title: Evening World, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: New York, United States
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Page 8 [Newspaper Page] — Burlington weekly free press. — 17 July 1919
... e Chinese rights for territory or personal prestige. If, on the other hand, the administration refuses to produce this resolution it will violate the chief of the fourteen points concerning public diplomacy and "open covenants of peace openly arrived at." The opinion is expressed that, if the President accepts any reservations or interpretations made in the Senate's resolution of .ratification, ...
Publication Title: Burlington Weekly Free Press
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Vermont, United States
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'An Old Dog for a Hard Road' M. BRIAND'S DISAPPOINTING SPEECH. WASHINGTON, November 22. [Newspaper Article] — Daily Herald — 23 November 1921
... s two nations hare asked plainly, if in directly, by diplomatic waye, which oltun appeal more cogently than twunk request or suggestion.* Mr. Bajfour had shown hiniseii as apt in public diplomacy as ail traditions of ins ' school, should i make liie in secret art, and- on' to day's speeches he and Al. JJdand could say in the language, ...
Publication Title: Daily Herald
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: SA, Australia
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DISARMAMENT. CASE FOR FRANCE. A PATRIOT'S WARNING AND APPEAL (U.S. Special Commissioner, Delamore McCoy). M. BRIANDS GREAT SPEECH. WASHINGTON, Nov. 22.[Newspaper Article] — The Maitland Daily Mercury — 24 November 1921
... d plainly, if indirectly, by diplo matic ways, which often appeul more cogently than a blank request. ? The suggestion is that Mr. Balfour has shown himself as apt at public diplomacy as all traditions of his school make him in tho secret art, and on to-day's speeches lie and M. Briand could say in the language of the classics, ...
Publication Title: Maitland Daily Mercury, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: NSW, Australia

THE FOURTEEN POINTS. [Newspaper Article] — Worker — 10 October 1918
... i tical independence and territorial in tegrity to great and small Steles alike. Tsikf the first, for instance. That the peace compacts should be openly arrived at by medium of public diplomacy would lie quite, impossible. 1'iider thfr fwond, .who is to decider 'when necessary'' '? What does 'the lowest point'' mean in number four!' fndtjr five, what is the ...
Publication Title: Worker
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: Qld, Australia
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Page 3 [Newspaper Page] — The sun. — 12 October 1918
... e of tho President by Sec retary of Btato Lansing to the Ger man Chancellor's note, t. Th.i Soc'a,llst Pnrty views with sat isfaction this first serious implication of positive public diplomacy. It ob- .iTyV ,'.hnt ,h d00r ls tllus opened to tho belligerents for a Just peace. It approves tho diplomatic and mllltiry guarantees required by President WII oon ...
Publication Title: Sun, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: New York, United States
Page 2 [Newspaper Page] — The public ledger. — 17 December 1921
... o true that the American idea of the conference has been and is the opener the better. Yet in the situation the public, while still holding to its faith in public diplomacy, finds the results as reported so satisfactory as to feel fully assured that the conference is approaching all subjects and canvassing all questions in tue most statesmanlike ana ...
Publication Title: Public Ledger, The
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: Kentucky, United States
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Page 2 [Newspaper Page] — New-York tribune. — 18 December 1921
... k on those who misrepifjserit her. But unfortu? nately for France, adverse propaganda cannot b? fought by merely shrugging the shoulders. Nor can it be counter? acted by animadversions on public diplomacy. It has been a matter of surprise and disappointment to her friends in this country that she who preaches "when in Paris do as the Parisians," should fail ...
Publication Title: New-York Tribune
Source: Chronicling America [US Library of Congress]
Country/State of Publication: New York, United States
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THE BOOK OF THE WEEK "SECRET DIPLOMACY" POPULAR CONTROL OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS THE ARISTOCRATIC PROFESSION! EDUCATION OF PUBLIC OPINION [Newspaper Article] — Evening News — 28 December 1922
... ) Lann ilm,,,,. on ndvnmlr of Jiopulnr control nf dlnlnmnev. while the (tilhrpfntl f-r thr. eBUle nyntem oppose It w(th all «??? vehemence of tVIr limited Intelll Paul Reinsch FOR PUBLIC DIPLOMACY Carl Balfeur FOR SECRET DIPLOMACY
Publication Title: Evening News
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: NSW, Australia
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SUNDAY TIMES FOREIGN CORRESPONDENCE Germans Disciplined by Stinnes—Defence of Diplomatic Efforts- -French Financial Position REVIEW OF ARTICLES PUBLISHED TO-DAY Times Foreign Correspondence FOUR [Newspaper Article] — Sunday Times — 2 March 1924
... n public relations between the partners in the Entente have been the subject of so much stress. In these days it is blasphemous to doubt the iniquity of 'secret diplomacy.' Public diplomacy — or treaty making car ried on from the house-tops, with the rights and claims of both parties loudly asserted through the columns of truculent journals, is, we ...
Publication Title: Sunday Times
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: NSW, Australia
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Urges U.S. Join League To Aid Peace Shotwell in Institute Talk Advocates World Air Cartel, National Regulation of Arms Traffic [Newspaper Article] — Columbia Daily Spectator — 5 January 1934
... e aggressor in an international struggle, the neutral country could reserve the right to refuse arms shipment to the aggressive nation. Terming the League of Nations "the great instrument for public diplomacy," the speaker indicated the difficulty of creating such an instrument on the verge of a war
Publication Title: Columbia Daily Spectator
Source: Columbia University
Country/State of Publication: New York, United States
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A.A.B. UTTERS A GRAVE WARNING (LONDON, (By Mail.) [Newspaper Article] — Northern Star —3 March 1934
... s a very vexed and complicated question, which will divide international jurists for some time to come. •i* 4* * We have heard a great deal of the advantages of public diplomacy over private. The muddle and deadlock in which we have now landed ourselves after a year and a half's talk is en tirely due to this much-vaunted pub ...
Publication Title: Northern Star
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: NSW, Australia
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Notes and Chat. [Newspaper Article] — The West Australian — 31 July 1935
... s have been entered. They am Hit the Deck, Cureboy, Brown Con. Declarah, Ergin Key, and Royal Durbar, all«of whom will be seen over hurdles for the first time in public. Diplomacy, another entrant, has not been over jumps in this State, but was a hurdler in the Eastern States. Yester day morning eleven horses were schooled, among them being ...
Publication Title: West Australian, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: WA, Australia
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PUBLIC DIPLOMACY. USING THE CONTROLLED PRESS German and Russian Examples.[Newspaper Article] — The West Australian — 15 June 1939
PUBLIC DIPLOMACY. USING THE CONTROLLED PRESS German and Russian. Examples. LONDON. June 14.-Europe, which has grown accustomed to the continual ex changes of Notes and protracted diplo matic negotiations in ...
Publication Title: West Australian, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: WA, Australia
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The Advertiser ADELAIDE: FRIDAY, MARCH 14, 1941 CANBERRA LOOKS AT THE WAR[Newspaper Article] — The Advertiser — 14 March 1941
... f all the facts, are better able than some cocksure private member of Parliament to dis tinguish between that which should, and that which should not, be dis cussed in public. Diplomacy, and mili tary strategy, too, have been known to make use of the expedient of the 'cal- culated indiscretion''; but no nation at war could afford to risk ...
Publication Title: Advertiser, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: SA, Australia
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Public Diplomacy. [Newspaper Article] — Queensland Times — 31 January 1942
Public Diplomacy. THE) strange spectacle of diplomacy gradually being forced out of the dark, underground channels, in which it had been conducted for centuries, into the healthier light of day, ...
Publication Title: Queensland Times
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: Ipswich, Australia (Qld)
Letters to the Editor Letters should be as brief as possible Conserption Referenda [Newspaper Article] — Examiner — 14 June 1945
... . de certainly built up a largo commercial trade. In war, we are In. formed, he has at least the courage of a fatalist. Why then, in the field of public diplomacy. are his utterances not merely childish but incredibly stupid and meaningless? The amount of nonsense that is pub. lished almost daily by Jan. spokesmen, whether they be Cabinet ...
Publication Title: Examiner
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: Tas, Australia
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UNO An 'Instrument For World Peace' [Newspaper Article] — The Daily News — 16 February 1946
... s been creat ed and that it works. 'It undoubtedly requires the willing co-operation of its mem ber nations,' he said. 'We have entered on a new phase, that of public' diplomacy. Diplomacy will no longer work behind the scenes. An instrument will be crea ted that will help' preserve peace.' Times diplomatic correspondent summing up- the work of the ...
Publication Title: Daily News, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: WA, Australia
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Spaak Speaks On UNO Optimism [Newspaper Article] — Mirror — 16 February 1946
... s been created, and that it works,' he said. 'It Undoubtedly requires the will ing co-operation of its member na tions. We have entered on a new phase, that of public diplomacy. 'Diplomacy no lonoer works behind the scenes. An Instrument will be created that will help to preserve peace.'
Publication Title: Mirror
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: WA, Australia
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Spaak Speaks On UNO Optimism [Newspaper Article] — Mirror — 16 February 1946
... s been created, and that it worfce.' he said. 'It undoubtedly requires the will ing co-operation of its member na tions. We have entered on a new phase, that of public diplomacy. 'Diplomacy no lonqer works behind the scenes. An instrument will be created that will help to preserve peace.'
Publication Title: Mirror
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: WA, Australia
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SHARP WORDS AMONG NATIONS BETTER THAN BAYONETS Australian Associated Press[Newspaper Article] — The Mercury — 18 February 1946
... d that an organisa- tion has been created and that it works. It undoubtedly requires the willing co-operation of its member nations. "We have entered on a new phase-thal of public diplomacy. Diplomacy no longer works behind the scenes. An instrument has been created thal will help to preserve peace." * * * * "DECISIONS of the first session of ...
Publication Title: Mercury, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: Tas, Australia
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FUTURE OF WORLD ORGANISATION [Newspaper Article] — Examiner — 19 February 1946
... f the General Assembly of the United Nations Organisation and the Security Council have ended and the results are being zur \eyed. Some comments are op timistic. The fashion of "public diplomacy" set by tlhe Sdcurity Council has been widely ac claimed. There is no doubt that frank, open discussion of interna tional issues, is much healthier than the old-style ...
Publication Title: Examiner
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: Tas, Australia
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BLUM IN AMERICA A Delicate Mission [Newspaper Article] — Townsville Daily Bulletin — 3 April 1946
... w that 'other direc tions' meant to Mofcow. The Rightist Parisian dally paper. 'KEptxjue,' angrily accused tut Foreign Minister of 'torpedoing' Blum's 'moat delicate mission.' Said L'Aurore: 'This is not public diplomacy.This is yelling on the fair ground. Bldault talks to Americans in the manner best calculated to upset them— by threatening blackmail.' Bidault hastily said he had been ...
Publication Title: Townsville Daily Bulletin
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: Qld, Australia
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Week In Westminster Macmillan Has Great Hopes Of Kennedy [Newspaper Article] — The Canberra Times — 6 February 1961
... e Htouse to enable him to re ceive the U.K. Premier. His eagerness to meet Mr. Kennedy has been sharpened by the President's decision to return to "secret" rather than "public" diplomacy — a change in the style of states manship mainly fostered by Mr. Khrushev and Mr. Eisen however. Britain always has prefer red the secrecy of dip lomatic ...
Publication Title: Canberra Times, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: ACT, Australia
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The Canberra Times Friday, May 20, 1966 THE TEST OF INDONESIA [Newspaper Article] — The Canberra Times — 20 May 1966
... r any preconditions for the talks. At this, the Malay sian Cabinet decided that Tun Razaie could talk. What course could negotiations take? Tun Razalr*"' says — another essay in public diplomacy — that there can be negotiations on how to prove the wishes of the people of Sabah and Sarawak without a referendum. So it seems that Malaysia is ...
Publication Title: Canberra Times, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: ACT, Australia
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The Canberra Times Saturday, July 15, 1967 MORE U.S. TROOPS FOR VIETNAM [Newspaper Article] — The Canberra Times — 15 July 1967
... s announced in Washington that the United States will shortly increase still further the size of its forces in Vietnam. At'the same press con ference, in an unusual piece of public diplomacy, the American Secretary of Defence, Mr McNamara, said that the Allies in Vietnam would be consulted about adding to their forces there, and that he believed that they ...
Publication Title: Canberra Times, The
Source: Trove [National Library of Australia]
Country/State of Publication: ACT, Australia