| Vojtech Mastny - 1998 - عدد الصفحات: 298
...the imposed uniformity in substance. US ambassador to Moscow Walter B. Smith described the outcome as "nothing less than a declaration of war by the Soviet Union on the immediate issue of the control of Europe."116 Considering Soviet weakness, this was an overstatement. But the ambassador was right in... | |
| Richard N. Rosecrance - 2001 - عدد الصفحات: 410
...Ambassador to the Soviet Union Walter Bedell Smith wrote to Marshall: The Czechoslovak reversal on the Paris Conference, on Soviet orders, is nothing less...Union on the immediate issue of the control of Europe. . . . The lines are drawn. Our response is awaited. I do not need to point out to the Dept the repercussions... | |
| Arnold A. Offner - 2002 - عدد الصفحات: 660
...Government." At the same time, Ambassador Smith reported from Moscow that the Czech reversal under Soviet orders "is nothing less than a declaration...war by the Soviet Union on the immediate issue of control of Europe." There had been a lot of "plain speaking" in the Kremlin, Smith added, and Stalin... | |
| Greg Behrman - 2007 - عدد الصفحات: 483
...Smith cabled Marshall that the reversal "on Soviet orders, is nothing 96 • THE MOST NOBLE ADVENTURE less than a declaration of war by the Soviet Union on the immediate control of Europe." The Paris Conference would be all-important now. Bedell Smith went on: "The lines... | |
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