U.S. Policy Options in El Salvador: Hearing and Markup Before the Committee on Foreign Affairs and Its Subcommittee on Inter-American Affairs, House of Representatives, Ninety-seventh Congress, First Session, on H. Con. Res. 197, H. Con. Res. 212, September 24, November 5, and 19, 1981

Предња корица
U.S. Government Printing Office, 1981 - 173 страница

Из књиге

Друга издања - Прикажи све

Чести термини и фразе

Популарни одломци

Страница 169 - The will of the people shall be the basis of the authority of government; this will shall be expressed in periodic and genuine elections which shall be by universal and equal suffrage and shall be held by secret vote...
Страница 165 - should press for unconditional discussions among the major political factions in El Salvador in order to guarantee a safe and stable environment for free and open democratic elections," 21 although the exact meaning of the resolution remained in some dispute.
Страница 163 - Resolved by the House of Representatives (the Senate concurring) , That it is the sense of the Congress that the following Code of Ethics should be adhered to by all Government employees, including officeholders: CODE OF ETHICS FOR GOVERNMENT SERVICE Any person in Government service should : 1.
Страница 138 - Salvadoran people a chance to defend their right to selfdetermination. . . . For just as the conflict was Salvadoran in its origins, so its ultimate resolution must be Salvadoran.
Страница 6 - On September 24, 1981, Assistant Secretary of State Thomas O. Enders told the House Foreign Affairs Committee that "the level of violence has apparently decreased over recent months, we believe, in part due to the effort of the Government to end the abuses that have occurred in that country."* In early 1982, the State Department noted a "downward trend in political violence"** and reported to Congress that the Salvadoran government was making a "concerted and significant effort" to protect human...
Страница 145 - ... the creation of this anti-interventionist front would be a great step toward a new Good Neighbor Policy, based on mutual respect, nonintervention, and economic and political cooperation. The Mexican newspaper Excelsior in 1943 praised President Franklin D. Roosevelt for recognizing as early as 1933 that the interests of his country lay in a policy of good neighborhood, of mutual cooperation, with the other American countries, in order to form with them a single political, economic, and even military...
Страница 147 - Nazi trojan horses" in Latin America even as he perceived the imminence of the Nazi threat. In a l94l letter to President Roosevelt, Welles observed that such incitements ignored the dangers which would result to the whole structure of inter-American cooperation if the United States undertook to determine for itself whether or not the government of some other American republic were subservient to Nazi or Fascist influence... and undertook to intervene directly.... Such a policy would. .. afford exactly...
Страница 124 - It is not always necessary to wait until all the conditions are ripe for the revolution; the insurrectional center can create them.
Страница 18 - India and all delegates present at this 12th congress, the friendly greetings from the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN) and the Revolutionary Democratic Front (FDR...
Страница 11 - We wholeheartedly support this objective. Not out of blind sentiment, not out of a desire to reproduce everywhere a political system that has served Americans so extraordinarily well, and certainly not because we underestimate the difficulties involved. "Rather we believe that the solution must be democratic because only a genuinely pluralistic approach can enable a profoundly divided society to live with itself without violent convulsions, gradually overcoming its differences.

Библиографски подаци