| Hutton Webster - 1920 - 844 pages
...to guarantee peace, they have developed their military forces in proportions hitherto unprecedented, and still continue to increase them without shrinking...the beneficent results of the desired pacification. ... In proportion as the armaments of each power increase, do they less and less fulfill the objects... | |
| Hutton Webster - 1921 - 978 pages
...to guarantee peace, they have developed their military forces in proportions hitherto unprecedented, and still continue to increase them without shrinking...the beneficent results of the desired pacification. ... In proportion as the armaments of each power increase, do they less and less fulfill the objects... | |
| Stanton Arthur Coblentz - 1927 - 518 pages
...to guarantee peace, they have developed their military forces in proportions hitherto unprecedented, and still continue to increase them without shrinking...the beneficent results of the desired pacification. ... In proportion as the armaments of each Power increase, do they less and less fulfill the objects... | |
| 1898 - 600 pages
...preservation of peace has been put forward as an object of international policy. It is in its name that great States have concluded between themselves powerful...better to guarantee peace that they have developed, in proportion hitherto unprecedented, their military forces, and still continue to increase them, without... | |
| 1919 - 692 pages
...preservation of peace was put forward as. the object of international policy ; it is in its name that great States have concluded between themselves powerful...forces, and still continue to increase them without shirking any sacrifice. " All these efforts, nevertheless, have not yet been able to bring about the... | |
| Sandi E. Cooper - 1991 - 345 pages
...forward as the object of international policy; in its name great States have concluded between [sic] themselves powerful alliances; it is the better to...the beneficent results of the desired pacification. The financial charges following an upward mark strike at the public prosperity at its very source.... | |
| Robert I. Rotberg - 2007 - 274 pages
...Although the preservation of peace was an object of international policy, wrote the Czar, "in its name great States have concluded between themselves powerful...continue to increase them without shrinking from any sacrifice."21 Twenty-six nations, including the major European powers, Japan, and the United States... | |
| 1916 - 842 pages
...to the world; Count Muravieff thus sums up the consequences of the existing political conditions : "The preservation of peace has been put forward as...better to guarantee peace that they have developed their military forces in proportions hitherto unprecedented, and still continue to increase them, without... | |
| 1899 - 616 pages
...preservation of peace has been put forward as an object of international policy. It is in Its name that great States have concluded between themselves powerful...Increase them, without shrinking from any sacrifice. Nevertheless, all these efforts have not yet been able to bring about the beneficent result desiredpacification,... | |
| 1899 - 500 pages
...preservation of peace has been put forward as an object of International policy. It is in Its name that great states have concluded between themselves powerful...Increase them without shrinking from any sacrifice. Nevertheless, all these efforts have not been able to bring about the beneficent result desired —... | |
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