| James Ford Rhodes - 1922 - 454 oldal
...Morocco. I do not care to take sides between France and Germany in the matter. At the same time ... I am sincerely anxious to bring about a better state...equally sure that Germany intends to attack England." On the same day he wrote to Sternburg, "Our interests in Morocco are not sufficiently great to make... | |
| James Ford Rhodes - 1922 - 452 oldal
...Morocco. I do not care to take sides between France and Germany in the matter. At the same time ... I am sincerely anxious to bring about a better state...equally sure that Germany intends to attack England." On the same day he wrote to Sternburg, "Our interests in Morocco are not sufficiently great to make... | |
| Sir Adolphus William Ward, George Peabody Gooch - 1923 - 690 oldal
...bring about a better state of feeling between England and Germany," he wrote to Mr Taft on April aoth. "Each nation is working itself up to a condition of desperate hatred of the other — each from fear the other is going to attack." On returning to Washington at the end of May, he found the French... | |
| Robert Granville Caldwell - 1927 - 606 oldal
...early as 1905, President Roosevelt, always well informed regarding the foreign situation, had written: "I am sincerely anxious to bring about a better state...equally sure that Germany intends to attack England." It was for this reason that Roosevelt used what influence he had to further the settlement at Algeciras... | |
| Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson - 1926 - 526 oldal
...words of an impartial outsider, friendly to both States. "Each nation," President Roosevelt wrote,1 "is working itself up to a condition of desperate...other; each from sheer fear of the other. The Kaiser is dead-sure that England intends to attack him. The English Government, and a large share of the English... | |
| Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson - 1926 - 520 oldal
...condition of desperate hatred of the other; each from sheer fear of the other, The Kaiser is dead-sure that England intends to attack him. The English Government,...share of the English people, are equally sure that tiermany intends to attack England." But he proceeds, "in my view this action of Germany in embroiling... | |
| Manfred F. Boemeke, Roger Chickering, Stig Förster - 1999 - 506 oldal
...countries, Roosevelt concluded, were unnecessary and dangerous because they could escalate to war. "Each Nation is working itself up to a condition of desperate hatred of each other from sheer fear of each other." If Roosevelt could use his close contacts with all sides... | |
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