| 1979 - 1198 sivua
...institutions. We maintain diplomatic relations with many governments of which we do not necessarily approve. The reality is that, in this day and age, coups and...obtained effective control penalizes us. It means we forsake much of the chance to influence the attitudes and conduct of a new regime. Without relations... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on International Relations - 1978 - 1436 sivua
...RECOGNITION We maintain diplomatic relations with many governments of which we do not necessarily approve. The reality is that, in this day and age, coups and...transmit our values and communicate our policies. Isolation may well bring out the worst in the new government. For the same reasons, we eschew withdrawal... | |
| 1979 - 1192 sivua
...institutions. We maintain diplomatic relations with many governments of which we do not necessarily approve. The reality is that, in this day and age, coups and...not exceptional developments. Withholding diplomatic relatior from these regimes after they have obtained effective control penalizes us. It means we forsake... | |
| Malcolm N. Shaw - 2003 - 1452 sivua
...for dealing with such regimes is essentially the same were not uncommon in this day and age and that 'withholding diplomatic relations from these regimes after they have obtained effective control penalises us', ibid., p. 1 8. See also, as regards Afghanistan and the continuation of diplomatic relations,... | |
| Robert H. Chaires, Bradley Stewart Chilton - 2003 - 300 sivua
...1977: We maintain diplomatic relations with many governments of which we do not necessarily approve. The reality is that, in this day and age, coups and...transmit our values and communicate our policies. Isolation may well bring out the worst in the new government. Henkin et al., supra note 43, at 263.... | |
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