United States-Soviet relations, 1988: hearings before the Subcommittee on Europe and the Middle East of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, House of Representatives, One Hundredth Congress, second session, Volume 1U.S. Government Printing Office, 1988 |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
Afghanistan agreement American areas arms control Baltic Baltic republics Brezhnev Bronfman bureaucratic Central Asia Chairman changes civilian COCOM Committee concern cooperation cultural defense discussion domestic economic reform economic relations Estonia exchange exports FESHBACH forces foreign policy GIFFEN glasnost going GOLDMAN Gorbachev Gorbachev's reforms Gosplan groups HAMILTON Helsinki Watch HEWETT human rights impact important industry initiative institutions interest issues joint ventures JUDY Kazakh leaders LEVINE major MICKIEWICZ million MISIUNAS Moscow NATO nomic official organizations party percent perestroika Politburo political prepared statement problems production question republics Russian science and technology scientific Secretary sector significant social Soviet economy Soviet science Soviet scientists Soviet society Soviet Union Stalin Stalinist subcommittee success SZPORLUK talk television things tion trade and economic U.S. policy U.S.-Soviet trade Ukraine United USSR West Western WOLL
Fréquemment cités
Page 551 - Rayburn House Office Building, Hon. Lee H. Hamilton (chairman of the subcommittee) presiding. Mr. HAMILTON. The meeting of the subcommittee will come to order.
Page 315 - HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS, SUBCOMMITTEE ON EUROPE AND THE MIDDLE EAST, Washington, DC. The subcommittee met at 2:30 pm, in room 2200, Rayburn House Office Building, Hon.
Page 189 - This memory is strongly reinforced by the nonrecogni tion by most western countries including the United States of the forcible incorporation of the Baltic states into the Soviet Union in 1940. All three have sizable communities of compatriots living outside the USSR, including in the United States, contact with whom provides significant psychological and material benefits to the homelands. Glasnost and Perestroika in the Baltic Republics The principal changes in Soviet nationality policy under Gorbachev...
Page 557 - February 1. 1991, with same date of rank. General Hard Is married to the former June O. Oliver of Sacramento, Calif. They have three daughters: Jennifer, Amy and Jut I*.
Page 13 - We must get used to the idea that a multiplicity of voices is a natural part of openness," its author had argued; We must treat diversity normally, as the natural state of the world; not with clenched teeth, as in the past, but normally as an immutable feature of social life. . . . We need in the economy and other areas of Soviet life a situation where multiple variants and alternative solutions are in and of themselves development tools and preconditions for obtaining optimal results, and where...
Page 79 - Department of Economics at Wellesley College and Associate Director of the Russian Research Center at Harvard University; Ed A.
Page 27 - ... course Gorbachev hoped that socialism would eventually triumph throughout the world, but this competition would be peaceful and subordinate to the many shared challenges facing mankind. Gorbachev repeatedly likened the nations of today's world to a group of mountain climbers who were tied together with a climbing rope. "They can either climb on together to the mountain peak or fall together into an abyss.