აშშ-ის პოლიტიკური ისტებლიშმენტისა და საზოგადოების აზრი საქართველოს შესახებ (1926 წ) | Georgia In the Eyes of the US Political Establishment, based on the 1926 Hearings of the Foreign Committee, the US House of Representatives, on PROVIDING FOR THE APPOINTMENT OF A DIPLOMATIC REPRESENTATIVE TO THE NATIONAL REPUBLIC OF GEORGIA (in exile), H. J. Res. 195.
Authors/Creators
Description
In March 1926, both the United States House of Representatives and the Senate considered a Proposal to appoint a diplomatic representative to the Government of the Republic of Georgia. This proposal came from Representative Copeland of Virginia and Senator Walthall Moore. Congress agreed that funding for this position would be provided if the President decided it was necessary. The legal status and independence of Georgia, as well as the March 11 resolution, were discussed again in Congress in early April. After remarks from John Stewart and Henry Opdycke, Congress published a quite detailed document about Georgia, including the session transcripts. However, no final decision was made.
This article is based on the abovementioned 1926 hearings at the Committee of Foreign Affairs,
exploring the US political establishment’s thoughts on Georgia, then, and the evaluation of
relationship between these two nations.
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--1926-2.pdf
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- Repository URL
- https://dspace.nplg.gov.ge/handle/1234/501697