Costs of War |
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Página 1
On more than 200 occasions the president has sent armed forces to foreign lands
without a congressional declaration of war.1 Since 1945 over 100,000 U.S.
military personnel have died in undeclared wars and over 400,000 have suffered
...
On more than 200 occasions the president has sent armed forces to foreign lands
without a congressional declaration of war.1 Since 1945 over 100,000 U.S.
military personnel have died in undeclared wars and over 400,000 have suffered
...
Página 4
... the American soldier, or any soldier for that matter. One of the great injustices
of the Vietnam War was the abuse heaped upon the returning veterans instead of
criticism of the politicians who caused that war, America's only military defeat.
... the American soldier, or any soldier for that matter. One of the great injustices
of the Vietnam War was the abuse heaped upon the returning veterans instead of
criticism of the politicians who caused that war, America's only military defeat.
Página 9
The chief material cause of the Republic's decay appears to have been the
military success of its armies and the expansion of Roman territories and power.
The three Punic Wars ruined the majority of the 26Ibid., p. 38; and see Farrand,
The ...
The chief material cause of the Republic's decay appears to have been the
military success of its armies and the expansion of Roman territories and power.
The three Punic Wars ruined the majority of the 26Ibid., p. 38; and see Farrand,
The ...
Página 12
... in the war, Lincoln rescinded the military order of General Fremont to free the
slaves in Missouri; Lincoln then dismissed Fremont from his command. The
argument is made that since the Emancipation Proclamation was made during
the war, ...
... in the war, Lincoln rescinded the military order of General Fremont to free the
slaves in Missouri; Lincoln then dismissed Fremont from his command. The
argument is made that since the Emancipation Proclamation was made during
the war, ...
Página 22
... with Union vessels and a virtual certainty of war. In the meantime, the
Confederacy would have secured enough outside military 70Charles A. and
Mary R. Beard, The Rise of American Civilization (New York: Macmillan, 1927), ...
... with Union vessels and a virtual certainty of war. In the meantime, the
Confederacy would have secured enough outside military 70Charles A. and
Mary R. Beard, The Rise of American Civilization (New York: Macmillan, 1927), ...
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