Abstract

Lame-Duck Diplomats

Anderson, Paul Y. | January 15, 1930 issue

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If there was one concession that politician Herbert Hoover's critics were willing-to make when he entered the White House, it was that he undoubtedly would seek to improve the quality of the country's foreign diplomatic service. He was no callow provincial, but a traveler who knew the world and its variegated politics and was fully aware of the enormous disadvantages which the United States suffers from being officially represented abroad by men who speak but one language and speak it none too well.

See Also:

DIPLOMATS; HOOVER, Herbert, 1874-1964; CRITICS; QUALITY; DIPLOMACY; UNITED States
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