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The security of which we speak is to be attained by the development of international law through an
The security of which we speak is to be attained by the development of international law through an
The security of which we speak is to be attained by the development of international law through an
The security of which we speak is to be attained by the development of international law through an
The security of which we speak is to be attained by the development of international law through an
The security of which we speak is to be attained by the development of international law through an
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Ludwig Quidde:
The relationship of the two problems is rather the reverse. To a great extent disarmament is dependLudwig Quidde:
The present level of armaments could be taken as the starting point. It could be stipulated in an iLudwig Quidde:
The popular, and one may say naive, idea is that peace can be secured by disarmament and that disarLudwig Quidde:
The following year, after I had prepared my draft, the Conference of the Interparliamentary Union aLudwig Quidde:
Some pacifists have carried the sound idea of the prime importance of security too far, to the poinLudwig Quidde:
So long as peace is not attained by law (so argue the advocates of armaments) the military protectiLudwig Quidde:
Pacifist propaganda and the resolutions of the parliamentarians encouraged such treaties, and towarLudwig Quidde:
Limitation of armaments in itself is economically and financially important quite apart from securiLudwig Quidde:
Lightly armed nations can move toward war just as easily as those which are armed to the teeth, andLudwig Quidde:
Let us assume that the ideal were reached; let us imagine a state of international life in which th