Foreign Relations of the United States Diplomatic Papers, 1932, General, Volume I
Foreign Relations of the United States Diplomatic Papers, 1932, General, Volume I
Editors:
- Gustave A. Nuermberger
- Victor J. Farrar
- John G. Reid
- William R. Willoughby
General Editor:
- E. R. Perkins
United States Government Printing Office
Washington
1947
- Preface
- Messages of the President of the United States to Congress:
- List of Persons
- List of Papers
- Participation of the United States in international negotiations for
disarmament: (Documents 1–355)
- I. The Conference for the Reduction and Limitation of Armaments, Geneva,
February 2–July 23, 1932:
(Documents 1–214)
- (1) The nine-point proposal of the American delegation, February
9 (Documents 1–36)
- (2) The American proposal of April 11 (Documents 37–66)
- (3) Secretary Stimson’s visit
to Geneva and the first phase of private conversations,
April–June (Documents 67–120)
- (4) President Hoover’s plan of
disarmament, June 22 (Documents 121–147)
- (5) The second phase of private conversations leading to the
resolution of adjournment, July 23 (Documents 148–214)
- (1) The nine-point proposal of the American delegation, February
9 (Documents 1–36)
- II. Work of the Bureau of the General Disarmament Conference, September
21–December 13, 1932
(Documents 215–285)
- III. Demand of Germany for equality of armaments (Documents 286–333)
- IV. Conversations on naval questions (Documents 334–355)
- I. The Conference for the Reduction and Limitation of Armaments, Geneva,
February 2–July 23, 1932:
(Documents 1–214)
-
The Pact of Paris: Three Years of Development, Address by
the Secretary of State, August 8, 1932 (Document 356)
- Efforts of interested governments to achieve a readjustment of war debt
payments to the United States: (Documents 357–559)
- I. Negotiation of agreements legalizing the Hoover moratorium (Documents 357–443)
- Austria (Documents 358–362)
- Belgium (Documents 363–372)
- Czechoslovakia (Documents 373–377)
- Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania (Documents 378–391)
- Finland (Documents 392–394)
- France (Documents 395–406)
- Germany (Documents 407–417)
- Great Britain (Documents 418–424)
- Greece (Documents 425–428)
- Hungary (Documents 429–431)
- Italy (Documents 432–434)
- Poland (Documents 435–440)
- Rumania (Document 441)
- Yugoslavia (Documents 442–443)
- Austria (Documents 358–362)
- II. The Lausanne Conference, June 16–July 9, 1932 (Documents 444–483)
- III. The Anglo-French declaration of July 13, 1932 (Documents 484–491)
- IV. Requests for suspension of war debt payments pending a review of the
question: (Documents 492–559)
- Belgium (Documents 492–499)
- Czechoslovakia (Documents 500–505)
- Estonia (Documents 506–509)
- France (Documents 510–526)
- Great Britain (Documents 527–537)
- Hungary (Document 538)
- Italy (Documents 539–540)
- Latvia (Documents 541–547)
- Lithuania (Documents 548–551)
- Poland (Documents 552–559)
- Belgium (Documents 492–499)
- I. Negotiation of agreements legalizing the Hoover moratorium (Documents 357–443)
- Preliminaries to the International Monetary and Economic Conference to be held
at London in 1933 (Documents 560–601)
- Proposal for an economic confederation of Danubian States (Documents 602–621)
- Tension arising from German-Polish relations with respect to the Polish
Corridor and Danzig
(Documents 622–626)
- Participation of the United States in the International Radiotelegraph
Conference, Madrid, September 3–December 9, 1932
(Documents 627–631)
- Desire of the United States for early implementation of the convention for
limiting the manufacture and regulating the distribution of narcotic drugs,
concluded at Geneva, July 13, 1931
(Documents 632–634)
- Conditional promise by the United States not to object to the adhesion of the
Soviet Union to the Spitzbergen treaty of February 9, 1920
(Documents 635–637)
- Suggested amendments to the regulations proposed by the International
Conference on Safety of Life at Sea, 1929
(Documents 638–645)
- Representations by foreign governments regarding certain Congressional
shipping bills dealing with “Tourist Cruises” and “Fighting Ships” (Documents 646–663)
- Representations by foreign governments regarding Congressional bills for the
deportation of certain alien seamen
(Documents 664–675)
- Representations by foreign governments with respect to Senate bills relating
to payment of advance wages to seamen on foreign vessels
(Documents 676–678)
- Index