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  1. 19 de dez. de 2021 · Gostaríamos de exibir a descriçãoaqui, mas o site que você está não nos permite.

  2. 26 de ago. de 2022 · Anglo-Malayan defence agreement. On 20 August 1957, Duncan Sandys, the British Minister of Defence, while in Canberra at the start of a tour of Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong and South East Asia, discovered the perils of the unscripted news conference. Sandys had hoped to use the tour to explain some of the recent changes to British defence ...

  3. Duncan Sandys, the tough-talking 'hatchet man', had been an ideal agent for this process of change. In 1945 there was nothing new about the concept of deterrence; only the size of the weapons and the speed of reaction had changed to make the price of failure near-instantly and globally catastrophic.

  4. That the 1957 Defence White Paper represented not some new strategic departure but rather a reaffirmation of existing trends well established in British defence policy has been the underlying theme of most analyses of this document. 1 Yet, at the same time, it is clear that between January and April 1957, the new Minister of Defence, Duncan Sandys, brought about a revolution in British force ...

  5. Profile. Former MP for Wandsworth Streatham. Entered the House of Commons on 14 March 1935 — unknown. Left the House of Commons on 8 February 1974 — General election. Also represented Lambeth Norwood.

  6. Edwin Duncan Sandys, barone Duncan-Sandys ( Sandford Orcas, 24 gennaio 1908 – Londra, 26 novembre 1987 ), è stato un politico britannico . Ministro nei successivi governi conservatori negli anni '50 e '60, era genero di Winston Churchill tra il 1935 e il 1960.

  7. 20 de out. de 2016 · This interpretation acts to diminish the notion of Sandys having possessed any sort of strategic concept, or coherent set of policy preferences, and the deficiencies of this approach can be seen in Baylis citing a July 1957 article by Slessor in support of his contention that the White Paper merely ‘reflected the culmination of past endeavours’. 6 The Slessor article in question claimed ...