Progress, Coexistence and Intellectual Freedom (1968), Dangers, Vietnam and the Middle East
“International policy does not aim at exploiting local, specific conditions to widen zones of influence and create difficulties for another country. The goal of international policy is to insure universal fulfillment of the "Declaration of the Rights of Man" and to prevent a sharpening of international tensions and a strengthening of militarist and nationalist tendencies.
Such a set of principles would in no way be a betrayal of the revolutionary and national liberation struggle, the struggle against reaction and counterrevolution. On the contrary, with the elimination of all doubtful cases, it would be easier to take decisive action in those extreme cases of reaction, racism, and militarism that allow no course other than armed struggle.”
Progress, Coexistence and Intellectual Freedom (1968), Dangers, International Tensions And New Principles
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Andrei Sakharov 57
Soviet nuclear physicist and human rights activist 1921–1989Related quotes
Source: The balance of payments, 1951, p. 157; As cited in: Metaxas & Weber (2013, p. 22)
Quoted in "Speeches and Writings: Leaders of the World" - Page 186 - by Konstantin Ustinovich Chernenko - Political Science - 1984
"How to be a Non-Liberal, Anti-Socialist Conservative," Intercollegiate Review: A Journal of Scholarship and Opinion (Spring 1993).
Speech to the National Labour conference at Caxton Hall, London (28 October 1935), quoted in The Times (29 October 1935), p. 9
1930s
from the 1969 book Empire and Revolution.
1960s
Source: The Foundations of Leninism, Ch.7