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What'd Cuba ever do to you ?
Is Nixon a communist for opening up relations wh china ?
What'd Cuba ever do to you ?
Is Nixon a communist for opening up relations wh china ?
I was in grade school in the fall of 1962 when Castro let the Russians park a couple of dozen nukes 90 miles off US Territory. As for Nixon, he had a clue what he was doing with China.
Nobody gives a shit.
What'd Cuba ever do to you ?
Is Nixon a communist for opening up relations wh china ?
I was in grade school in the fall of 1962 when Castro let the Russians park a couple of dozen nukes 90 miles off US Territory. As for Nixon, he had a clue what he was doing with China.
When Nixon visited China, he wanted to emulate communism into main stream American social acceptance...Both have something in common. Castro ran a one party state, and Obama would like to. Wonder of BO will take Bill Ayers with him? Maybe BO will help harvest Cuban sugar cane like some leftists did back in the late 60's, early 70's.
You can have mine....I'll leave it on the front porch, in a burning paper bag...Nobody gives a shit.
Reagan pushed for the Most Favored Nation trading position for China, so we could start a trade deficit with them....1984: President Reagan’s Visit to China
President Ronald Reagan became the third U.S. President to visit the PRC. The following year, Chinese President Li Xiannian became China’s first formal head of state to visit the United States.
30 Years of U.S. - PRC Diplomatic Relations | Beijing, China - Embassy of the United States
Washington — As President Reagan leaves Washington today on the first leg of his pilgrimage to China, administration officials are carefully stressing that the United States is not playing the ''China card.''
Because US relations with Moscow are chilly, while its ties with Peking are conspicuously expanding, some observers speculate that the administration seeks to build up the People's Republic of China as a military counterweight to the Soviet Union. They cite such developments as the proposed sale of US defensive weapons to China, the supply of sophisticated technology, and possible participation of a Chinese astronaut in the American space program.
'China card' policy shadows Reagan
Reagan pushed for the Most Favored Nation trading position for China, so we could start a trade deficit with them....1984: President Reagan’s Visit to China
President Ronald Reagan became the third U.S. President to visit the PRC. The following year, Chinese President Li Xiannian became China’s first formal head of state to visit the United States.
30 Years of U.S. - PRC Diplomatic Relations | Beijing, China - Embassy of the United States
Washington — As President Reagan leaves Washington today on the first leg of his pilgrimage to China, administration officials are carefully stressing that the United States is not playing the ''China card.''
Because US relations with Moscow are chilly, while its ties with Peking are conspicuously expanding, some observers speculate that the administration seeks to build up the People's Republic of China as a military counterweight to the Soviet Union. They cite such developments as the proposed sale of US defensive weapons to China, the supply of sophisticated technology, and possible participation of a Chinese astronaut in the American space program.
'China card' policy shadows Reagan
Our corporate masters...Reagan pushed for the Most Favored Nation trading position for China, so we could start a trade deficit with them....1984: President Reagan’s Visit to China
President Ronald Reagan became the third U.S. President to visit the PRC. The following year, Chinese President Li Xiannian became China’s first formal head of state to visit the United States.
30 Years of U.S. - PRC Diplomatic Relations | Beijing, China - Embassy of the United States
Washington — As President Reagan leaves Washington today on the first leg of his pilgrimage to China, administration officials are carefully stressing that the United States is not playing the ''China card.''
Because US relations with Moscow are chilly, while its ties with Peking are conspicuously expanding, some observers speculate that the administration seeks to build up the People's Republic of China as a military counterweight to the Soviet Union. They cite such developments as the proposed sale of US defensive weapons to China, the supply of sophisticated technology, and possible participation of a Chinese astronaut in the American space program.
'China card' policy shadows Reagan
Nah...the airhead did it because someone told him to...