Foreign policy
Found in 692 Collections and/or Records:
Official: Cabinet: Foreign Office: prints., 23 Jan 1928 - 17 Nov 1928
Includes printed papers about affairs in the Soviet Union (including economic and agricultural difficulties) by Foreign Office officials including: Reginald Leeper; Sir Ronald Lindsay (8); P Gent (5); Harold Nicolson; Joseph Addison; Alvary Gascoigne (4); Sir Thomas Hohler and Horace Rumbold. Also includes covering letters from Sir Maurice Hankey, Cabinet Secretary, and a paper on the situation in Egypt.
Official: Cabinet: Foreign Office prints., 01 Jan 1926 - 10 Dec 1926
Official: Cabinet: Foreign Office prints., 10 Jan 1927 - 20 Dec 1927
Official: Cabinet: Foreign Office prints., 02 Oct 1924 - 19 Dec 1925
Official: Cabinet: Foreign Office prints: China., 10 Jan 1927 - 15 Sep 1927
Official: Cabinet: Foreign Office telegrams., 02 Jun 1909 - 25 Jul 1910
Official: Cabinet: Imperial Conference: notes of meetings 1 - 16., 19 Oct 1926 - 23 Nov 1926
Printed notes on the proceedings of the conference, on subjects including: statements on foreign affairs; the position in Egypt; inter-imperial trade; statements on the colonies; the Empire Press Union; imperial naval, military and air defence; imperial air communication.Also includes: printed index.
Official: Cabinet: Maritime Belligerent Rights., [1928]
Includes: 3 copies of a paper [by WSC] covering British naval supremacy, international relations and the Dardanelles campaign; a reply [?by Sir Maurice Hankey]; copies of letters from WSC to Arthur Balfour [Lord President of the Council] and to Stanley Baldwin [Prime Minister] with a suggested response to proposals by the United States; and internal Treasury correspondence including notes from James Grigg [Principal Private Secretary to WSC].
Official: Cabinet: Maritime Belligerent rights and disarmament., 08 Mar 1929 - 05 Jun 1929
Various papers including: a letter from Rupert Howorth; copy letters from Sir Maurice Hankey [Cabinet Secretary]; a committee report on policy regarding disarmament; Cabinet papers by Sir Austen Chamberlain, Foreign Secretary, with statements by Hugh Gibson on the position of the United States and [1st Lord Cushendun [earlier Ronald McNeill]; and a Committee of Imperial Defence paper on maritime belligerent rights.
Official: Cabinet: Naval programme: notes., 04 Feb 1909 - 05 Nov 1909
Includes printed notes by WSC for the Cabinet on the financial position of Germany and its impact on naval building in Germany; on the naval estimates 1909-1910 and the need for protection against German naval armaments. Also includes a paper by Reginald McKenna [First Lord of the Admiralty] arguing for naval expansion and a paper on the Imperial Conference for Defence.