About this Digital Document
With the Geneva Agreements, a precarious peace came to Indo-China, a peace which meant no more than a respite from conditions of actual warfare. The peace which came to Indo-China was not a "conqueror's peace" but a "forced peace". It was born out of neither vi ctory nor ordinary diplomatic compromise, but out of a combination of balckmail, threats, and military defeats.
Full Title
A diplomatic interpretation of the far Eastern conference at Geneva
Member of
Contributor(s)
Creator: Khan, Huynh K.
Thesis advisor: Joynt, Carey Bonthron
Publisher
Lehigh University
Date Issued
1961-09
Language
English
Type
Genre
Form
electronic documents
Department name
International Relations
Digital Format
electronic documents
Media type
Creator role
Graduate Student
Identifier
1048260974
https://asa.lib.lehigh.edu/Record/10946338
Keywords
Khan, . H. K. (1961). A diplomatic interpretation of the far Eastern conference at Geneva (1–). https://preserve.lehigh.edu/lehigh-scholarship/graduate-publications-theses-dissertations/theses-dissertations/diplomatic-0
Khan, Huynh K. 1961. “A Diplomatic Interpretation of the Far Eastern Conference at Geneva”. https://preserve.lehigh.edu/lehigh-scholarship/graduate-publications-theses-dissertations/theses-dissertations/diplomatic-0.
Khan, Huynh K. A Diplomatic Interpretation of the Far Eastern Conference at Geneva. Sept. 1961, https://preserve.lehigh.edu/lehigh-scholarship/graduate-publications-theses-dissertations/theses-dissertations/diplomatic-0.