Stimson Doctrine

When Hoover Stimson Doctrine or Stimsondoktrin it was the official foreign policy of the United States Declaration on the occasion of the Japanese occupation of Manchuria in northeast China in 1932.

This doctrine said that the U.S. territorial expansions and contracts that would never recognize contrary to the Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928 had occurred in other words, by military force.

Named the statement after the U.S. President Herbert Hoover and his Secretary of State Henry L. Stimson, which in the Depression era einhielten so that the foreign policy line of Presidents Coolidge and Harding. Nevertheless, they spoke to them in to greater flexibility and an enhanced sense of reality.

The conception of Stimsondoktrin has at least largely prevailed in the legal sphere of the western states.

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