The Italian Crisis and Interim Aid


Book Description




Italian Crisis and Interim Aid


Book Description

Committee Print. Print is followed by 16 Committee Prints. a. "French Crisis and Interim Aid" (Nov. 12, 1947. ii+20 p.). b. "Grain Requirements and Availabilities (Cereals Except Rice)" (Nov. 12, 1947. ii+10 p.). c. "Fertilizer Requirements and Availabilities (Western Europe, With Special Attention to France, Italy, Western Germany, and Austria)" (Nov. 12, 1947. ii+10 p.). d. "Petroleum Requirements and Availabilities" (Nov. 12, 1947. ii+8 p.). e. "U.S. Steel Requirements and Availabilities, as They Affect European Needs for Interim Aid" (Nov. 12, 1947. ii+13 p.). f. "Coal Requirements and Availabilities" (Nov. 12, 1947. ii+12 p.). g. "Proposed Principles and Organization for Any Program of Foreign Aid" (Nov. 22, 1947. ii+12 p.). h. "Break-Down of European Requirements by Major Categories (Nov. 22, 1947. ii+13 p.). i. "Foreign Aid and Exhaustion of Natural Resources in Relation to a Stock-Piling Program" (Nov. 22, 1947. ii+ll p.). j. "Comparative Analysis of Suggested Plans of Foreign Aid" (Nov. 22, 1947. ii+33 p.). k. "Report on Greece" (Jan. 27, 1948. ii+12 p.). l. "Report on Germany" (Feb. 6, 1948. ii+6 p.). m. "What Western Europe Can Do for Itself" (Feb. 13, 1948. ii+24 p.). n. "Inflation and Methods of Financing Any Foreign Aid Program" (Feb. 15, 1948. ii+29 p.). o. "Governmental Control Powers Affecting the Foreign-Aid Program" (Feb. 16, 1948. ii+43 p.). p. "Transportation as it Affects the European Recovery Program" (Feb. 17, 1948. ii+61 pages).




Catalogue of Publications Issued by the Government of the United States


Book Description

February issue includes Appendix entitled Directory of United States Government periodicals and subscription publications; September issue includes List of depository libraries; June and December issues include semiannual index







Report


Book Description




The CIA and the Marshall Plan


Book Description

Pisani shows how the U. S. added a Cold War Corollary to the principle of self-determination: massive foreign aid and nonmilitary covert operations to reshape war-torn Europe in the image of the U. S. She tells, for the first time, the story of the top CIA operatives who were instrumental in developing the non-military covert intervention policies of the early Cold War years and the Office of Policy Coordination that carried them out.