Jason Sands

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Washington believed that he had been duly elected to provide that voice, he found himself living a central paradox of the early republic: what was essential for a viable and coherent foreign policy was ideologically at odds with what the infant republic claimed to stand for.32 The full implications of that paradox became visible in the debate over the Jay Treaty (1795), the landmark foreign policy achievement of Washington’s second term. Perhaps
American Dialogue: The Founders and Us
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