-
countries interpret their neutrality differently: some, such as
Costa Rica have demilitarized,
while Switzerland holds to "
armed neutrality", to
deter aggression...
-
League of
Armed Neutrality refers to one of two
alliances of
European naval powers (1780–1783 and 1800–1801), both
intended to
protect neutral shipping...
- The
First League of
Armed Neutrality was an
alliance of
European naval powers between 1780 and 1783
which was
intended to
protect neutral shipping against...
- The
Second League of
Armed Neutrality or the
League of the
North was an
alliance of the
north European naval powers Denmark–Norway, Prussia, Sweden, and...
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could invade France via
Swiss territory. The
country has a
history of
armed neutrality going back to the Reformation; it has not been in a
state of war internationally...
-
Sweden had a
policy of
neutrality in
armed conflicts from the
early 19th century,
until 2009, when it
entered into
various mutual defence treaties with...
-
acting without a bias, the bias of
neutrality itself is the
expectation upon the
Swiss government (in
armed neutrality), and the
International Federation...
- The
Neutrality Acts were a
series of acts p****ed by the US
Congress in 1935, 1936, 1937, and 1939 in
response to the
growing threats and wars that led...
-
policy aims at
neutrality in case of an
armed conflict that
could involve the
party in question. A
neutralist is an
advocate of
neutrality in international...
- hoped. By a
series of negotiations,
Vergennes sought to
secure the
armed neutrality of the
Northern European states,
which was
eventually achieved by Catherine...