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[ US /ˈnutɹəˌɫɪzəm/ ]
NOUN
  1. a policy of neutrality or nonalignment in international affairs

How To Use neutralism In A Sentence

  • In addition, by once more dazzling the world with cleverly packaged proposals, the self-assured Soviet leader displayed the seductive charms that could woo Western Europe into a neutered neutralism. American Sketches
  • He took neutralism in the cold war seriously, making trips to the Soviet Union and China (though to the White House as well). News Not Fit to Print: US Coup Planned for Venezuela?
  • Nevertheless, neutralism is still the foreign doctrine of all the nationalist Arab states, even though in Egypt at this moment it seems to mean not so much a good or tolerable relation with both blocs as bad terms with both. Oil, Power Politics and the Arab Awakening
  • Economic growth was the American way of inoculating them against communism, neutralism, socialism, and other potentially anti-American political orientations.
  • It was the Vietnam War which made Sihanouk's neutralism untenable, as Cambodia was used by Vietminh and Vietcong forces as a supply route from North to South Vietnam, and received its fair share of US carpet bombing in return.
  • Neutralism differs from neutrality in that it is an attitude of mind in time of peace rather than a legal status in time of war.
  • J. Budziszewski outlines the case that toleration depends not on doubt, nor skepticism, nor ethical neutralism, but on belief.
  • Once more, then, neutralism was coupled with internationalism to define U.S. military policy.
  • It's not appropriate to regard neutralism as eclecticism and then criticize or thoroughly abandon it.
  • Existence of neutralism in decision making that enriches division to characteristics of public.
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