In the mid-1950s Ireland barely had a foreign policy worth the name. External relations consisted almost entirely of the “sore thumb” strategy, as it was proudly called: the perpetual repetition of anti-British resentment over Partition. As one historian put it, the country occupied a “Celtic twilight”, from which “the contours of the surrounding world could only be dimly discerned”.
Yol, Haberleri, Trafik
Merkez mahallesi mutlu han sokak no:17/2 Bartın/Sakarya
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