Foreign Affairs


Foreign Affairs - American bi-monthly published in September 1922 by the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), created in New York in 1921. The aim of the publication is to disseminate issues in the field of foreign policy and to identify America's place in the world.

The first editors of the magazine were: prof. Archibald Cary Coolidge of Harvard University, who received a part time job from Boston to New York, and graduate of Princeton University and European correspondent for the New York Evening Post (currently the New York Post) Hamilton Fish Armstrong as a full-time editor. They worked together on a daily exchange of letters. The Foreign Affairs Journal is a continuation of the Journal of International Relations (1910-1922) and the Journal of Race Development (1911-1919). At present, the magazine is about 200 thousand. copies. The 20th and 30th centuries

The first issue was published by the Secretary of State in Theodore Roosevelt's cabinet, Elihu Root.

In 1925, the magazine published a series of articles by W.E.B. Du Bois. It touched on racial issues.

In the late 1930s, Dorothy Thompson, a journalist for Time magazine, was also featured in the magazine. Cold War

The period of the magazine's greatest significance was in the post-war years, when international issues were centered in America. It was then published in the so-called FA. The long telegram of George Kennana, and the thesis contained in it allowed us to formulate the doctrine of suppression, based on the Cold War policy of the United States.

At that time, eleven Secretaries of State published FA essays.

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