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  1. 20 de oct. de 2016 · Abstract. Duncan Sandys was one of the most significant British politicians of the 1950s, serving in successive Conservative administrations from 1951 to 1964, and holding a number of key posts. Most significantly, he was Minister of Defence at the time of the controversial 1957 White Paper on Defence, which set out a radical vison for the ...

  2. Lord Duncan-Sandys is deceased. His full title was The Lord Duncan-Sandys. His name was Duncan Edwin Duncan-Sandys.

  3. 19 de dic. de 2021 · Tory minister Duncan Sandys – pictured on his wedding to Diana Churchill in 1935 ... Sandys died in 1987, but Lord Denning, still alive at that time, then decided to speak out.

  4. 26 de ago. de 2022 · Anglo-Malayan defence agreement. On 20 August 1957, Duncan Sandys, the British Minister of Defence, while in Canberra at the start of a tour of Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong and South East Asia, discovered the perils of the unscripted news conference. Sandys had hoped to use the tour to explain some of the recent changes to British defence ...

  5. The newly appointed Defence Minister, Duncan Sandys, wrote a new White Paper in 1957, which set forth a perceived future of the British military. It has earned a notorious reputation due to its overwhelming effects on the British defence industry and the armed forces, especially concerning the RAF. Sandys became Defence Minister on 14 October ...

  6. That the 1957 Defence White Paper represented not some new strategic departure but rather a reaffirmation of existing trends well established in British defence policy has been the underlying theme of most analyses of this document. 1 Yet, at the same time, it is clear that between January and April 1957, the new Minister of Defence, Duncan Sandys, brought about a revolution in British force ...

  7. British politician (1908-1987) Duncan Edwin Sandys, Baron Duncan-Sandys