1893-1976
Eastern Europe
(372) documents
1909- 1989
East Asia
North America
South Asia
1906- 1982
Central America and Caribbean
1914- 1984
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1879- 1953
1905- 1995
November 9, 1950
Telegram from Gromyko to Zhou Enlai advising the latter to turn down the invitation for China to participate in the UN Security Council. It also explains the circumstances under which the invitation was obtained.
November 17, 1950
Kim Il Sung asks to send Korean students over in order to learn flying and maintenance techniques.
October 2, 1959
Khrushchev and Mao discuss current political situations in Tibet, India, Indochina and Taiwan.
September 11, 1949
The Soviet Union sends a set of questions to Kim Il Sung on about the South Korean army and North Korea's war plans.
October 28, 1962
Gromyko sends instructions to Zorin regarding negotiations and UN inspections in Cuba.
Gromyko asks Alekseev to relay a message to Castro regarding U Thant’s possible visit.
Gromyko instructs Dobrynin to tell R. Kennedy N.S. Khruchev’s response to John F. Kennedy’s 27 October message.
October 20, 1962
Gromyko expresses that the Soviet government is committed to assist Cuba in the face of a US blockade. Kennedy says that the recent build up Soviet supplies to Cuba negatively affected the US population and Congress and that his actions were meant to calm public opinion; also that the US had no intention of invading Cuba.
October 17, 1963
Memorandum of conversation between Yugoslav Foreign Minister Koca Popovic and Secretary of State Dean Rusk at the State Department. The discussion concentrates on US foreign policy - US-Soviet Relations, US policy toward West Germany, non-proliferation of nuclear weapons, force reduction in Europe, and the presence of Soviet forces in Cuba.
October 19, 1962
Gromyko expresses satisfaction at the current American policy of economic embargo toward Cuba and the administration’s current preoccupation in West Berlin