1893-1976
Eastern Europe
(372) documents
East Asia
1875- 1965
Southeast Asia
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North America
1914- 1989
June 1954
A proposal for the creation an Anti-Communist Union of the Peoples of Asia, an organization which would allow "all democratic and free States of Asia...to pool their strength to resist Communist aggression."
June 16, 1954
Delegates from the Republic of China endorse the establishment of an Anti-Communist Union of the Peoples of Asia.
June 14, 1954
Delegates from the Republic of China warn that the "expansion of Communist aggression in Asia" must be checked.
The Chinese delegation at the Asian Peoples' Anti-Communist Conference announces that "Asia has only one arch enemy."
March 8, 1955
Young P. Lee objects to Japan attending a meeting of the Asian Peoples' Anti-Communist League.
March 12, 1955
Anup Singh invites South Korea to attend the Conference of Asian Countries in New Delhi, even though a delegate of North Korea will also be in attendance.
February 11, 1955
General Ogden praises the Asian Peoples' Anti-Communist League for its "laudable cause."
March 21, 1955
Chairman of the Asian Peoples' Anti-Communist League Central Liaison Office Young P. Lee thanks General Ogden for supporting the anti-communist struggle in the Ryukyu Islands.
July 31, 1954
A nine-chapter constitution of the Asian Peoples' Anti-Communist League for the Republic of China.
June 15, 1954
President Syngman Rhee proposes a "Pacific Pact or Alliance of Mutual Security" for non-communist countries in the Asia Pacific.