1893-1976
Eastern Europe
(372) documents
East Asia
-
1915-
1917- 1979
North America
1912- 1994
March 10, 1977
Zbigniew Brezinski rejects North Korea's proposals for talks with representatives from South Korea as of limited significance.
August 5, 1977
Zbiginew Brzezinski offers instructions on how best to coordinate tripartite talks between North Korea, South Korea, and the United States, including how the U.S. should work with China, the Soviet Union, and the United Nations on this issue.
July 26, 1977
The Jimmy Carter administration attempts to develop a diplomatic strategy for inter-Korean talks in the wake of anticipated U.S. troop withdrawals.
1979
The National Security Council outlines it views of tripartite talks involving North Korea, South Korea, and the United States.
January 25, 1979
The National Security Council positively asseses North Korea's proposal for talks with South Korea.
August 26, 1975
Several memoranda of conversations between U.S. Secretary of Defense James R. Schlesinger and Park Chung Hee and other leading South Korean officials.
March 14, 1975
Morton I. Abramowitz, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense, provides Richard Smyser with a chronology of events surrounding the February 26-27, 1975, incident in Yellow Sea between North and South Korea.
February 27, 1975
The American Embassy in Seoul assesses the naval clash between North and South Korea in the Yellow Sea on February 26-27, 1975.
January 1974
A Central Intelligence Agency assessment of the origins of the Northern Limit Line.
December 22, 1973
John A. Froebe, Jr., briefs Henry Kissinger on the Northern Limit Line Dispute.