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Documents

June 6, 1968

Directive Sent to Cde. V.V. Kuznetsov, Soviet Delegation, New York

Suggested refinements to the draft of the Treaty on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.

May 4, 1968

Attachment to Directives for the USSR Delegation at the Continuing XXII Session of the UN General Assembly

A series of recommendations for the UN, put forth by the Soviet Union, calling for strong restrictions on the creation, testing, movement, and use of nuclear weapons.

May 4, 1968

Directives for the USSR Delegation at the Continuing XXII Session of the UN General Assembly

This directive to the Soviet delegation to the 22nd U.N. General Assembly states opinions of Nuclear weapons and proliferation, as well as statements on the Middle East.

April 15, 1968

Directive Sent to the Soviet Ambassador, Havana

Soviet guidance to its ambassador in Havana on the establishment of a Latin American nuclear free zone. Soviet concerns are voiced about the possibility of the treaty impeding on the transit of nuclear weapons in large areas of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.

April 15, 1968

Directive Sent to the Soviet Ambassador, Washington

Statement sent to the Soviet ambassador in Washington chastising the United States for the B-52 crash in Greenland.

March 11, 1968

Directive Sent to Cde. Roshchin, Soviet Representative, Geneva

The Politburo adds language for a UN Statement about nuclear aggression.

March 11, 1968

Directive Sent to Cde. Roshchin, Soviet Representative, Geneva

The Politburo giving instructions and language to use at the 18 Nations of the General Assembly.

February 9, 1968

Directive Sent to Cde. Roshchin, Soviet Representative, Geneva

Politburo to the Soviet ambassador and representatives giving them language to use when discussing the American Air Force crash of a B-52 carrying hydrogen bombs in Greenland.

February 9, 1968

Memorandum from the Government of the USSR to the Government of the USA

A Politburo memo about a B-52 bomber carrying four hydrogen bombs crashed off the western coast of Greenland, while trying to land at the United States Ai1 Force base at Thule.

February 9, 1968

Decisions of the Politburo of the Central Committee of the CPSU for 9-12 February 1968, '11. On Our Steps in connection with the Accident of the American Bomber with Nuclear Weapons on Board and the Radioactive Contamination of the Environment...'

An outline of next steps the Politburo plans to take in response to the 1968 Thule Air Base B-52 crash.

Pagination