Skip to content

Results:

481 - 490 of 2492

Documents

April 6, 1973

Letter to the Congress of the United States from the Supreme People’s Assembly, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea

North Korea’s Supreme People’s Assembly calls for the removal of U.S. forces from South Korea and an end to U.S. “interference in the internal affairs of the Korean people”

1973

For Congress to Act We Must Speak Out, Loud and Clear!

The AKFIC urges the U.S. Congress to positively respond to a letter from North Korea's Supreme People's Assembly.

1972

A Visit to the DPRK: A Report from the Delegation of the American-Korean Friendship and Information Center to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea

A report on a North Korean sponsored tour of Pyongyang made by staff and supporters of the AKFIC in 1972.

1972

About the AFKIC: American-Korean Friendship and Information Center

The American-Korean Friendship and Information Center (AKFIC) describes its founding, organization, and activities.

1974

Korea Must Be Reunified: A Call for Friendship between the Peoples of the United States and the Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea

Kim Il Sung praises the work of AKFIC for giving “wide publicity to our people’s struggle [in the United States]…exposing the fascist dictatorship of South Korean reactionaries…as well as U.S. aggression in Korea.”

1971

Insert included in Operation War Shift: Position Paper, Second (Revised) Edition

The AKFIC claims that "there is much misinformation and deliberate untruth about Korea" in the United States.

1971

Operation War Shift: Position Paper, Second (Revised) Edition

A position paper of the American-Korean Friendship and Information Center, describing the organization's objectives in the context of the Vietnam War.

February 25, 1971

Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos—and Korea Again?

An advertisement in the New York Times announces the establishment of the American-Korean Friendship and Information Center and warns of a new war in Korea if the U.S. did not remove its troops from the peninsula

January 11, 1964

Report, Embassy of Hungary in North Korea to the Hungarian Foreign Ministry

In this report, Hungarian Ambassador to North Korea József Kovács details a conversation with Soviet Ambassador Moskovsky and Romanian Ambassador Bodnaras about the Soviet interpretation of North Korean-Chinese relations. Moskovsky states that his predecessors underestimated the situation.

June 16, 1956

Letter from Choi Duk Shin to Mr. Vu Van Mau

Choi Duk Shin informs Vietnam of the problematic usage of the name "South Korea" in the local press.

Pagination