1893-1976
Eastern Europe
(372) documents
East Asia
-
1908- 1996
1914- 1984
1879- 1953
February 22, 1958
Wierna details a meeting with Czech officials regarding further actions on the Rapacki Plan.
February 12, 1958
Memorandum outlines the details of the nuclear-free zone proposed in the Rapacki Plan.
January 23, 1958
Director General Wierna expresses disapproval of the Czechoslovak idea for territorial expansion of the Rapacki Plan, and also warns against the propaganda campaign that the Czechoslovak officials intend to carry out.
November 7, 1945
Stalin confirms that all Soviet and American troops should be withdrawn from Czechoslovakia by December 1, 1945.
November 4, 1945
Molotov, Beria, Malenkov, and Mikoyan agree with Stalin's positions on radium deposits in Czechoslovakia as well as the withdrawl of American and Soviet troops from Czechoslovakia.
November 3, 1945
Czechoslovak Ambassador to the Soviet Union Jiri Horak requests (through Minister of Foreign Affairs Molotov) that Stalin sends greetings to the opening of the International Congress of Students in Prague.
In a meeting with Soviet Minister of Foreign Affairs V. M. Molotov, Czechoslovak Ambassador to the Soviet Union Jiri Horak requests that Stalin send greetings to the International Congress of Students to be held in Prague, expresses concerns about the implications of a joint Soviet-Czechoslovak company for developing uranium, and voices his hope that the Volhynia Czechs will be permitted to resettle in Czechoslovakia.
Stalin discusses the Czechoslovaks' reluctance to create a joint radium company and President Truman's desire for a simultaneous withdrawal of American and Soviet troops from Czechoslovakia by December 1, 1945.
January 11, 1958
Report on the positive reception to the Rapacki Plan on the part of several countries, namely Czechoslovakia, the GDR, and Belgium. The note discusses the importance of the plan in terms of the disarmament debate.
June 10, 1954
CIA official Thomas Braden assures the State Department that RFE broadcasts which took sides in Czechoslovak factory council elections, as envisaged in FEC Czechoslovak Guidance No. 13, have ended. (The Guidance and the cited FEC telegram are available in the Hoover Archives and the Blinken Open Society Archives as FEC teletype NYC 29, June 8, 1954.)