1893-1976
Eastern Europe
(372) documents
East Asia
North America
1912- 1994
1898- 1976
1904- 1997
1913- 2008
1918- 2019
1915- 1989
February 4, 1960
Pak Yong-guk provides information about the progress of the repatriation of Korean citizens from Japan to the DPRK.
July 1, 1958
Pak Deok-hwan and M.S. Kapitsa discuss the prospect of having Korean loggers come to the Soviet Union for work, Japanese-North Korean relations, and the DPRK Embassy in Moscow.
August 26, 1958
Ri San-pal and M.V. Zimyanin review the status of Koreans living in Japan and the USSR.
May 12, 1958
Pak Geum-cheol and Puzanov are indignant with the League of Communists of Yugoslavia, while Nam Il desires for the Soviet Union to expand an exhibit about the peaceful use of atomic energy in Pyongyang.
September 8, 1980
The telegram speaks on the current status of diplomatic relations between Pakistan and North Korea. Among the issues discussed are the Soviet invasion and occupation of Afghanistan (and North Korea's desire to remain neutral), and Japan's stance on the Afghanistan question.
November 11, 1965
Zhou Enlai, Ri Ju-yeon, and Pak Seong-cheol discuss Japanese militarism, U.S. imperialism, the issue of Korean citizenship for Koreans in Japan, the Chinese 5-year plan, and military preparations.
July 15, 1971
Officials of the Mongolian People's Republic and the Korean Worker's Party discuss their mutual support for the peaceful unification of the Korean peninsula, obstacles presented by the U.S. and Japan, and perspectives on the Sino-Soviet split.
May 23, 1966
Pak Seong-cheol explains North Korea's military policies and stances toward reunification, Japan, and military relations with the Soviet Union.
February 14, 1961
East German diplomats report that the repatriation of Koreans living in Japan has been suspended.
March 3, 1975
American officials in Washington, D.C., conclude that South Korea is in the initial stages of developing a nuclear weapons program.