Skip to content

Results:

671 - 680 of 2425

Documents

February 9, 1951

Telegram, Ambassador Wellington Koo to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs

Koo reports on the development in the United States of the proposal of dispatching the Kuomintang' army to the Korean War.

February 1, 1951

Telegram, Ambassador Wellington Koo to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs

Koo reports on the Assistant Secretary of State Jack K. McFall's response to Republican Senator Jelly Brown on dispatching the Kuomintang's army to the Korean War.

June 29, 1950

Telegram, Ambassador Wellington Koo to Foreign Minister Yeh

Chinese ambassador Koo states the talk with secretary general of the United Nations and American diplomat about dispatching troops to South Korea.

June 28, 1950

Telegram, Chinese Embassy in Washington D.C. to Deputy Foreign Minister Yeh, President Jiang, and Dean Chen

Chinese Ambassador Wellington Koo states his opinion about dispatching troops to aid United Nation Army on the Korean War.

June 19, 1950

Letter, Owen Lattimore to Lennox C. Fogg, Jr.

Lattimore forwards a letter from three exiled leaders from Xinjiang, and hints at Senator Joseph McCarthy's attacks on his character.

May 7, 1949

Telegram, Ambassador Wellington Koo to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs

Koo reports on defections from the South Korean army, US policy towards Korea, and hopes for closer collaboration between the Republic of Korea and the Republic of China.

December 4, 1973

Note of Conversation between Richard Nixon and Comrade Nicolae Ceausescu

December 4, 1973

Memorandum of Conversation between Nicolae Ceausescu and President Nixon

Ceasescu, Nixon and Kissinger discuss issues ranging from European security to the situation in the Middle East.

July 20, 1949

Memorandum from Philip C. Jessup, 'Chiang-Quirino Proposal for a Pacific Union'

Philip Jessup writes to Walton Butterworth regarding the meeting between Chiang Kai-shek and Elpidio Quirino, as well as an idea by George Kennan to establish a regional university in Asia.

May 25, 1955

Equipment for Radio Free Europe Studio in London

The Foreign Office writes to the Treasury to ask it to reverse its denial to RFE of customs duties exemption for import of technical equipment for a new London bureau. RFE “deserves the full support of her Majesty’s Government,” wrote the Foreign Office, adding that a London bureau will enable better cooperation between the U.K. and RFE and facilitate its interviewing of East European refugees. The Foreign Office notes that RFE is not a commercial organization and “is in fact supported by US Government money contributed covertly.. For political and other reasons the US Government are unable to admit this ….”

Pagination