1893-1976
Eastern Europe
(372) documents
North America
South Asia
East Asia
Middle East
Western Europe
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1923-
June 6, 1968
Suggested refinements to the draft of the Treaty on Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons.
May 4, 1968
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.
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
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.
The Soviet government provided guidance to its representatives to the 1968 session of the UN General Assembly. The USSR specifically took issue with the American proposal on disarmament negotiations at the ENDC which it viewed as an attempt at arms control.
Statement sent to the Soviet ambassador in Washington chastising the United States for the B-52 crash in Greenland.
March 11, 1968
The Politburo adds language for a UN Statement about nuclear aggression.
February 9, 1968
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.
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.
An outline of next steps the Politburo plans to take in response to the 1968 Thule Air Base B-52 crash.