THE JOHN FTHE JOHN FTHE JOHN FTHE JOHN FTHE JOHN F. KENNEDY. KENNEDY. KENNEDY. KENNEDY. KENNEDYNANANANANATIONAL SECURITY FILESTIONAL SECURITY FILESTIONAL SECURITY FILESTIONAL SECURITY FILESTIONAL SECURITY FILES
USSR ANDUSSR ANDUSSR ANDUSSR ANDUSSR ANDEASTERN EUROPE:EASTERN EUROPE:EASTERN EUROPE:EASTERN EUROPE:EASTERN EUROPE:NANANANANATIONAL SECURITY FILES,TIONAL SECURITY FILES,TIONAL SECURITY FILES,TIONAL SECURITY FILES,TIONAL SECURITY FILES,
1961–19631961–19631961–19631961–19631961–1963FIRST SUPPLEMENTFIRST SUPPLEMENTFIRST SUPPLEMENTFIRST SUPPLEMENTFIRST SUPPLEMENT
A UPA Collectionfrom
The John F. KennedyNational Security Files,
1961–1963USSR and Eastern Europe
First Supplement
National Security FilesGeneral Editor
George C. Herring
Microfilmed from the Holdings ofThe John F. Kennedy Library, Boston, Massachusetts
Project CoordinatorRobert E. Lester
Guide compiled byNicholas P. Cunningham
7500 Old Georgetown Road • Bethesda, MD 20814-6126
A UPA Collection from
Copyright © 2006 LexisNexis,a division of Reed Elsevier Inc.
All rights reserved.ISBN 1-55655-876-7.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
The John F. Kennedy national security files, 1961–1963. USSR and Eastern Europe. Firstsupplement [microform] / project coordinator, Robert E. Lester. microfilm reels ; 35 mm. — (National security files) “Microfilmed from the holdings of the John F. Kennedy Library, Boston,Massachusetts.” Accompanied by a printed guide compiled by Nicholas P. Cunningham. ISBN 1-55655-876-7 1. United States—Foreign relations—Soviet Union—Sources. 2. Soviet Union—Foreignrelations—United States—Sources. 3. United States—Foreign relations—1961–1963—Sources. 4. National security—United States—History—Sources. 5. Soviet Union—Foreign relations—1953–1975—Sources. 6. Europe, Eastern—Foreign relations—1945–1989. I. Lester, Robert. II. Cunningham, Nicholas P. III. University Publications ofAmerica (Firm) IV. Title. V. Series.E183.8.S65327.73047'0'09'046—dc22
2005044440 CIP
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TABLE OF CONTENTSScope and Content Note ...................................................................................... vSource Note ........................................................................................................... ixEditorial Note ......................................................................................................... ixAcknowledgments ................................................................................................ ixAbbreviations List ................................................................................................. xi
Reel Index
Reel 1Albania, General .............................................................................................. 1Bulgaria, General ............................................................................................. 1Czechoslovakia, General ................................................................................ 1Hungary, General ............................................................................................ 2Poland, General ............................................................................................... 3
Reel 2Poland, General cont. ...................................................................................... 3Poland, Subjects ............................................................................................. 4Rumania, General ........................................................................................... 4
Reel 3Rumania, General cont. .................................................................................. 5Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, General .................................................. 5
Reels 4–8Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, General cont. ......................................... 7
Reels 9–16Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, Subjects ................................................ 17
Reel 17Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, Subjects cont. ........................................ 28Yugoslavia, General ........................................................................................ 29
Reel 18Yugoslavia, General cont. ............................................................................... 30
Reel 19Yugoslavia, General cont. ............................................................................... 31Yugoslavia, Subjects ....................................................................................... 32
iv
Principal Correspondents Index .......................................................................... 33Subject Index ......................................................................................................... 39
v
SCOPE AND CONTENT NOTEThe John F. Kennedy National Security Files, 1961–1963, USSR and Eastern Europe,
First Supplement, consists of documents on political, diplomatic, economic, and socialdevelopments concerning the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) and, to alesser extent, Eastern Europe. The files are organized alphabetically by country andchronologically within each country. The collection contains cables, letters, and reportsfrom diplomatic personnel; memoranda and analyses from the Central IntelligenceAgency (CIA) and the State Department; transcripts of speeches; and political/economicassessments.
Most of the collection contains files on the Soviet Union. The collection begins withdocuments on the diplomatic relations between the new Kennedy administration and theSoviet government. When Kennedy took office, the United States and the Soviet Unionwere in the midst of the cold war. One subject continuously present in this collection isthe state of relations between the two nations. The collection includes analyses andupdates by the U.S. ambassador to the Soviet Union, Foy Kohler; Secretary of StateDean Rusk; Undersecretary of State George Ball; U.S. Ambassador to the United Na-tions Llewellyn Thompson; and adviser on national security Walt Whitman Rostow. Inaddition, this collection documents conversations with Soviet officials such as Minister ofForeign Affairs Andrei Gromyko and Soviet Ambassador to the United States AnatolyDobrynin, as well as speeches delivered by Nikita Khrushchev.
Many issues created tension between the United States and the Soviet Union duringthis period, and predominant in this collection of National Security Files is the Berlincrisis. In August 1961, the Soviet government began the construction of the Berlin Wall toprevent mass emigration from East Germany to West Germany. The National SecurityFiles contain many cables from the U.S. ambassador to the Soviet Union about discus-sions with Soviet officials over an agreement on the status of Berlin. Furthermore, StateDepartment officials provide analyses and reports on the potential agreement points onthe Berlin issue.
Another important issue covered in the National Security Files is the relationshipbetween the Soviet Union and the People’s Republic of China (PRC). The Soviet Unionand the PRC had been friendly since the Communist Revolution in China in 1949 thatbrought Mao Zedong to power. The two Communist nations worked together to advancethe Communist movement throughout the 1950s. In 1956, however, relations between theSoviet Union and the PRC started to deteriorate. At the 20th Congress of the CommunistParty of the Soviet Union, Nikita Khrushchev delivered a speech denouncing JosephStalin and his “cult of personality.” The Chinese became very agitated at what theybelieved was an attack on Marxism-Leninism. Mao Zedong believed that Khrushchevwas betraying the principles of communism. Furthermore, Khrushchev supported apolicy of “peaceful coexistence” with non-Communist nations. In other words, Communistnations could live peacefully with capitalist nations and avoid war. This was in contradic-tion to the Marxist idea of the inevitability of confrontation with capitalism. In the eyes of
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the Chinese, Khrushchev was being “soft” concerning relations with the West, as theUnited States was seen as the most hated enemy of communism.
In the ensuing years, the Soviet Union and the PRC engaged in propaganda attackson one another. Relations between the two Communist nations were very strained in theearly 1960s, as reflected in these National Security Files. The collection contains manydocuments from State Department officials, the CIA, and ambassadors analyzing thecauses of the Sino-Soviet conflict, potential developments, and implications for theUnited States. This collection also includes letters from the Communist Party of theSoviet Union to the Chinese Communist Party and vice versa, which contain the propa-ganda attacks that were exchanged between the Soviet Union and the PRC.
A third major issue during the Kennedy administration was the Cuban missile crisis,which had profound implications for the relationship between the United States and theSoviet Union. The Soviet Union moved nuclear weapons into Cuba, resulting in a periodof tension that came closer to nuclear war than ever before. This collection of documentshas files on the correspondence between Soviet and U.S. officials during and after thecrisis. The collection contains many analyses of the implications of the Cuban missilecrisis for U.S.-USSR relations.
As a result of the threat of nuclear war, the United States and the Soviet Union at-tempted to improve relations to avoid a second nuclear encounter. Talks of nucleardisarmament and prevention of nuclear proliferation were significant occurrences duringthis period. The two nations attempted to agree on a nonaggression pact and a ban onthe testing of nuclear weapons. Officials from both governments met with relative suc-cess in signing the Partial Test Ban Treaty of 1963, which banned the detonation ofnuclear weapons in the atmosphere, in outer space, or underwater. This collection ofNational Security Files contains related cables and letters from ambassadors and StateDepartment officials, analyses from the CIA, and transcripts of speeches by Khrushchevand other Soviet officials.
Relations between the United States and the Soviet Union were also important inrelation to the treatment of so-called third world nations. It was the policy of the Kennedyadministration to continue the advancement of the Truman Doctrine, the containment ofthe spread of communism. Thus U.S. involvement in Southeast Asia became an impor-tant location of interaction between the United States and the USSR. Analyses andreports on the situations in Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam reflect the thoughts and as-sessments of U.S. officials on U.S. involvement in Southeast Asia in relation to thespread of communism.
These National Security Files also contain analyses and evaluations of the military andeconomic capabilities of both the United States and the Soviet Union. The collectionincludes many CIA analyses comparing the military capabilities of the Soviet Union tothose of the United States, as well as the state of their economies. In counterpoint, thecollection includes speeches by Khrushchev praising the military and economic power ofthe Soviet Union. This collection further addresses U.S.-USSR trade relations during theKennedy administration. The documents include analyses of potential positive and nega-tive results from selling grain and agricultural products to the USSR.
In addition to the files on the Soviet Union, this collection of National Security Filescontains documents on relations with other nations in Eastern Europe. Documents onAlbania, for example, illustrate the role that country played in the Sino-Soviet conflict.Documents concerning Bulgaria highlight its disagreement with the United States asexchanged in printed media. Other documents cover the extent to which the UnitedStates sent economic assistance to Czechoslovakia. Documents on Hungary include
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citizens’ appeals to the United States for help against Soviet control. Documents onPoland highlight the dispute over the border between Poland and Germany, as well asU.S. agricultural and economic aid. Yugoslavia was also a subject of agricultural andeconomic aid from the United States, as shown in this collection. Additional documentscover relations between Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union.
The years of the Kennedy administration were some of the most significant years ofthe cold war. U.S. relations with the Soviet Union fluctuated with tensions escalating tothe brink of nuclear annihilation. This collection of National Security Files opens the doorto the thoughts and assessments of some of the most important figures involved in therelations between the two superpowers of the cold war.
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SOURCE NOTEThe documents reproduced in this microfilm publication are donated historical materi-
als from the John F. Kennedy Presidential Papers, National Security Files, Countries, inthe custody of the John F. Kennedy Library, Boston, Massachusetts. The donors havededicated their literary rights to the public.
EDITORIAL NOTELexisNexis has microfilmed in their entirety all National Security Files (NSF) “Country
Files” documents that were declassified, sanitized, or unclassified as of January 2001 forUSSR and Eastern Europe. There are individual documents and folders of documentsthat remain classified and or unprocessed; LexisNexis has therefore included in this NSFmicrofilm publication the “Document Withdrawal Sheets” for each folder. These withdrawalsheets itemize documents that have been withdrawn from the folders, due to eithernational security or privacy restrictions, by the staff of the John F. Kennedy Library. Thetable of contents lists the various Eastern European countries that are included in thissupplement and have available recently declassified and or processed material.
AcknowledgmentsLexisNexis would like to acknowledge the assistance and cooperation of the John F.
Kennedy Library. Mr. Stephen Plotkin and Ms. Sharon Kelly were most helpful and patientin providing the support necessary for completion of this microform. Their efforts aregreatly appreciated.
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ABBREVIATIONSThe following abbreviation are used three or more times in this guide.
CCP Chinese Communist Party
CEMA (COMECON) Council for Mutual Economic Assistance
CIA Central Intelligence Agency
CPSU Communist Party of the Soviet Union
FRG Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany)
GDR German Democratic Republic (East Germany)
PL Public Law
PRC People’s Republic of China
UK United Kingdom
UN United Nations
USSR Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
1
REEL INDEX The following is a listing of the folders that compose The John F. Kennedy National Security
Files 1961–1963, USSR and Eastern Europe, First Supplement. The four-digit number on the far left is the frame number at which a particular file folder begins. This is followed by the file title and the date(s) of the file. Substantive issues are highlighted under the heading Major Topics, as are prominent correspondents under the heading Principal Correspondents. Topics and correspondents are listed in the order in which they appear on the film, and each one is listed only once per folder.
Reel 1 Frame No.
Albania General
0001 1961–1963. Major Topics: Divisions between CPSU and Albanian Communist Party; Sino-Soviet
relations; meeting on 20th anniversary of Albanian Workers Party and 44th anniversary of October Revolution; Nikita Khrushchev; U.S.-Albania policy; Enver Hoxha regime.
Principal Correspondents: Roger Hilsman; George Ball; Terry Sanders.
Bulgaria General
0092 January 1961–February 1963. Major Topics: Espionage; U.S.-Bulgaria diplomatic relations; 20th International
Plovdiv Fair; John F. Kennedy; Luben Karavelov (ship); Bulgarian National Front; Bulgarian Communist Party divisions; governmental reorganization; Todor Zhivkov; African student exodus.
Principal Correspondents: Dimitur Ganev; George Frederick Reinhardt; Dean Rusk; Eugenie M. Anderson; Charles Bohlen.
0172 March–November 1963. Major Topics: Petur Voutov; African student exodus; propaganda; Fifth Congress of
the Bulgarian Fatherland Front; U.S.-Bulgaria trade; Lyubomir Dimitrov Popov. Principal Correspondents: Eugenie M. Anderson; William Brubeck; George Ball;
Todor Zhivkov; Dean Rusk.
Czechoslovakia General
0279 January–December 1961. Major Topics: [Miroslav] Nacvalac; Karel Duda; U.S.-Czechoslovakia diplomatic
relations.
Frame No.
2
Principal Correspondents: Milsoslav Ruzek; [C. Douglas] Dillon; Edward Thompson Wailes; Antonin Novotny.
0301 January–April 1962. Major Topics: Espionage; Jaromir Zastera; disarmament; effects of U.S. relationship
with Cuba; effects of U.S. relationship with FRG; Council of Free Czechoslovakia in Canada; John F. Kennedy inaugural address; John F. Kennedy foreign policy.
Principal Correspondents: Timothy J. Burke; Edward Thompson Wailes; John F. Kennedy; Antonin Novotny; John M. Richmond; Joseph Brousek.
0335 May–September 1962. Major Topics: Internal discontent; Brno International Trade Fair. Principal Correspondents: George Ball; Edward Thompson Wailes; Dean Rusk; John
F. Kennedy; William Brubeck.
0355 October–December 1962. Major Topics: U.S.-Czechoslovakia economic relations; Robert Budway; Milsoslav
Ruzek; Karel Zizka; public opinion of U.S. Principal Correspondents: Edward Thompson Wailes; Dean Rusk; Outerbridge
Horsey.
0395 January–November 1963. Major Topics: U.S.-Czechoslovakia economic relations; Brno International Trade
Fair; U.S.-Czechoslovakia diplomatic relations; Antonin Novotny administration; Jozef Lenart; Frantisek Hamouz; Luther Hodges; Vaclav David; Jaroslav Zantovsky; Karel Duda.
Principal Correspondents: Outerbridge Horsey; George Ball; John F. Kennedy; William Brubeck.
Hungary General
0445 1961–1962. Major Topics: Appeals to U.S.; USSR occupation of Hungary; U.S. foreign policy;
[Frederick H.] Boland; UN; Sir Leslie Munro; U.S.-Hungary diplomatic relations; history of USSR aggression; self-determination; Janos Kadar; Nikita Khrushchev foreign policy; Edmund Lazar; Hungarian Socialist Worker’s Party Central Committee divisions; amnesty for political prisoners; Janos Kadar’s party purges; Hungarian government release of prisoners from 1956 Hungarian Revolution; Cardinal Koenig; Stefan Verosta; Janos Radvanyi; Josip Broz Tito.
Principal Correspondents: John F. Kennedy; Dean Rusk; Cardinal Joseph Mindszenty; Karoly Szarka; Istvan Dobi; Horace Gates Torbert; R. W. Komer; Adlai E. Stevenson; William Avery Crawford; William Krasser.
0609 1963. Major Topics: Appeals to U.S.; Josip Broz Tito; Nikita Khrushchev; Cardinal Koenig;
Archduke Otto; amnesty for political prisoners; Monsignor Casroli; role of the Vatican with Cardinal Joseph Mindszenty; U.S.-Hungary diplomatic relations; USSR troops in Hungary; Janos Radvanyi; W. Averell Harriman; Frigyes Puja.
Principal Correspondents: Cardinal Joseph Mindszenty; William Avery Crawford; Dean Rusk; Owen Thomas Jones; James Williams Riddleburger; George Ball; Foy David Kohler.
Frame No.
3
Poland General
0771 January–September 1961. Major Topics: U.S.-Poland diplomatic relations; Marian Dobrsielski; Sino-Soviet
conflict; Wladyslaw Gomulka; U.S.-Poland economic relations; Polish agriculture; U.S. aid to Poland (PL 480); Poznan International Fair; Tadeusz Lychowski; Jerzy Michalowski; U.S.-USSR relations with third countries; disarmament; German-Polish border problem (Oder-Neisse boundary); public opinion of U.S.; delay of U.S. aid to Poland.
Principal Correspondents: Jacob Dyneley Beam; W. W. Rostow; Zbigniew Brzezinski; Charles Bohlen; Marian Heitzman; John F. Kennedy; Aleksander Zawadzki; Richard Neustadt; Dean Rusk; William L. Magistretti; Carl Kaysen.
Reel 2 Poland cont. General cont.
0001 October 1961–May 1962. Major Topics: Hubert H. Humphrey; Edward Ochab; German-Polish border problem
(Oder-Neisse boundary); U.S. aid to Poland (PL 480); disarmament (Rapacki Plan); Wladyslaw Gomulka domestic policy; U.S.-Poland diplomatic relations; Edward Drosniak; John F. Kennedy foreign policy; public opinion; Poznan International Fair; U.S.-Poland trade relations (most favored nation treatment); Tadeusz Lychowski; Witold Tramiczynski.
Principal Correspondents: William L. Magistretti; Lee T. Stull; W. W. Rostow; Dean Rusk; Carl Kaysen; Jacob Dyneley Beam; Stefan Wilkosz; Walter Jenkins; John Moors Cabot; General W. Anders; John F. Kennedy; Lucius D. Battle; Harold C. Vedeler.
0160 June–December 1962. Major Topics: U.S. aid to Poland (PL 480); effects of Poland-Cuba relations; U.S.-
Poland trade relations; most favored nation treatment to Poland and Yugoslavia; Tadeusz Lychowski; Witold Tramiczynski; Fonmin Winiewicz; Wladyslaw Gomulka regime; Poland foreign policy; German-Polish border problem (Oder-Neisse boundary); Polish views on politics and economics of USSR bloc; Poland-GDR relations; Sino-Soviet conflict; U.S.-USSR nuclear monopoly.
Principal Correspondents: Dean Rusk; John Moors Cabot; Carl Kaysen; George Ball; John F. Kennedy; Roger Hilsman; William Brubeck; Ralph Dungan; Malcolm Toon.
0309 1963. Major Topics: Fonmin Winiewicz; most favored nation treatment to Poland; U.S. aid
to Poland (PL 480); Sino-Soviet conflict; U.S.-Poland diplomatic relations; self-determination; Edward Drosniak; effect of Poland-Cuba relations; Poznan International Trade Fair; German-Polish border problem (Oder-Neisse boundary); student protest; Jan Paderewski; Jozef Cyrankiewicz; U.S.-Poland relations; Polish views of Sino-Soviet conflict; Polish views on politics and economy in USSR; Wladyslaw Gomulka views of U.S.
Frame No.
4
Principal Correspondents: John Moors Cabot; Dean Rusk; Lucjan Kydrynski; L. W. Czempinski; John F. Kennedy; William Beull; Aleksander Zawadzki; George Ball.
Poland cont. Subjects
0447 Ambassadorial Talks with Ambassador Wang, June 1961–July 1962. Major Topics: Wang Ping-nan; U.S. involvement in Laos; Geneva Conference;
Chiang Kai-shek; U.S.-PRC conflict over Taiwan; U.S. food to PRC; U.S.-PRC relations; U.S. aid to South Vietnam; U.S. citizens detained in PRC; disarmament; Pathet Lao; recognition of Chinese sovereignty of Paracel Islands; suspected invasion of mainland China by Taiwan with U.S. support; U.S. warships in Chinese waters.
Principal Correspondents: Jacob Dyneley Beam; Dean Rusk; John Moors Cabot; George Ball.
0632 Ambassadorial Talks with Ambassador Wang, August 1962–November 1963. Major Topics: Wang Ping-nan; U.S.-PRC conflict over Taiwan; U.S. citizens detained
in PRC; U.S.-PRC relations; suspected invasion of mainland China by Taiwan with U.S. support; anti-U.S. feelings in PRC; Chiang Kai-shek; U.S. warships in Chinese waters; U-2 plane; exchange of journalists; PRC view of U.S. aid to India; Sino-Indian border; U.S.-Japan relations; U.S. and PRC involvement in Laos; PRC sovereignty of Paracel Islands; nuclear disarmament; nuclear test ban talks; Chou En-lai; U.S. involvement in South Vietnam.
Principal Correspondents: John Moors Cabot; Dean Rusk; George Ball; Alan Goodrich Kirk; Jerauld Wright.
Rumania General
0833 January–December 1961. Major Topics: George Macovescu; U.S.-USSR conflict over Berlin; fear of Germany
in Rumania; U.S.-Rumania trade relations. Principal Correspondent: Dean Rusk.
0855 January 1–June 30, 1962. Major Topics: U.S.-Rumania cultural exchanges; Rumania-USSR conflict in CEMA;
Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej; Nicolae Ceausescu; Rumania role in COMECON; Alexandru Birladeanu; Rumania-USSR economic relations.
Principal Correspondents: Dean Rusk; William A. Crawford; Foy David Kohler.
0904 July 1963. Major Topic: Rumania-USSR economic relations.
0934 July 1–August 6, 1963. Major Topics: Rumania-USSR economic relations; Rumania-USSR conflict in CEMA;
Rumania role in Sino-Soviet conflict; Jewish emigration from Rumania; U.S.-Rumania trade relations; Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej; Mircea Malita.
Principal Correspondents: William A. Crawford; John Putnam Shaw; Dean Rusk.
Frame No.
5
0991 August 7–22, 1963. Major Topics: Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej; U.S.-Rumania trade relations; Rumania-
USSR conflict in CEMA; Mircea Malita; signs of Rumanian independence from USSR; Rumanian desire for industrial growth.
Principal Correspondents: Thomas L. Hughes; George Ball.
Reel 3 Rumania cont. General cont.
0001 August 23–September 10, 1963. Major Topics: U.S. aid for Rumanian industrial development; CIA.
0017 September 11–November 22, 1963. Major Topics: U.S.-Rumania trade relations; Multilateral Force; Rumania role in Sino-
Soviet conflict; Rumania-FRG trade; signs of Rumanian independence from USSR; Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej.
Principal Correspondents: John Putnam Shaw; George Crews McGhee; William A. Crawford.
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics General
0041 January 1–21, 1961. Major Topics: U.S. concerns about USSR; Nikita Khrushchev’s view on world
communism, war, and revolution; Communist arms shipments into the free world. Principal Correspondents: Llewellyn E. Thompson; W. W. Rostow.
0073 Report on Exchanges with the USSR and Eastern Europe, January 1, 1961. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR Exchange Agreement; scientific, technical, cultural, and
educational projects in USSR, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Rumania, and Bulgaria.
Principal Correspondent: Frank G. Siscoe.
0126 January 22–28, 1961. Major Topic: U.S.-USSR relations. Principal Correspondents: Dean Rusk; Llewellyn E. Thompson.
0158 January 29–February 1, 1961. Major Topics: Nikita Khrushchev’s regime; communism; arms shipments. Principal Correspondents: Llewellyn E. Thompson; W. W. Rostow.
0193 February 2–14, 1961. Major Topics: Berlin question; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; USSR and world
reaction to beginning of John F. Kennedy administration; disarmament; USSR government; USSR foreign policy; U.S. foreign policy.
Principal Correspondents: Dean Rusk; Llewellyn E. Thompson; McGeorge Bundy.
Frame No.
6
0227 February 15–19, 1961. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; Mikhail Menshikov; Air Transport
Agreement; Nikita Khrushchev; U.S.-USSR trade relations; Bucharest Conference; effect of Sino-Soviet relations on U.S.; peaceful coexistence.
Principal Correspondents: W. Averell Harriman; Dean Rusk; W. W. Rostow.
0309 February 20, 1961. Major Topics: USSR military and war policy; Nikita Khrushchev; China and nuclear
weapons; history of Russia, 1860–1960; USSR foreign policy. Principal Correspondents: Roger Hilsman; Raymond L. Garthoff.
0352 February 21–March 1, 1961. Major Topics: Moscow Conference; Nikita Khrushchev; U.S.-USSR trade relations;
U.S.-USSR relations concerning third countries; U.S.-USSR foreign relations; disarmament.
Principal Correspondents: John Whitman; Dean Rusk.
0382 A Comparison of Capital Investment in the U.S. and the USSR, 1950–1959, February 1961.
Major Topics: Comparison of capital investment in U.S. and USSR; CIA.
0459 Compendium of USSR Remarks on Missiles, February 1961. Major Topics: Long-range ballistic missiles; military comparison of U.S. and USSR;
Nikita Khrushchev foreign policy; state of USSR military; Richard M. Nixon. Principal Correspondents: Allen Dulles; Nikita Khrushchev.
0510 March 2–12, 1961. Major Topics: Sino-Soviet conflict; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; U.S.-USSR trade
relations; Nikita Khrushchev; disarmament; Berlin question; USSR-FRG relations.
Principal Correspondents: Sherman Kent; Llewellyn E. Thompson; George Ball.
0548 March 13–22, 1961. Major Topics: USSR-FRG relations; U.S.-USSR ideological differences; reasons
against publication of secret documents in Sino-Soviet conflict; Andrei Gromyko; Berlin question.
Principal Correspondents: Llewellyn E. Thompson; Robert H. Botabrook; Dean Rusk.
0579 March 23–May 8, 1961. Major Topics: Sino-Soviet conflict; Ho Chi Minh; Berlin question; U.S.-USSR
economic competition; Cuba; U.S.-Eastern Europe trade. Principal Correspondents: Charles Bohlen; McGeorge Bundy; Robert Komer; Arthur
Schlesinger; John F. Kennedy; Llewellyn E. Thompson.
0622 Sino-Soviet Conflict and its Significance, April 1, 1961. Major Topics: CIA; Sino-Soviet conflict; USSR authority over Communist bloc; PRC
foreign policy; peaceful coexistence; USSR view of peaceful transition to socialism; Sino-Soviet views on Communist movement in underdeveloped countries; Sino-Soviet policy towards non-Communist world; Nikita Khrushchev; Teng Hsiao-ping; Walter Ulbricht; Enver Hoxha; Ho Chi Minh; Wladyslaw Gomulka.
Frame No.
7
0731 May 9–17, 1961. Major Topics: CIA; U.S. relations with Laos and Vietnam; communism; science;
Nikita Khrushchev; USSR-UN relations; Mikhail Menshikov. Principal Correspondent: W. W. Rostow.
0755 May 18, 1961.
0758 May 19–24, 1961. Major Topics: Berlin question; U.S.-USSR relations. Principal Correspondent: Llewellyn E. Thompson.
0770 U.S. Economic Relations with USSR Bloc, May 25, 1961. Major Topics: Foreign economic relations; economic conditions; U.S. economic
objectives and policy.
0827 May 25, 1961. Major Topics: Nikita Khrushchev speech; U.S.-USSR relations; disarmament; U.S.-
USSR relations on Cuba situation; U.S.-USSR relations on Laos; peaceful coexistence; Khrushchev on nuclear war; U.S.-USSR economic relations; USSR air space policy.
Principal Correspondents: Nikita Khrushchev; Leon Trilling.
0842 May 26–31, 1961. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; Nikita Khrushchev; Berlin question;
nuclear testing; USSR space program. Principal Correspondents: Llewellyn E. Thompson; W. W. Rostow.
0867 The Khrushchev Succession Problem, May 31, 1961. Major Topics: U.S. Air Force; Nikita Khrushchev succession crisis; CPSU;
succession crisis after death of Joseph Stalin.
0928 June 1–2, 1961. Major Topics: CIA; biographical data of USSR political personnel.
0964 June 3–20, 1961. Major Topics: Peaceful coexistence; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; U.S.-USSR
relations in third countries; Berlin question. Principal Correspondents: Edward Morrow; John Lukacs.
Reel 4 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics cont.
General cont.
0001 June 21–July 5, 1961. Major Topics: U.S. influence on USSR resource allocation; U.S.-USSR Exchange
Agreement; scientific, technical, cultural, and academic projects in USSR, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Rumania, and Bulgaria.
Principal Correspondent: Frank G. Siscoe.
0076 July 6–13, 1961. Major Topics: Sino-Soviet relations; U.S.-USSR relations on Cuba situation; nuclear
test ban; Nikita Khrushchev speech; disarmament; Berlin question; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; USSR-GDR relations; U.S.-USSR economic competition.
Frame No.
8
Principal Correspondents: Arthur Schlesinger; Llewellyn E. Thompson; Nikita Khrushchev.
0106 July 14–21, 1961. Major Topic: USSR economy. Principal Correspondent: Llewellyn E. Thompson.
0117 July 22–31, 1961. Major Topics: USSR economy; arms race; reactions to John F. Kennedy speech;
USSR-Sudan communiqué; Nikita Khrushchev; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; USSR-GDR treaty talks; disarmament; nuclear testing.
Principal Correspondents: Llewellyn E. Thompson; Roger Hilsman; Leon Trilling.
0148 August 1–3, 1961. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR economic competition; CPSU draft program, internal
affairs, and foreign policy; U.S. exports to Eastern Europe; CIA; communism. Principal Correspondents: Llewellyn E. Thompson; George Ball.
0189 August 4–10, 1961. Major Topics: USSR Twenty-Year Economic Program; CPSU draft program; U.S.-
USSR economic comparison; USSR military budget increase; Nikita Khrushchev speech; USSR space program achievements; USSR economy; arms race; USSR view of U.S. foreign policy.
Principal Correspondents: W. W. Rostow; Nikita Khrushchev.
0243 August 11–25, 1961. Major Topics: Nikita Khrushchev; U.S.-USSR Air Transport Agreement; John F.
Kennedy policy on Berlin crisis. Principal Correspondents: John McSweeny; Dean Rusk; John F. Kennedy.
0280 August 26–31, 1961.
0284 September 1–6, 1961. Major Topics: Charles De Gaulle’s diplomacy with Joseph Stalin as model for
diplomacy with Nikita Khrushchev; USSR military maneuvers. Principal Correspondents: W. Averell Harriman; McGeorge Bundy.
0300 September 7–26, 1961. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; effect of U.S.-Iran relations on USSR-
Iran relations. Principal Correspondents: Llewellyn E. Thompson; Julius Cecil Holmes.
0330 September 27–31, 1961. Major Topics: CIA; Sino-Soviet bloc aid; Belgrade Conference; U.S.-USSR foreign
aid comparison.
0360 October 1961. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; Nikita Khrushchev; missile defense
capabilities. Principal Correspondent: John McSweeny.
0424 November 1–20, 1961.
Frame No.
9
0451 November 21–31, 1961. Major Topics: Foreign Broadcast Information Service; USSR policy conflict over
resource allocation; CIA; CPSU Twenty-Year Program; Berlin crisis; U.S.-USSR Air Transport Agreement negotiations.
Principal Correspondent: Llewellyn E. Thompson.
0554 December 1–14, 1961. Major Topics: Nuclear test ban; U.S.-USSR Air Transport Agreement negotiations;
USSR economic goals for 1962; Yuri Zhukov. Principal Correspondent: Llewellyn E. Thompson.
0611 December 15–31, 1961. Major Topics: USSR policy conflict over resource allocation; U.S.-USSR relations;
CPSU 22nd Congress; CPSU internal politics; radio propaganda reports; Foreign Broadcast Information Service.
Principal Correspondents: Llewellyn E. Thompson; George Kennan.
0646 January 1962. Major Topics: USSR position on local wars; Vyacheslav Molotov; nuclear test ban
talks; Sino-Soviet conflict; socialism in Cuba and Ghana; Nikita Khrushchev speech excerpts; U.S.-USSR economic competition; Khrushchev on war.
Principal Correspondents: Llewellyn E. Thompson; Nikita Khrushchev.
0726 February 1962. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; Mikhail Menshikov; U.S.-USSR
relations on Africa; imprisonment and release of U-2 pilot Francis Powers; U.S.-USSR cultural relations; USSR economic slowdown; CPSU internal divisions; USSR-Cuba relations; disarmament; V. I. Ustinov; USSR policy conflict over resource allocation; USSR agricultural production; history of Russian foreign policy.
Principal Correspondents: Dean Rusk; Pierre Salinger; Roger Hilsman; Llewellyn E. Thompson.
0819 March 1962. Major Topics: Sino-Soviet conflict; Berlin crisis; U.S.-USSR cultural relations; Nikita
Khrushchev speech excerpts; Khrushchev on agricultural production; U.S. military policy; USSR foreign policy; USSR efforts to combat Chinese influence in underdeveloped areas; disarmament; propaganda; John F. Kennedy nuclear weapons remarks and reactions; proposed repeal of embargo on import of furs from USSR; USSR 1962 budget.
Principal Correspondents: Llewellyn E. Thompson; V. Larionov; Roger Hilsman; Dean Rusk.
0979 April 1962. Major Topics: Reactions to John F. Kennedy nuclear weapons remarks; Berlin
question; Andrey Smirnov; Sino-Soviet relations; space programs; negotiations in Geneva; USSR press reaction to Kennedy remarks on steel industry; Andrei Gromyko speech excerpt; disarmament; U.S. travel restrictions.
Principal Correspondents: George Kennan; Llewellyn E. Thompson; Andrei Gromyko; Dean Rusk.
Frame No.
10
Reel 5 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics cont.
General cont.
0001 May 1962 and undated. Major Topics: Berlin question; Sino-Soviet conflict; Nikita Khrushchev diplomacy;
U.S. Civil Aviation Policy; USSR foreign policy; USSR-Asia trade; U.S.-USSR cultural relations; maneuverings in top USSR leadership; USSR economic problems; USSR military doctrine; U.S. military doctrine; USSR press reaction to John F. Kennedy remarks on steel industry; Nikita Khrushchev; McGeorge Bundy; USSR military capabilities; Yugoslavia-USSR relations; disarmament; Vladimir Titov visit to U.S.; possible projects for U.S.-USSR international cooperation; U.S.-USSR science cooperation.
Principal Correspondents: Rodion Malinovsky; Llewellyn E. Thompson; Griffith Johnson; Thomas L. Hughes; Roger Hilsman; Dean Rusk; I. Sidelnikov; Eugene Varga; Charles Bohlen; Dean Rusk; Adlai E. Stevenson.
0151 June 1962. Major Topics: Nikita Khrushchev on Africa; Sino-Soviet conflict; USSR-Eastern
Europe economic relations; de-Stalinization in media; CEMA; U.S.-USSR travel restrictions; Khrushchev visit to Bulgaria; USSR-Bulgaria relations; USSR press criticism of Kennedy family; USSR press view on John F. Kennedy–Khrushchev meeting; U.S.-USSR military strength.
Principal Correspondents: Llewellyn E. Thompson; Roger Hilsman; John McSweeny; R. T. Davis; Dean Rusk; Rodion Malinovsky.
0229 July 1–15, 1962. Major Topics: Sino-Soviet relations; USSR strategic doctrine for the start of war;
Berlin question. Principal Correspondents: Thomas L. Hughes; Dean Rusk; John McSweeny.
0294 July 16–31, 1962. Major Topics: USSR economic crisis; USSR view of common market in Europe;
Anastas I. Mikoyan; U.S.-USSR trade relations; Western public opinion of Nikita Khrushchev; U.S.-USSR cultural relations; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; USSR strategic doctrine for the start of war; USSR reaction to U.S. in outer space.
Principal Correspondents: George S. Moore; Terrence F. Catherman; Dean Rusk; Llewellyn E. Thompson.
0372 August 1–15, 1962, and undated. Major Topics: Berlin question; possible U.S. harassment of USSR merchant vessels;
USSR fishing off New England; USSR foreign policy; Sino-Soviet relations; disarmament; USSR military aid; Ivan F. Kurdiukov; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; uprising in Rostov; USSR economy.
Principal Correspondents: Gerry M. McCabe; L. D. Battle; Dean Rusk; William C. Battle; R. T. Davis; Roger Hilsman.
0444 August 16–31, 1962. Major Topics: USSR–Eastern Europe meetings on Berlin question; alleged USSR
development of death-ray weapon; USSR-Japan trade relations; USSR foreign policy; shift in East-West power balance; uprising in Rostov; Sino-Soviet conflict;
Frame No.
11
CEMA; USSR-Eastern Europe economic relations; USSR opposition to common market; disarmament.
Principal Correspondents: John McSweeny; Dean Rusk; Richard Funkhouser; Mose Harvey; Allan Evans; W. W. Rostow; Roger Hilsman.
0540 September 1962. Major Topics: USSR-Japan relations on nuclear weapons; espionage; U.S.-USSR
cultural relations; political implications of new USSR military doctrine; Rodion Malinovsky; USSR media; U.S.-USSR space exploration relations; Berlin question; USSR opposition to common market; Andrei Gromyko; disarmament; Sino-Soviet conflict; USSR foreign policy; USSR propaganda on space programs; interference with merchant ships.
Principal Correspondents: John McSweeny; Terrence F. Catherman; William H. Brubeck; Dean Rusk; Foy David Kohler; Roger Hilsman; Gerry McCabe; George Ball.
0663 October 1–8, 1962. Major Topics: Effect of USSR-Yugoslavia relations on U.S.-Yugoslavia relations;
diplomatic privilege and immunity; Raymond Smith; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; interference with merchant ships; USSR withdrawal from New York World’s Fair; Robert Moses; economic management and planning; USSR program for abolition of income tax.
Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; William H. Brubeck; N. Antonov; Roger Hilsman.
0771 October 9–31, 1962, and undated. Major Topics: USSR withdrawal from New York World’s Fair; Robert Moses; USSR
foreign aid; disarmament; espionage; uprising in Rostov; Nikita Khrushchev on Eastern Europe economies and the common market; detention of U.S. citizens in USSR; profit motive for USSR workers; interference with merchant ships; USSR media on Andrei Gromyko press conference; Boris G. Jouravlev; U.S.-USSR relations concerning Yugoslavia, Berlin, Cuba, and Denmark; U.S.-USSR economic comparison; USSR-India relations.
Principal Correspondents: William H. Brubeck; Roger Hilsman; Leo Szilard; Nikita Khrushchev; Foy David Kohler; Adlai E. Stevenson; Eric Fleisher; W. W. Rostow.
Reel 6 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics cont.
General cont.
0001 November 1962. Major Topics: Detention of U.S. citizens in USSR; Nikita Khrushchev on U.S. and
Cuba; Berlin question; Aleksey Kosygin speech at celebration of 45th anniversary of October Revolution; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; USSR foreign policy and support from satellite countries; Cuban missile crisis talks; propaganda; anti-Stalin theme of USSR leadership; Sino-Soviet conflict; PRC press doctrinal views; John F. Kennedy and Cuban missile crisis; U.S.-USSR cultural exchange program; Mary Dutkanicz; Frol Kozlov; reorganization of party and state control and operation of USSR economy; Sino-Soviet conflict; U.S. treatment of Sino-Soviet conflict; USSR aid to Pakistan; Sino-Indian border;
Frame No.
12
effect of Cuban missile crisis on U.S.-USSR relations; USSR economic resource allocation.
Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; Robert L. Anshuetz; Aleksey Kosygin; Roger Hilsman; Thomas L. Hughes; David Bruce; John Moors Cabot; Zbigniew Brzezinski; R. T. Davis; Peter C. Walker; Dean Rusk; Allan Evans.
0145 December 1962. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; Berlin question; Cuban missile crisis;
Sino-Indian conflict; escalation of Sino-Soviet conflict; Palmiro Togliatti on Sino-Soviet conflict; USSR foreign policy; USSR gold sales; USSR economic policy; espionage; nuclear testing; Eastern Europe trade with European Economic Community.
Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; R. T. Davis; Roger Hilsman; John McSweeny.
0233 January 1–8, 1963. Major Topics: L. F. Ilichev; U.S. naval plane violation of USSR air space; Sino-Soviet
conflict; Robert Frost mission to Moscow; U.S.-USSR cultural relations; Nikita Khrushchev visit to Berlin; analysis of Khrushchev’s power.
Principal Correspondents: R. T. Davis; Foy David Kohler; Thomas L. Hughes.
0294 January 9–14, 1963. Major Topics: USSR-Japan economic relations; Sino-Soviet conflict; USSR
agriculture; shift in East-West power balance. Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; Ray S. Cline.
0327 January 15–24, 1963. Major Topics: Disarmament; USSR religious persecution; U.S. treatment of Sino-
Soviet conflict; humanitarian requests to USSR; Leonid Brezhnev; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations.
Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; George C. McGhee; David Klein.
0363 January 25–31, 1963. Major Topics: Nuclear test ban; discrimination in FRG; students in Moscow; Sino-
Soviet conflict; USSR propaganda. Principal Correspondents: John McSweeny; Roger Hilsman.
0387 February 1–11, 1963. Major Topics: Basis for possible negotiations with USSR; French-FRG treaty of
cooperation; USSR objectives and strategy in Middle East; nuclear test ban. Principal Correspondent: Roger Hilsman.
0422 February 12–21, 1963. Major Topics: CPSU internal relations; nuclear test ban; Sino-Soviet conflict; USSR
army; USSR media; U.S. plane violation of USSR airspace; interference with merchant ships.
Principal Correspondents: John McSweeny; Robert W. Adams; Roger Hilsman; Foy David Kohler; Dean Rusk.
0450 February 22–24, 1963. Major Topics: Rodion Malinovsky speech; USSR foreign policy; military weapons;
USSR military; Cuban missile crisis. Principal Correspondents: Rodion Malinovsky; Roger Hilsman; Foy David Kohler.
Frame No.
13
0481 February 25–28, 1963. Major Topics: Nuclear testing; on-site nuclear inspections; Alexander Zinchuk; U.S.-
USSR–Southeast Asia relations; USSR presence in West Berlin; USSR aircraft flight over U.S. naval vessel.
Principal Correspondents: R. T. Davis; Michael V. Forrestal; Foy David Kohler.
0510 February 27, 1963. Major Topics: CIA; USSR economy and economic policy; USSR military
expenditures; USSR foreign trade and aid.
0577 March 1–6, 1963. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR relations; Andrei Gromyko speech; USSR foreign policy;
East-West relations; peaceful coexistence; disarmament; Berlin question; U.S.-USSR relations in Cuba; USSR-Norway relations; USSR internal economic problems; USSR leadership policy conflicts; effect of U.S.-Yugoslavia relations on USSR-Yugoslavia relations; Communist Party of Italy; Palmiro Togliatti; CPSU internal problems; international Communist movement; communism; Palmiro Togliatti on war and peace and Communist revolution; Palmiro Togliatti–Mao Tse-tung differences on western imperialism; problem of Leninism in contemporary world.
Principal Correspondents: William H. Brubeck; Andrei Gromyko; Llewellyn E. Thompson; Foy David Kohler; Roger Hilsman.
0719 March 7, 1963. Major Topic: Sino-Soviet border conflict. Principal Correspondent: Roger Hilsman.
0735 March 7–14, 1963. Major Topics: Sino-Soviet border conflict; U.S. treatment of Sino-Soviet conflict;
treatment of USSR citizens in U.S.; nuclear weapons; USSR military relations; USSR media reaction to Sino-Soviet conflict; Nikita Khrushchev visit to Sweden; USSR-Cuban relations; U.S. foreign policy; Supreme Economic Council for industry and construction; USSR-Iraq relations; Berlin question.
Principal Correspondents: Roger Hilsman; Dean Rusk; Foy David Kohler; G. Kuznetsov; R. T. Davis; Stephen Winship.
0804 March 15, 1963. Major Topics: USSR-Japan economic relations; USSR leadership policy conflicts. Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; Roger Hilsman.
0816 March 16–21, 1963. Major Topics: Change in USSR foreign policy after Cuban missile crisis; USSR-
Africa relations; U.S. harassment of USSR shipping; USSR withdrawal from New York World’s Fair; V. Ye. Dymshits.
Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; R. T. Davis; Herbert W. Klotz; Roger Hilsman.
0876 March 22, 1963. Major Topics: CIA; effect of USSR economic internal problems on U.S. foreign
policy. Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; W. W. Rostow.
Frame No.
14
0963 March 23–31, 1963. Major Topics: Peaceful coexistence; USSR aircraft violation of U.S. airspace; signs
of change in USSR foreign policy since Cuban missile crisis; USSR-FRG relations on nuclear weapons; USSR economy; Alexei Passioutin; Boris Vilkov; multilateral nuclear force; France-FRG relations; Sino-Soviet conflict; USSR–Latin America relations.
Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; Dean Rusk; Francis T. Williamson; R. T. Davis; Nikita Khrushchev.
Reel 7 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics cont.
General cont.
0001 April 1–14, 1963. Major Topics: Rumor of USSR change in leadership; Sino-Soviet relations; CCP;
Mao Tse-tung; communism; USSR resource allocation for armed forces; USSR denial of aircraft violating U.S. airspace; signs of conflict in USSR leadership; Nikita Khrushchev on Leninism; dangers of revisionism in USSR communism; CCP attacks on Khrushchev; Frol Kozlov and Mikhail Andreyevich Suslov criticism of Khrushchev; CPSU.
Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; Thomas L. Hughes; William H. Brubeck.
0118 April 15–30, 1963. Major Topics: Papal influence on USSR; problems of USSR leadership; USSR
analysis of developments in Middle East; Arab nationalism; U.S. goals in Middle East; violations of U.S. airspace; USSR economy; rumors of USSR leadership change; military spending; USSR repression of intellectuals; U.S.-USSR trade relations; Nikita Khrushchev possible retirement.
Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; R. T. Davis; Llewellyn E. Thompson; John C. Guthrie; Powell Garst; Huntington D. Sheldon; Roger Wellington Tubby; Thomas L. Hughes.
0198 May 1963. Major Topics: Problems in USSR leadership; dissension within CEMA; U.S.-USSR
trade relations; Nikita Khrushchev successor; world oil market; USSR Guba Okolnaya submarine support facility; Fidel Castro visit to USSR; Leninist ideology in contemporary USSR; Jews in the USSR; Nahum Goldmann; USSR economy; Sino-Soviet conflict; Konrad Adenauer; Khrushchev on Berlin, disarmament, and agriculture; Khrushchev message to African heads of state; USSR-Cuban relations; USSR–International Labour Organization relations; domestic dissatisfaction with USSR foreign aid program.
Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; R. T. Davis; Vitaly Sinigovsky; Luther H. Hodges; Dean Rusk; George Ball; Valerian Zorin; Thomas L. Hughes.
0314 June 1–17, 1963. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; causes and points of U.S.-USSR
tension; USSR-Sweden relations; disarmament; Georgi Kornienko; Sovetskanya Rossiya analysis of U.S.-USSR relations; USSR political conditions; problems of USSR leadership; USSR foreign relations; Nikita Khrushchev on John F.
Frame No.
15
Kennedy speech; USSR-Eastern Europe trade relations; USSR economy; Sino-Soviet relations; Marxism-Leninism; communism; nuclear weapons; Yugoslavia.
Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; R. T. Davis; Ronald I. Spiers; John McSweeny; Nikita Khrushchev; George Crews McGhee.
0468 June 18–30, 1963. Major Topics: USSR foreign relations; Sino-Soviet conflict; Leonid Brezhnev; Nikita
Khrushchev succession; Khrushchev trip to Berlin. Principal Correspondents: John McSweeny; Thomas L. Hughes; Mose Harvey;
George C. Denney; Michael V. Forrestal.
0514 July 1–14, 1963. Major Topics: U.S. approach to Sino-Soviet talks; U.S. arrest of USSR diplomats;
USSR policies and problems on eve of Moscow negotiations; U.S. arrest of USSR citizens; Leonid Brezhnev; Sino-Soviet relations concerning India.
Principal Correspondents: George Ball; Dean Rusk; John McSweeny; Foy David Kohler; Thomas L. Hughes.
0618 July 15–29, 1963. Major Topics: CPSU; CCP; Sino-Soviet conflict; USSR foreign policy; disarmament;
Nikita Khrushchev on agriculture; implications of Sino-Soviet conflict for the U.S.; USSR economy; USSR-Hungarian relations.
Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; Thomas L. Hughes; Dean Rusk; Llewellyn E. Thompson; George Denney.
0744 July 30–31, 1963. Major Topics: USSR economy; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; USSR travel
restrictions; Communist attacks on the Peace Corps; Communist Party, USA; Federal Bureau of Investigation.
Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; George Denney; Thomas W. Wolfe.
0893 August 1–15, 1963. Major Topics: Détente; Nikita Khrushchev economic reforms; USSR propaganda;
Berlin question; disarmament; USSR views of Charles De Gaulle; Sino-Soviet conflict; PRC nuclear power; UN affairs; U.S.-USSR negotiations; views of Polish Communist leadership on Sino-Soviet conflict; USSR internal economic problems; USSR foreign policy; U.S.-USSR economic comparison; NATO.
Principal Correspondents: George Denney; W. W. Rostow; Thomas L. Hughes; Dean Rusk.
Reel 8 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics cont.
General cont.
0001 August 16–31, 1963, and undated. Major Topics: Possible future foreign policy moves by USSR; Josip Broz Tito–Nikita
Khrushchev relations; Sino-Soviet conflict; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; implications of Sino-Soviet conflict for U.S.
Principal Correspondents: W. W. Rostow; Foy David Kohler.
Frame No.
16
0063 September 1963. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR negotiations; Sino-Soviet conflict; USSR military forces;
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; USSR economy; USSR agriculture; USSR–Hong Kong trade relations; Josip Broz Tito; USSR interference with fishermen; Stalin legacy; John F. Kennedy on U.S.-USSR relations; anti-Semitism; economic consequences of Sino-Soviet conflict; USSR–European Community relations.
Principal Correspondents: Dean Rusk; Richard Funkhouser; Foy David Kohler; Yevgeny Yevtushenko; Thomas Finletter; Walter Stoessel; George Ball; Thomas L. Hughes.
0221 October 1–18, 1963. Major Topics: USSR foreign economic relations; U.S.-USSR cultural exchanges;
FRG-USSR trade relations; Sino-Soviet conflict; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; USSR economy; USSR–Middle East relations; Jewish emigration from USSR; USSR space programs; Chinese failure as ally to USSR in Cuban missile crisis; Mao Tse-tung; USSR gold position; Marxism-Leninism; international Communist movement.
Principal Correspondents: Walter Stoessel; Foy David Kohler; Thomas L. Hughes; Frederick G. Dutton; Walworth Barbour; James Harvey.
0418 Czisek/Makinen/Egerov Exchange [October 30, 1962–October 28, 1963]. Major Topics: Andrei Gromyko; exchange of USSR spies for U.S. citizens imprisoned
in USSR; Walter Ciszek; Marvin Makinen; Mikhail Smirnovsky. Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; David Klein; Dean Rusk; Walter
Stoessel.
0451 January 26–October 14, 1963. Major Topics: USSR trawlers; treatment of USSR fishing vessels; Convention on the
Territorial Sea and the Contiguous Zone; USSR trawlers off the Florida coast; Paul Rogers; Admiral E. J. Roland.
Principal Correspondents: Gordon Chase; McGeorge Bundy; Alexis Johnson.
0567 October 19–31, 1963. Major Topics: Sino-Soviet conflict; USSR détente policy; difference in U.S. treatment
of USSR and PRC; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; USSR policy on UN; USSR views on Latin America; U.S.-USSR trade relations; Nikita Khrushchev and USSR space program; Khrushchev on foreign relations and the economy; Khrushchev and Andrei Gromyko on negotiations with U.S.; disarmament; Jewish emigration from USSR; USSR trade relations with western nations; prospects for an international Communist conference.
Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; Thomas L. Hughes; Dean Rusk; Malcolm Toon; George Ball; Ray Cline; Walter Stoessel; Benjamin Read; Konrad Adenauer.
0632 Civil Air Agreement with USSR, January–October 1963 and undated. Major Topics: U.S. actions to prevent USSR civil aviation penetration of less
developed countries; bilateral civil air transport relations between U.S. and Sino-Soviet bloc; advantages to U.S. of air service to USSR bloc; advantages to USSR of air services to U.S.; program for countering USSR air penetration of Latin America; USSR aviation efforts in Africa; U.S. Civil Aviation Program in Africa; Joint Chiefs of Staff; U.S.-USSR Civil Air Agreement; Mikhail Smirnovsky; Andrei Gromyko.
Frame No.
17
Principal Correspondents: Dean Rusk; Griffith Johnson; Walter Stoessel; David Klein.
0736 Zawacki Correspondence (Open Cities Correspondence), May–October 1963. Major Topics: “Open cities” plan; U.S.–Eastern Europe tourism exchange; domestic
support for “open cities” plan. Principal Correspondents: David Klein; Edmund Zawacki; Jack Olsen; Harry Jackim.
0774 November 1–13, 1963. Major Topics: PRC anti-Marxist line; National Liberation Movement; Trotskyism;
international Communist movement; Moon-Shot proposal; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; U.S.-USSR trade relations; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; Berlin question; USSR agriculture; Vietnam question; U.S. treatment of Sino-Soviet conflict; USSR labor unions.
Principal Correspondents: Walter Stoessel; Foy David Kohler; Thomas L. Hughes; Zbigniew Brzezinski; V. V. Grishin.
0983 November 14–22, 1963. Major Topics: Loans to USSR government; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; USSR
economic problems; USSR conscription process; USSR agriculture; Sino-Soviet conflict; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty.
Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; George Denney; W. W. Rostow.
Reel 9 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics cont.
Subjects
0001 Khrushchev Correspondence, January–October 1961. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; space exploration; Cuba; Geneva
negotiations; German question; Laos; Souvanna Phouma. Principal Correspondents: Nikita Khrushchev; John F. Kennedy.
0106 Khrushchev Correspondence, January 20–October 16, 1961. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; Geneva negotiations; Nuclear Test
Ban Treaty; Cuba; Llewellyn E. Thompson; Laos; disarmament; German question.
Principal Correspondent: Nikita Khrushchev.
0158 Khrushchev Correspondence, November–December 1961. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; German question; Laos; Vietnam. Principal Correspondents: John F. Kennedy; Nikita Khrushchev.
0228 Khrushchev Correspondence, November 9–December 31, 1961. Major Topics: German question; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; U.S. military forces
in West Berlin; Laos; Souvanna Phouma; Boun Oum group; Ngo Dinh Diem; Vietnam.
Principal Correspondents: Nikita Khrushchev; John F. Kennedy.
0289 Khrushchev Correspondence, January 1–February 14, 1962. Major Topics: Disarmament; Geneva negotiations; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations;
18-Nation Disarmament Committee; Harold Macmillan. Principal Correspondents: John F. Kennedy; Nikita Khrushchev.
Frame No.
18
0348 Khrushchev Correspondence, January 18–February 14, 1962. Major Topics: German question; possible joint statement from John F. Kennedy and
UK to Nikita Khrushchev; disarmament; Harold Macmillan suggestions for reply to Khrushchev.
Principal Correspondents: Nikita Khrushchev; John F. Kennedy; Harold Macmillan.
0435 Khrushchev Correspondence, February 15–24, 1962. Major Topics: German question; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations. Principal Correspondent: John F. Kennedy.
0477 Khrushchev Correspondence, February 15–28, 1962. Major Topics: German question; disarmament; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; U.S.-
USSR cooperation on space exploration; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. Principal Correspondents: John F. Kennedy; Nikita Khrushchev.
0567 Khrushchev Correspondence, March 3–10, 1962. Major Topics: John F. Kennedy; Nikita Khrushchev. Principal Correspondent: Dean Rusk.
0582 Khrushchev Correspondence, March 1–19, 1962. Major Topics: Disarmament; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; Nuclear Test Ban
Treaty; Geneva negotiations; U.S. quarantine on USSR ships; U.S.-USSR cooperation on space exploration; media image of John F. Kennedy–Nikita Khrushchev correspondence; German question; German peace proposal.
Principal Correspondents: Nikita Khrushchev; John F. Kennedy; C. V. Clifton.
0698 Khrushchev Correspondence, March 20–May 31, 1962. Major Topics: Nuclear tests; German question; U.S.-UK-USSR diplomatic relations;
espionage; disarmament; Laos. Principal Correspondents: John F. Kennedy; Nikita Khrushchev; Roger Hilsman.
0761 Khrushchev Correspondence, March 20–May 31, 1962. Major Topic: U.S.-USSR cooperation on space program. Principal Correspondent: Nikita Khrushchev.
0786 Khrushchev Correspondence, June 5–September 5, 1962. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; German question; Laos; nuclear
testing. Principal Correspondents: John F. Kennedy; Nikita Khrushchev; Harold Macmillan.
0834 Khrushchev Correspondence, June 1–September 14, 1962. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; Laos; Souvanna Phouma; German
question; German peace proposal. Principal Correspondents: John F. Kennedy; Nikita Khrushchev.
0890 Khrushchev Correspondence, September 15–October 31, 1962. Major Topics: Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; USSR intentions on Berlin; military reserves;
Cuban missile crisis. Principal Correspondents: Nikita Khrushchev; Roger Hilsman; John F. Kennedy.
0931 Khrushchev Correspondence, November 28–December 30, 1962. Major Topics: UK-USSR diplomatic relations; Cuban missile crisis; Nuclear Test Ban
Treaty; German question; German peace proposal; nuclear inspections. Principal Correspondents: Nikita Khrushchev; John F. Kennedy.
Frame No.
19
0984 Khrushchev Correspondence, November–December 1962. Major Topics: Nuclear testing; Cuban missile crisis; U.S. military forces in Berlin;
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; nuclear inspections. Principal Correspondents: John F. Kennedy; Nikita Khrushchev.
Reel 10 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics cont.
Subjects cont.
0001 Khrushchev Correspondence, October 22–27, 1962. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; Cuban missile crisis; USSR
withdrawal of weapons from Cuba; threat of war; quarantine of USSR ships; UN proposal; reasons for USSR involvement in Cuba; disarmament; espionage; foreign radio and press reaction to Khrushchev’s October 28 letter on dismantling Cuban missile bases; restoration of rights of PRC in UN.
Principal Correspondents: Nikita Khrushchev; John F. Kennedy.
0193 Khrushchev Correspondence (Cuba), October 26–30, 1962. Major Topics: Cuban missile crisis; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; U.S. quarantine
of USSR ships; threat of nuclear war; armaments in Cuba; armaments in Turkey. Principal Correspondents: Dean Rusk; Foy David Kohler; Nikita Khrushchev; John F.
Kennedy.
0285 Khrushchev Correspondence (Cuba), November 3–6, 1962, and November 15, 1962.
Major Topics: Cuban missile crisis; U.S. quarantine of USSR ships; armaments in Cuba; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; U.S. commitment to noninvasion of Cuba; UN involvement in Cuban missile crisis; disarmament.
Principal Correspondents: John F. Kennedy; Nikita Khrushchev.
0418 Khrushchev Correspondence (Cuba), November 20–December 14, 1962. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; Cuban missile crisis; armaments in
Cuba; U.S. quarantine of USSR ships; UN involvement in Cuban missile crisis; USSR removal of missiles from Cuba; German question.
Principal Correspondents: Nikita Khrushchev; John F. Kennedy.
0510 Khrushchev Correspondence, January 14–April 11, 1963. Major Topics: Laos; Geneva agreements; Democratic Republic of Vietnam; Chiang
Kai-shek; Souvanna Phouma; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; nuclear weapons inspections; U.S. quarantine of USSR ships; Cuban missile crisis; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty.
Principal Correspondents: Nikita Khrushchev; W. Averell Harriman; McGeorge Bundy; Llewellyn E. Thompson; John F. Kennedy.
0588 Khrushchev Correspondence, January 4–April 11, 1963. Major Topics: Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; nuclear weapons inspections; nuclear
proliferation; Laos; Geneva agreements; Democratic Republic of Vietnam; Chiang Kai-shek; Souvanna Phouma; W. Averell Harriman.
Principal Correspondents: Nikita Khrushchev; W. Averell Harriman.
Frame No.
20
0627 Khrushchev Correspondence, April 15–May 8, 1963. Major Topics: Disarmament; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; nuclear weapons inspections;
U.S.-UK-USSR diplomatic relations; Laos; USSR withdrawal of troops from Cuba; German question.
Principal Correspondents: John F. Kennedy; Harold Macmillan; Foy David Kohler; W. Averell Harriman; Dean Rusk; Nikita Khrushchev.
0754 Khrushchev Correspondence, May 13–31, 1963. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; nuclear weapons inspections; Nuclear
Test Ban Treaty; U.S.-UK nuclear test ban proposal. Principal Correspondents: Nikita Khrushchev; John F. Kennedy; Dean Rusk; William
C. Foster; Harold Macmillan.
0824 Khrushchev Correspondence, June 7–December 9, 1963. Major Topics: Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; espionage;
nuclear weapons inspections. Principal Correspondents: Pierre Salinger; Nikita Khrushchev; John F. Kennedy;
Dean Rusk.
0957 Dobrynin Talks (Bowles), Tabs 1–3, Miscellaneous and Extra Copies, October 31, 1962–May 13, 1963.
Major Topics: Cuban missile crisis; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; spread of world communism; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; nuclear proliferation; Sino-Indian war; Laos.
Principal Correspondent: Chester Bowles.
0972 Dobrynin Talks (Bundy), June 14, 1962–May 7, 1963. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; USSR military forces in Cuba;
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; PRC and nuclear weapons; Laos. Principal Correspondent: McGeorge Bundy.
0977 Dobrynin Talks (Rusk), Vol. I. [Documents withdrawn.]
Reel 11 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics cont.
Subjects cont.
0001 Dobrynin Talks (Rusk), April 16, 1962–November 5, 1963. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; German question; Andrei Gromyko;
Laos; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; U.S. military forces in West Berlin; disarmament; USSR proposal on German question; COMECON; nonproliferation of nuclear weapons; Cuban missile crisis.
Principal Correspondent: Dean Rusk.
0185 Dobrynin Talks (Rusk), Miscellaneous and Extra Copies, April 17, 1962–April 23, 1963.
Major Topics: U.S.-USSR cultural exchanges; Western troops in West Berlin; Berlin crisis; Andrei Gromyko; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; USSR intentions in Berlin crisis; possible use of nuclear force by U.S. against USSR; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; COMECON; nonproliferation of nuclear weapons.
Principal Correspondents: Dean Rusk; Foy David Kohler; Martin J. Hillenbrand.
Frame No.
21
0325 Dobrynin Talks (Rusk), Cables, April 15, 1962–March 27, 1963. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; German and Berlin question; Western
forces in Berlin; Dobrynin proposal for West Berlin; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; disarmament; nonproliferation of nuclear weapons.
Principal Correspondents: Dean Rusk; Thomas Finletter; George Ball.
0396 Dobrynin Talks (Thompson), April 6, 1962–May 20, 1963. Major Topics: USSR interpretation of U.S. policy; disarmament; Berlin question;
Cuban missile crisis; U.S. quarantine of USSR ships; nuclear tests; nuclear weapons inspections; USSR withdrawal of troops from Cuba; Laos; nuclear proliferation.
Principal Correspondents: Llewellyn E. Thompson; Dean Rusk.
0484 Dobrynin Talks (Thompson), Miscellaneous and Extra Copies, August 23–November 21, 1963.
Major Topics: USSR foreign policy; U.S. actions in Cuba; sale of wheat in USSR; radio broadcast in USSR; U.S.-USSR trade relations; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; Berlin question.
Principal Correspondents: Llewellyn E. Thompson; George Ball.
0560 Dobrynin Talks (Foster, Kohler), April 23, 1962–September 11, 1963. Major Topics: Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; Berlin question; Sino-Soviet conflict. Principal Correspondents: William C. Foster; Foy David Kohler.
0587 Dobrynin Talks (Sorensen, Stevenson, Tyler), August 23, 1962–September 20, 1963.
Major Topics: Berlin question; Cuba; nuclear testing; U.S.-USSR trade relations. Principal Correspondent: Theodore C. Sorensen.
0611 Dobrynin Talks (Rostow, Salinger, Schlesinger), May 1, 1962–October 31, 1963. Major Topics: Cuba; arms control and disarmament; U.S.-USSR trade relations;
Berlin question. Principal Correspondents: W. W. Rostow; Pierre Salinger.
0628 Dobrynin Talks (Udall, Weaver, General), August 2, 1962–November 15, 1963.
0640 Dobrynin Talks (Ball), July 6, 1962–October 23, 1963. Major Topics: U.S. travel restrictions; Berlin question; U.S. wheat sales in USSR. Principal Correspondents: George Ball; Dean Rusk.
0667 Dobrynin Talks (Bundy), June 14, 1962–May 7, 1963. Major Topics: Cuba; China; Laos. Principal Correspondent: McGeorge Bundy.
0687 Dobrynin Talks (Bowles), October 13, 1962–May 13, 1963. Major Topics: Cuba; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; German question; Afghanistan; China;
U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; India. Principal Correspondent: Chester Bowles.
0763 Dobrynin Talks (The President), March 30, 1962–August 26, 1963. Major Topics: Berlin question; nuclear testing; Laos; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations;
Cuba.
Frame No.
22
0815 Gromyko Talks (Thompson/Berlin Negotiations), December 24, 1961–January 26, 1962.
Major Topics: Berlin question; German border negotiations; GDR sovereignty; removal of military personnel in West Berlin.
Principal Correspondents: Llewellyn E. Thompson; Thomas Finletter; Henry Owen; Dean Rusk.
Reel 12 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics cont.
Subjects cont.
0001 Gromyko Talks (Thompson/Berlin Negotiations), January 18–March 7, 1962. Major Topics: Removal of military personnel in West Berlin; Free City proposal; U.S.-
USSR diplomatic relations; International Access Authority; disarmament. Principal Correspondents: Dean Rusk; Llewellyn E. Thompson; George Ball.
0213 Gromyko Talks (Thompson/Berlin Negotiations), Drafts and Miscellaneous, December 19, 1961–March 1, 1962, and undated.
Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; France position; Free City proposal; International Access Authority; removal of military personnel in West Berlin.
Principal Correspondents: M. J. Hillenbrand; Dean Rusk.
0369 Gromyko Talks (Rusk), March 18, 1961–September 30, 1961. Major Topics: Laos; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; disarmament; Berlin crisis; Free
City proposal. Principal Correspondents: Charles Bohlen; Dean Rusk.
0455 Gromyko Talks (Rusk), March 11–27, 1962. Major Topics: Berlin crisis; disarmament; GDR sovereignty; Free City proposal. Principal Correspondent: Dean Rusk.
0543 Gromyko Talks (Rusk), July 21–October 18, 1962. Major Topics: Berlin crisis; Free City proposal; disarmament; removal of military
personnel in West Berlin; Laos; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; GDR sovereignty; German border conflict; German unification; International Access Authority.
Principal Correspondents: Roger Wellington Tubby; Dean Rusk.
0667 Gromyko Talks (Rusk), Miscellaneous and Extra Copies, September 18–October 3, 1961.
Major Topics: Berlin crisis; disarmament; German border conflict; Free City proposal; disarmament; German unification; Laos; GDR sovereignty.
Principal Correspondent: Dean Rusk.
0832 Gromyko Talks (Rusk), Cables, March 13–October 24, 1962. Major Topics: Berlin crisis; GDR sovereignty; disarmament; International Access
Authority; Free City proposal; German unification; removal of military personnel in West Berlin.
Principal Correspondent: Dean Rusk.
Frame No.
23
0974 Gromyko Talks (Rusk), August 5–7, 1963. Major Topics: Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; Berlin crisis; disarmament; removal of
military personnel in West Berlin. Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; Dean Rusk.
Reel 13 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics cont.
Subjects cont.
0001 Gromyko Talks (Rusk), August 8–October 1, 1963. Major Topics: Disarmament; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty. Principal Correspondent: Dean Rusk.
0047 Gromyko Talks (Rusk), October 2, 1963. Major Topics: Laos; Berlin crisis. Principal Correspondent: Dean Rusk.
0080 Gromyko Talks (Rusk), October 3–10, 1963. Major Topics: Disarmament; U.S.-USSR trade relations; military expenditures; Non-
Aggression Pact; Laos. Principal Correspondents: Dean Rusk; William R. Tyler.
0141 Gromyko Talks (President). Major Topics: Laos; U.S.-USSR relations; Berlin crisis; Free City proposal; Cuba;
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; disarmament; U.S.-USSR trade relations; Non-Aggression Pact; military expenditures.
Principal Correspondents: John F. Kennedy; Chester Bowles; Dean Rusk; Llewellyn E. Thompson.
0343 Gromyko Talks (Thompson), April 1961–July 1962. Major Topics: Cuba; Laos; Berlin crisis. Principal Correspondent: Llewellyn E. Thompson.
0363 Gromyko Talks (Kohler), Miscellaneous and Extra Copies, July 1962–November 1963.
Major Topics: Berlin crisis; Cuba; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; Laos; Non-Aggression Pact.
Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; Dean Rusk.
0437 Gromyko Talks (Lord Home), September 1961–August 1962. Major Topics: Berlin crisis; Free City proposal; Laos; Non-Aggression Pact. Principal Correspondent: Dean Rusk.
0475 Gromyko Talks (McCloy), October 1, 1961. Major Topic: Disarmament.
0482 Gromyko Talks (Stevenson), 1961. Major Topic: Disarmament. Principal Correspondent: Adlai E. Stevenson.
0493 Gromyko Talks (Foster) and Miscellaneous and Extra Copies, October 17, 1962. Major Topic: Disarmament. Principal Correspondent: William C. Foster.
Frame No.
24
0507 Gromyko Talks (Harriman) and Miscellaneous and Extra Copies, April–July 1963. Major Topics: Laos; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; Non-Aggression Pact; Berlin crisis. Principal Correspondents: W. Averell Harriman; Foy David Kohler.
0626 Khrushchev/Spaak Talks, July 1963, June 29–July 19, 1963. Major Topics: Neutralized zone in Eastern Europe; disarmament; Nuclear Test Ban
Treaty; Non-Aggression Pact; Berlin crisis. Principal Correspondent: Thomas L. Hughes.
0672 Khrushchev Talks, Vol. I, President John F. Kennedy, Subfolder: Vienna Meeting, June 3–4, 1961.
Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; Laos; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; disarmament; Berlin crisis; spread of communism; Iran; Africa; Poland.
Principal Correspondent: Dean Rusk.
0762 Khrushchev Talks (Harriman), April–July 1963. Major Topics: Laos; Cuba; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; Berlin crisis; U.S.-USSR
diplomatic relations; Non-Aggression Pact; military expenditures; disarmament; Sino-Soviet relations.
Principal Correspondents: W. Averell Harriman; Foy David Kohler.
0915 Khrushchev Talks (British Ambassador Roberts & Candadian Ambassador Smith), July 5–December 11, 1962.
Major Topics: Berlin crisis; Cuba; Laos; Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; disarmament; Non-Aggression Pact; UN; Free City proposal.
Principal Correspondents: Dean Rusk; David Bruce; Foy David Kohler.
Reel 14 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics cont.
Subjects cont.
0001 Khrushchev Talks (Thompson), January 1961–July 1962. Major Topics: Spread of communism; Laos; disarmament; Congo; Berlin crisis;
Cuba. Principal Correspondent: Llewellyn E. Thompson.
0078 Khrushchev Talks (Thompson), Miscellaneous and Extra Copies. Major Topics: Berlin crisis; disarmament; Laos; Congo. Principal Correspondents: Llewellyn E. Thompson; William Blair.
0117 Khrushchev Talks (Kohler), October 16, 1962–April 24, 1963, and Miscellaneous. Major Topics: Cuba; military facility inspections; Berlin crisis; disarmament; Nuclear
Test Ban Treaty; U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations. Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; Dean Rusk.
0202 Khrushchev Talks (Rusk), August 5–30, 1963, and Miscellaneous. Major Topics: Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; Berlin crisis; Non-Aggression Pact; U.S.-
USSR trade relations; Laos. Principal Correspondent: Dean Rusk.
0252 Khrushchev Talks (Norman Cousins, Gardiner Cowles), April 20–22, 1962. Major Topics: Nuclear Test Ban Treaty; Sino-Soviet conflict; Berlin crisis. Principal Correspondents: Dean Rusk; Llewellyn E. Thompson.
Frame No.
25
0277 Khrushchev Talks (Freeman and Gandhi/Kabul), July 1963. Major Topics: USSR agriculture; USSR-India relations. Principal Correspondents: Orville L. Freeman; Nikita Khrushchev; Indira Gandhi.
0308 Khrushchev Talks (McCloy, Pietra interview), July 27, 1961–April 25, 1963. Major Topics: Cuba; disarmament; Sino-Soviet relations; USSR agriculture; Berlin
crisis; Pope John XXIII; Western Communists. Principal Correspondents: I. Pietra; Nikita Khrushchev.
0337 Khrushchev Talks (Groepper/Trevelayan Talks, Kreisky), July 10, 1962–March 11, 1963.
Major Topics: Berlin crisis; nuclear testing. Principal Correspondent: Foy David Kohler.
0350 Khrushchev Talks (Pitterman, Paul Reynaud), September 19–20, 1962.
0356 Khrushchev Talks (Udall, Harold Wilson). Major Topics: Space program; Berlin crisis; Cuba; communism; succession of Nikita
Khrushchev; disarmament. Principal Correspondents: Edward Crankshaw; William R. Tyler; Foy David Kohler.
0420 Khrushchev Conversations with American Leaders, 1955–1961. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR political and economic relations; colonialism; U.S.-USSR
diplomatic relations; Berlin crisis; Sino-Soviet conflict; USSR agriculture; propaganda; disarmament; U.S.-USSR trade relations; Laos; Cuba; Iran.
Principal Correspondents: Nikita Khrushchev; Adlai E. Stevenson; Richard H. Davis; Llewellyn E. Thompson; Herbert Humphrey; Robert Owen; John F. Kennedy; Walter Lippmann.
0574 Kuznetsov Talks (Thompson, Kohler, Vakil, Dean, Cavaletti, Harriman, and Foster), January 1961–June 1963.
Major Topics: Laos; disarmament; Berlin crisis; Cuba; nuclear testing. Principal Correspondents: Llewellyn E. Thompson; Foy David Kohler; Dean Rusk;
Adlai E. Stevenson.
0622 Kuznetsov Talks (Stevenson), October 1962–January 1963. Major Topics: Disarmament; Cuban missile crisis; military facility inspections;
espionage; U.S. quarantine of USSR ships. Principal Correspondent: Adlai E. Stevenson.
0807 Kuznetsov Talks (Rusk, The President, McCloy) and Miscellaneous and Extra Copies, November 1962–January 1963.
Major Topics: U.S.-USSR trade relations; nuclear testing; Berlin crisis; U.S.-USSR relations; Cuban missile crisis; military facility inspections; espionage; disarmament.
Principal Correspondents: Dean Rusk; Adlai E. Stevenson; George Ball; V. Kuznetsov.
0949 Khrushchev Speeches and Commentary, January 6, 1961. Major Topics: Foreign Broadcast Information Service; international Communist
movement; Marxism-Leninism; colonialism; war. Principal Correspondent: Charles Bohlen.
Frame No.
26
Reel 15 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics cont.
Subjects cont.
0001 Khrushchev Speeches and Commentary, June–September 1961. Major Topics: Disarmament; Congo; nuclear testing; Berlin crisis; Laos; World War II;
GDR; U.S.-USSR economic relations; USSR agriculture. Principal Correspondent: Llewellyn E. Thompson.
0113 Khrushchev Speeches and Commentary, October 1961–August 1962. Major Topics: Berlin crisis; U.S.-USSR economic relations; USSR-Albania relations;
disarmament; USSR-Bulgaria relations; Laos; legacy of Lenin; imperialism; U.S.-USSR-Africa relations.
Principal Correspondents: Roger Hilsman; Otto Gothe; John McSweeny; George Ball; Llewellyn E. Thompson.
0235 Khrushchev Speeches and Commentary, December 12, 1962. Major Topics: Foreign Broadcast Information Service; USSR agriculture;
disarmament; imperialism; USSR-Cuba relations; Berlin crisis; Sino-Soviet relations; Sino-Indian relations; USSR-Albania relations.
Principal Correspondent: John McSweeny.
0293 Khrushchev Speeches and Commentary, January 16, 1963. Major Topics: Sino-Soviet conflict; Berlin crisis; imperialism; Cuba; legacy of Lenin;
spread of communism; USSR economy; imperialism; USSR-Albania relations. Principal Correspondent: David Klein.
0415 Khrushchev Speeches and Commentary, February 27–July 2, 1963. Major Topics: USSR economy; disarmament; Berlin crisis; imperialism; USSR-Cuba
relations; U.S.-Cuba relations; Foreign Broadcast Information Service; CPSU; space program; legacy of Lenin; nuclear testing; military facility inspections; FRG-GDR economic relations.
Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; George C. Denney.
0605 Khrushchev Speeches and Commentary, July 19, 1963, and September 26, 1963. Major Topics: Berlin crisis; USSR-Hungary relations; Janos Kadar; nuclear testing;
disarmament; imperialism; legacy of Lenin; Foreign Broadcast Information Service; USSR agriculture.
Principal Correspondents: Llewellyn E. Thompson; Foy David Kohler; Thomas L. Hughes.
0774 Khrushchev Speeches and Commentary, November 1962. Major Topics: Anastas I. Mikoyan; U.S.-USSR relations on Cuba and Laos; nuclear
testing; nonaggression pact; Berlin crisis; UN; military facility inspections; economic blockade of Cuba.
Principal Correspondent: Llewellyn E. Thompson.
0865 Mikoyan Talks (The President and Rusk), Miscellaneous and Extra Copies, November 1962.
Major Topics: Nuclear testing; nonaggression pact; Berlin crisis; U.S.-USSR relations on Cuba and Laos; Anastas I. Mikoyan; Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam).
Principal Correspondents: Llewellyn E. Thompson; W. W. Rostow; Dean Rusk; McGeorge Bundy.
Frame No.
27
Reel 16 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics cont.
Subjects cont.
0001 Sino-Soviet Conflict, June–December 1960. Major Topics: CPSU-CCP relations; views on Leninism; imperialism; question of war;
disarmament; CIA; détente with U.S.; international Communist movement; Bucharest debates; 20th CPSU Congress.
0130 Sino-Soviet Conflict, January–February 1961. Major Topics: 20th CPSU Congress; views on Leninism; imperialism; views on war;
peaceful coexistence. Principal Correspondent: Mario Alves de Sousa Vieira.
0152 President’s Interview with Aleskey Adzhubei, November 25, 1961, November 15–27, 1961.
Major Topics: Berlin crisis; disarmament; colonialism; CPSU program; communism; common bonds between U.S.-USSR; Sino-Soviet conflict.
Principal Correspondents: Llewellyn E. Thompson; Raymond Aron.
0298 President’s Interview with Aleskey Adzhubei, November 25, 1961, November 28, 1961–January 16, 1962.
Major Topics: Foreign media reaction; Foreign Broadcast Information Service; CIA. Principal Correspondent: Llewellyn E. Thompson.
0371 Adzhubei Visit, January 30–February 1, 1962, January 1962–December 1963. Major Topics: Berlin crisis; Cuba; Laos; disarmament; U.S.-USSR cultural
exchanges. Principal Correspondents: Alesky Adzhubei; McGeorge Bundy; Pierre Salinger.
0452 Fidel Castro’s Trip to the USSR, April–June 1963, April 17–June 9, 1963. Major Topics: Effect of Castro visit on Sino-Soviet conflict; USSR military and
economic assistance to Cuba; CPSU; U.S.-Cuba relations; imperialism; disarmament; legacy of Lenin; USSR economy; USSR-Cuba relations on Latin America.
Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; Mose Harvey; Art McCafferty; Nikita Khrushchev; Fidel Castro; Bromley Smith.
0646 Fidel Castro’s Trip to the USSR, April–June 1963, June 10–July 13, 1963. Major Topics: Cuba–Latin America relations; USSR-Cuba military and economic
relations; media reaction. Principal Correspondent: Dean Rusk.
0742 USSR Accusations Against General Heusinger, December 1961–August 1962. Major Topic: NATO. Principal Correspondents: Dean Rusk; Adlai E. Stevenson.
0770 RB-47 Airmen Flyers, January–February 1961. Major Topic: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations. Principal Correspondents: Dean Rusk; Llewellyn E. Thompson.
0802 US/USSR Television Exchange Broadcast, March 8, 1962, February–March 1962. Major Topic: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations. Principal Correspondent: Llewellyn E. Thompson.
Frame No.
28
0814 Barghoorn Detention, Messages, November 15–26, 1963. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; espionage. Principal Correspondents: Walter Stoessel; George Ball.
0853 Barghoorn Detention, Miscellaneous, November 12–14, 1963. Major Topics: Espionage; U.S.-USSR relations. Principal Correspondents: Foy David Kohler; Dean Rusk.
0886 Barghoorn Detention, Miscellaneous, November 12–15, 1963. Principal Correspondent: George Denney.
0911 Barghoorn Detention, Miscellaneous, November 16–21, 1963.
0921 USSR & Satellites—Grain Sales, September 17–18, 1963. Major Topic: USSR purchase of Canadian wheat. Principal Correspondent: Ray Cline.
Reel 17 Union of Soviet Socialist Republics cont.
Subjects cont.
0001 USSR & Satellites—Grain Sales, September 19–25, 1963. Major Topic: Cuba. Principal Correspondent: Thomas L. Hughes.
0025 USSR & Satellites—Grain Sales, Response to Sorensen Questions, General & Agriculture, September 24, 1963.
Major Topics: Agricultural exports to USSR; international crop conditions.
0077 USSR & Satellites—Grain Sales, Response to Sorensen Questions, CIA, September 24, 1963.
Major Topic: International crop conditions.
0092 USSR & Satellites—Grain Sales, Response to Sorensen Questions, Commerce, Part I, September 24, 1963.
Major Topic: Export licenses to Eastern Europe.
0169 USSR & Satellites—Grain Sales, Response to Sorensen Questions, Commerce, Part II, & Justice, September 24, 1963.
Major Topics: Agricultural exports to USSR; Agricultural Act of 1961; Battle Act.
0204 USSR & Satellites—Grain Sales, Response to Sorensen Questions, State, September 21, 1963.
Major Topics: Agricultural exports to USSR; expansion of trade with USSR and Eastern Europe.
Principal Correspondents: Benjamin Read; Thomas L. Hughes; Llewellyn E. Thompson.
0293 USSR & Satellites—Grain Sales, September 26–30, 1963. Major Topics: USSR-Cuba-Canada agricultural trade; U.S.-USSR agreement on
grain sales. Principal Correspondents: Orville L. Freeman; Thomas L. Hughes; Benjamin Read;
Frederick Dutton.
Frame No.
29
0328 USSR & Satellites—Grain Sales, October 1, 1963. Major Topics: USSR wheat purchases; Nikita Khrushchev. Principal Correspondent: Thomas L. Hughes.
0352 USSR & Satellites—Grain Sales, October 2–3, 1963. Major Topic: Agricultural exports to USSR. Principal Correspondents: Thomas L. Hughes; Theodore Sorenson; Douglas Dillon.
0381 USSR & Satellites—Grain Sales, October 4–8, 1963. Major Topics: USSR-Canada trade relations; USSR economic problems; export
licenses in Eastern Europe. Principal Correspondents: Thomas L. Hughes; George Ball.
0415 USSR & Satellites—Grain Sales, October 9–14, 1963. Major Topic: Agricultural exports to USSR. Principal Correspondents: John Whitman; John F. Kennedy; Richard Funkhouser;
Dean Rusk.
0450 USSR & Satellites—Grain Sales, Letter to Senate & House, October 10, 1963. Major Topics: Agricultural exports to USSR; Agricultural Act of 1961; Battle Act. Principal Correspondents: John F. Kennedy; Lyndon B. Johnson; Robert F.
Kennedy.
0481 USSR & Satellites—Grain Sales, October 15–31, 1963. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR diplomatic relations; U.S.-USSR trade relations. Principal Correspondents: John F. Kennedy; George Ball.
0505 USSR & Satellites—Grain Sales, November 1–14, 1963. Major Topics: USSR grain problem; USSR agricultural purchases. Principal Correspondent: George Denney.
0536 USSR & Satellites—Grain Sales, November 15–19, 1963. Major Topics: Agricultural exports to USSR; Export-Import Bank. Principal Correspondents: Benjamin Read; Dean Rusk.
0562 USSR & Satellites—Grain Sales, November 20–December 16, 1963. Major Topics: Export-Import Bank; George Ball; Segey Borisov. Principal Correspondent: Luther H. Hodges.
0583 USSR & Satellites—Grain Sales, George Ball Statement, November 21, 1963. Major Topic: Export-Import Bank. Principal Correspondents: George Ball; Dean Rusk; Walter Saver.
Yugoslavia General
0617 January–August 1961. Major Topics: U.S.-Yugoslavia diplomatic relations; Josip Broz Tito; Africa;
Yugoslavia-USSR relations; U.S. press in Yugoslavia; Belgrade Conference; Brazil; Berlin question; Koca Popovic; Captive Nations Resolution; nuclear weapons; Yugoslavia foreign relations; Yugoslavia economic relations; Albania.
Principal Correspondents: Dean Rusk; George Kennan.
Frame No.
30
0755 September–October 1961. Major Topics: U.S.-Yugoslavia economic relations; Koca Popovic; Belgrade
Conference; Josip Broz Tito; U.S.-Yugoslavia diplomatic relations; Alex Bebler; Berlin question; Yugoslavia-USSR relations; Africa; disarmament; U.S. military aid for Yugoslavia; export licenses for Yugoslavia; U.S.-Yugoslavia trade relations.
Principal Correspondents: W. W. Rostow; George Kennan; Dean Rusk.
0871 November–December 1961 and undated (1 of 2). Major Topics: 22nd Congress of CPSU; Sino-Soviet conflict; Josip Broz Tito;
Cambodia; Yugoslavia-FRG relations; Lazo Vracaric; U.S.-Yugoslavia diplomatic relations; U.S. military aid for Yugoslavia; PL 480; Yugoslavia–Eastern Europe relations; Yugoslavia-Albania relations; U.S.-Yugoslavia trade relations.
Principal Correspondents: George Kennan; Dean Rusk; Foy David Kohler.
Reel 18 Yugoslavia cont.
General cont.
0001 November–December 1961 and undated (2 of 2). Major Topics: Exports to Yugoslavia and Poland; Josip Broz Tito; Yugoslavia-FRG
relations; U.S.-Yugoslavia economic relations; Yugoslavia-USSR relations; Lazo Vracaric; Yugoslavia-Turkey relations; Belgrade Conferences.
Principal Correspondents: Dean Rusk; W. W. Rostow; George Kennan; Foy David Kohler; George Ball.
0139 January 1–April 15, 1962. Major Topics: PL 480; Yugoslavia-USSR relations; U.S.-Yugoslavia relations; U.S.
assistance for Yugoslavia; Yugoslavia-Cuba relations; Josip Broz Tito; Berlin Crisis; Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
Principal Correspondents: George Kennan; Dean Rusk; Abram Chayes; George Ball; Alexis Johnson.
0307 April 16–May 3, 1962. Major Topics: Yugoslavia-USSR relations; U.S. assistance for Yugoslavia;
Yugoslavia-Italy relations; U.S.-Yugoslavia diplomatic relations; Yugoslavia-Greece relations; Josip Broz Tito; U.S. trade relations with Yugoslavia and Poland; atomic energy; Yugoslavia-Brazil relations; Koca Popovic.
Principal Correspondents: George Kennan; Dean Rusk; Abram Chayes; George Ball; Alexis Johnson.
0481 June–July 1962. Major Topics: U.S. aid for Yugoslavia; Yugoslavia economic relations; Koca Popovic;
U.S.-Yugoslavia diplomatic relations; Josip Broz Tito; disarmament; agricultural exports to Yugoslavia; William Proxmire.
Principal Correspondents: William Brubeck; Dean Rusk; George Kennan; William Broderick.
Frame No.
31
0597 August–September 1962. Major Topics: Josip Broz Tito; U.S.-Yugoslavia diplomatic relations; PL 480; Allan
Angote; Yugoslavia internal affairs; Yugoslavia-USSR relations; immigration; Yugoslavia-FRG relations; Leonid Brezhnev.
Principal Correspondents: George Kennan; Douglas Perry; George Ball; Abram Chayes.
0715 October 1962. Major Topics: Agricultural exports to Yugoslavia; Yugoslavia-USSR relations; U.S.-
Yugoslavia economic relations; Yugoslavia-FRG relations; Josip Broz Tito; Leonid Brezhnev; Cuban missile crisis; Yugoslavia Trade Union Federation.
Principal Correspondents: George Kennan; Roger Hilsman.
0813 October 5–11, 1962. Major Topic: Most favored nation treatment. Principal Correspondent: George Kennan.
0836 November–December 1962. Major Topics: Most favored nation treatment; Veljko Milunovic; Cuban missile crisis;
PL 480; Josip Broz Tito; Yugoslavia-USSR relations; Yugoslavia-PRC relations; U.S.-Yugoslavia relations; Nikita Khrushchev.
Principal Correspondents: George Kennan; William Broderick; Richard Davis; McGeorge Bundy; Foy David Kohler.
Reel 19 Yugoslavia cont.
General cont.
0001 January 1963. Major Topics: Josip Broz Tito; Yugoslavia-USSR relations; U.S. aid for Yugoslavia;
U.S.-Yugoslavia diplomatic relations; Yugoslavia-USSR economic relations; most favored nation treatment.
Principal Correspondents: George Kennan; George Ball.
0135 February–March 1963. Major Topics: Most favored nation treatment; Josip Broz Tito; U.S.-Yugoslavia
economic relations; Todor Zhikov; U.S. aid for Yugoslavia; Yugoslavia-USSR relations; Yugoslavia-FRG relations; Koca Popovic; Sino-Soviet conflict.
Principal Correspondents: George Kennan; Eugenie Anderson; Dean Rusk; George Ball.
0274 April 1963. Major Topics: Yugoslavia-USSR relations; U.S.-Yugoslavia relations; Vladamir
Bakaric; most favored nation treatment; Yugoslavia–Latin America relations; Yugoslavia constitution; Yugoslavia-PRC relations.
Principal Correspondents: George Kennan; Josip Broz Tito; Alexander Johnpoll; Frederick Dutton.
0465 May–June 1963. Major Topics: U.S.-Yugoslavia diplomatic relations; most favored nation treatment;
U.S. aid for Yugoslavia; U.S.-Yugoslavia technology exchange; Yugoslavia-
Frame No.
32
USSR relations; U.S. citizens in Yugoslavia; Sino-Soviet conflict; Yugoslavia-Cuba relations.
Principal Correspondents: Josip Broz Tito; George Ball; George Kennan; Dean Rusk; Carl Hayden; George Spangler.
0587 July–August 1963. Major Topics: Yugoslavia economic relations; Josip Broz Tito; U.S.-Yugoslavia
relations; U.S. aid for Yugoslavia; cultural exchanges; most favored nation treatment; Yugoslavia-FRG relations; Skopje disaster relief; U.S. citizens in Yugoslavia; War Claims Act of 1948; Pugwash Conference; Nikita Khrushchev.
Principal Correspondents: George Kennan; Benjamin Read; Edward Ro; George Ball.
0705 September–November 1963. Major Topics: Yugoslavia-USSR relations; Nikita Khrushchev; U.S. citizens in
Yugoslavia; Skopje disaster relief; Milovan Djilas; Yugoslavia–Latin America relations; U.S.-Yugoslavia relations; U.S. aid for Yugoslavia.
Principal Correspondents: Adlai E. Stevenson; George Ball; Alexander Johnpoll; Thomas L. Hughes; C. M. McCoy.
Yugoslavia cont. Subjects
0813 Tito Visit, October 1963, August 22–October 15, 1963. Major Topics: U.S.-Yugoslavia relations; Yugoslavia–Latin America relations; U.S.
aid for Yugoslavia; U.S.-Yugoslavia economic relations; Skopje disaster relief. Principal Correspondent: Dean Rusk.
0922 Tito Visit, October 1963. Major Topics: U.S. aid for Yugoslavia; Skopje disaster relief; Yugoslavia–Latin
America relations; Koca Popovic; reactions to Josip Broz Tito visit. Principal Correspondents: Benjamin Read; Josip Broz Tito; John F. Kennedy;
Thomas L. Hughes.
1091 Ambassador Kennan Talks, September 9, 1961–March 3, 1963. Major Topics: U.S.-USSR relations; Berlin crisis; Yugoslavia-USSR relations. Principal Correspondent: George Kennan.
33
PRINCIPAL CORRESPONDENTS INDEX The following index is a guide to the major correspondents in this microform publication. The
first number after each entry refers to the reel, while the four-digit number following the colon refers to the frame number at which a particular file folder containing correspondence by the person begins. Hence, 6: 0422 refers to the folder that begins at Frame 0422 of Reel 6. By referring to the Reel Index, which constitutes the initial section of this guide, the researcher will find the folder title, inclusive dates, and a list of Major Topics and Principal Correspondents, listed in the order in which they appear on the film. Adams, Robert W.
6: 0422 Adenauer, Konrad
8: 0567 Adzhubei, Alesky
16: 0371 Anders, General W.
2: 0001 Anderson, Eugenie M.
1: 0092, 0172; 19: 0135 Anshuetz, Robert L.
6: 0001 Antonov, N.
5: 0663 Aron, Raymond
16: 0152 Ball, George
1: 0001, 0172, 0335, 0395, 0609; 2: 0160, 0309, 0447, 0632, 0991; 3: 0510; 4: 0148; 5: 0540; 7: 0198, 0514; 8: 0063, 0567; 11: 0325, 0484, 0640; 12: 0001; 14: 0807; 15: 0113; 16: 0814; 17: 0381, 0481, 0583; 18: 0001, 0139, 0307, 0597; 19: 0001, 0135, 0465, 0587, 0705
Barbour, Walworth 8: 0221
Battle, Lucius D. 2: 0001; 5: 0372
Battle, William C. 5: 0372
Beam, Jacob Dyneley 1: 0771; 2: 0001, 0447
Beull, William 2: 0309
Blair, William 14: 0078
Bohlen, Charles 1: 0092, 0771; 3: 0579; 5: 0001;
12: 0369; 14: 0949 Botabrook, Robert H.
3: 0548 Bowles, Chester
10: 0957; 11: 0687; 13: 0141 Broderick, William
18: 0481, 0836 Brousek, Joseph
1: 0301 Brubeck, William H.
1: 0172, 0335, 0395; 2: 0160; 5: 0540, 0663, 0771; 6: 0577; 7: 0001; 18: 0481
Bruce, David 6: 0001; 13: 0915
Brzezinski, Zbigniew 1: 0771; 6: 0001; 8: 0774
Bundy, McGeorge 3: 0193, 0579; 4: 0284; 8: 0451;
10: 0510, 0972; 11: 0667; 15: 0865; 16: 0371; 18: 0836
Burke, Timothy J. 1: 0301
Cabot, John Moors 2: 0001, 0160, 0309, 0447, 0632;
6: 0001 Castro, Fidel
16: 0452 Catherman, Terrence F.
5: 0294, 0540
34
Chase, Gordon 8: 0451
Chayes, Abram 18: 0139, 0307, 0597
Clifton, C. V. 9: 0582
Cline, Ray S. 6: 0294; 8: 0567; 16: 0921
Crankshaw, Edward 14: 0356
Crawford, William Avery 1: 0445, 0609; 2: 0855, 0934; 3: 0017
Czempinski, L.W. 2: 0309
Davis, R. T. 5: 0151, 0372; 6: 0001, 0145, 0233,
0481, 0735, 0816, 0963; 7: 0118, 0198, 0314
Davis, Richard H. 14: 0420; 18: 0836
Denney, George C. 7: 0468, 0618, 0744, 0893; 8: 0983;
15: 0415; 16: 0886; 17: 0505 Dillon, C. Douglas
1: 0279; 17: 0352 Dobi, Istvan
1: 0445 Dulles, Allen
3: 0459 Dungan, Ralph
2: 0160 Dutton, Frederick G.
8: 0221; 17: 0293; 19: 0274 Evans, Allan
5: 0444; 6: 0001 Finletter, Thomas
8: 0063; 11: 0325, 0815 Fleisher, Eric
5: 0771 Forrestal, Michael V.
6: 0481; 7: 0468 Foster, William C.
10: 0754; 11: 0560; 13: 0493 Freeman, Orville L.
14: 0277; 17: 0293 Funkhouser, Richard
5: 0444; 8: 0063; 17: 0415 Gandhi, Indira
14: 0277
Ganev, Dimitur 1: 0092
Garst, Powell 7: 0118
Garthoff, Raymond L. 3: 0309
Gothe, Otto 15: 0113
Grishin, V. V. 8: 0774
Gromyko, Andrei 4: 0979; 6: 0577
Guthrie, John C. 7: 0118
Harriman, W. Averell 3: 0227; 4: 0284; 10: 0510, 0588, 0627;
13: 0507, 0762 Harvey, James
8: 0221 Harvey, Mose
5: 0444; 7: 0468; 16: 0452 Hayden, Carl
19: 0465 Heitzman, Marian
1: 0771 Hillenbrand, Martin J.
11: 0185; 12: 0213 Hilsman, Roger
1: 0001; 2: 0160; 3: 0309; 4: 0117, 0726, 0819; 5: 0001, 0151, 0372, 0444, 0540, 0663, 0771; 6: 0001, 0145, 0363, 0387, 0422, 0450, 0577, 0719, 0735, 0804, 0816; 9: 0698, 0890; 15: 0113; 18: 0715
Hodges, Luther H. 7: 0198; 17: 0562
Holmes, Julius Cecil 4: 0300
Horsey, Outerbridge 1: 0355, 0395
Hughes, Thomas L. 2: 0991; 5: 0001, 0229; 6: 0001, 0233;
7: 0001, 0118, 0198, 0468, 0514, 0618, 0893; 8: 0063, 0221, 0567, 0774; 13: 0626; 15: 0605; 17: 0001, 0204, 0293, 0328, 0352, 0381; 19: 0705, 0922
Humphrey, Herbert 14: 0420
35
Jackim, Harry 8: 0736
Jenkins, Walter 2: 0001
Johnpoll, Alexander 19: 0274, 0705
Johnson, Alexis 8: 0451; 18: 0139, 0307
Johnson, Griffith 5: 0001; 8: 0632
Johnson, Lyndon Baines 17: 0450
Jones, Owen Thomas 1: 0609
Kaysen, Carl 1: 0771; 2: 0001, 0160
Kennan, George F. 4: 0611, 0979; 17: 0617, 0755, 0871;
18: 0001, 0139, 0307, 0481, 0597, 0715, 0813, 0836; 19: 0001, 0135, 0274, 0465, 0587, 1091
Kennedy, John F. 1: 0301, 0335, 0395, 0445, 0771;
2: 0001, 0160, 0309; 3: 0579; 4: 0243; 9: 0001, 0158, 0228, 0289, 0348, 0435, 0477, 0582, 0698, 0786, 0834, 0890, 0931, 0984; 10: 0001, 0193, 0285, 0418, 0510, 0627, 0754, 0824; 13: 0141; 14: 0420; 17: 0415, 0450, 0481; 19: 0922
Kennedy, Robert F. 17: 0450
Kent, Sherman 3: 0510
Khrushchev, Nikita 3: 0459, 0827; 4: 0076, 0189, 0646;
5: 0771; 6: 0963; 7: 0314; 9: 0001, 0106, 0158, 0228, 0289, 0348, 0477, 0582, 0698, 0761, 0786, 0834, 0890, 0931, 0984; 10: 0001, 0193, 0285, 0418, 0510, 0588, 0627, 0754, 0824; 14: 0277, 0308, 0420; 16: 0452
Kirk, Alan Goodrich 2: 0632
Klein, David 6: 0327; 8: 0418, 0632, 0736; 15: 0293
Klotz, Herbert W. 6: 0816
Kohler, Foy David 1: 0609; 2: 0855; 5: 0540, 0663, 0771;
6: 0001, 0145, 0233, 0294, 0327, 0422, 0450, 0481, 0577, 0735, 0804, 0816, 0876, 0963; 7: 0001, 0118, 0198, 0314, 0514, 0618, 0744; 8: 0001, 0063, 0221, 0418, 0567, 0774, 0983; 10: 0193, 0627; 11: 0185, 0560; 12: 0974; 13: 0363, 0507, 0762, 0915; 14: 0117, 0337, 0356, 0574; 15: 0415, 0605; 16: 0452, 0853; 17: 0871; 18: 0001, 0836
Komer, Robert 1: 0445; 3: 0579
Kosygin, Aleksey 6: 0001
Krasser, William 1: 0445
Kuznetsov, G. 6: 0735
Kuznetsov, V. 14: 0807
Kydrynski, Lucjan 2: 0309
Larionov, V. 4: 0819
Lippmann, Walter 14: 0420
Lukacs, John 3: 0964
Macmillan, Harold 9: 0348, 0786; 10: 0627, 0754
Magistretti, William L. 1: 0771; 2: 0001
Malinovsky, Rodion 5: 0001, 0151; 6: 0450
McCabe, Gerry M. 5: 0372, 0540
McCafferty, Art 16: 0452
McCoy, C. M. 19: 0705
McGhee, George Crews 3: 0017; 6: 0327; 7: 0314
McSweeny, John 4: 0243, 0360; 5: 0151, 0229, 0444,
0540; 6: 0145, 0363, 0422; 7: 0314, 0468, 0514; 15: 0113, 0235
36
Mindszenty, Joseph (Cardinal) 1: 0445, 0609
Moore, George S. 5: 0294
Morrow, Edward 3: 0964
Neustadt, Richard 1: 0771
Novotny, Antonin 1: 0279, 0301
Olsen, Jack 8: 0736
Owen, Henry 11: 0815
Owen, Robert 14: 0420
Perry, Douglas 18: 0597
Pietra, I. 14: 0308
Read, Benjamin 8: 0567; 17: 0204, 0293, 0536;
19: 0587, 0922 Reinhardt, George Frederick
1: 0092 Richmond, John M.
1: 0301 Riddleburger, James Williams
1: 0609 Ro, Edward
19: 0587 Rostow, W. W.
1: 0771; 2: 0001; 3: 0041, 0158, 0227, 0731, 0842; 4: 0189; 5: 0444, 0771; 6: 0876; 7: 0893; 8: 0001, 0983; 11: 0611; 15: 0865; 17: 0755; 18: 0001
Rusk, Dean 1: 0092, 0172, 0335, 0355, 0445, 0609,
0771; 2: 0001, 0160, 0309, 0447, 0632, 0833, 0855, 0934; 3: 0126, 0193, 0227, 0352, 0548; 4: 0243, 0726, 0819, 0979; 5: 0001, 0151, 0229, 0294, 0372, 0444, 0540; 6: 0001, 0422, 0735, 0963; 7: 0198, 0514, 0618, 0893; 8: 0063, 0418, 0567, 0632; 9: 0567; 10: 0193, 0627, 0754, 0824; 11: 0001, 0185, 0325, 0396, 0640, 0815; 12: 0001, 0213, 0369, 0455, 0543, 0667,
0832, 0974; 13: 0001, 0047, 0080, 0141, 0363, 0437, 0672, 0915; 14: 0117, 0202, 0252, 0574, 0807; 15: 0865; 16: 0646, 0742, 0770, 0853; 17: 0415, 0536, 0583, 0617, 0755, 0871; 18: 0001, 0139, 0307, 0481; 19: 0135, 0465, 0813
Ruzek, Milsoslav 1: 0279
Salinger, Pierre 4: 0726; 10: 0824; 11: 0611; 16: 0371
Sanders, Terry 1: 0001
Saver, Walter 17: 0583
Schlesinger, Arthur 3: 0579; 4: 0076
Shaw, John Putnam 2: 0934; 3: 0017
Sheldon, Huntington D. 7: 0118
Sidelnikov, I. 5: 0001
Sinigovsky, Vitaly 7: 0198
Siscoe, Frank G. 3: 0073; 4: 0001
Smith, Bromley 16: 0452
Sorenson, Theodore 11: 0587; 17: 0352
Sousa Vieira, Mario Alves de 16: 0130
Spangler, George 19: 0465
Spiers, Ronald I. 7: 0314
Stevenson, Adlai E. 1: 0445; 5: 0001, 0771; 13: 0482;
14: 0420, 0574, 0622, 0807; 16: 0742; 19: 0705
Stoessel, Walter 8: 0063, 0221, 0418, 0567, 0632, 0774;
16: 0814 Stull, Lee T.
2: 0001 Szarka, Karoly
1: 0445 Szilard, Leo
5: 0771
37
Thompson, Llewellyn E. 3: 0041, 0126, 0158, 0193, 0510, 0548,
0579, 0758, 0842; 4: 0076, 0106, 0117, 0148, 0300, 0451, 0554, 0611, 0646, 0726, 0819, 0979; 5: 0001, 0151, 0294; 6: 0577; 7: 0118, 0618; 10: 0510; 11: 0396, 0484, 0815; 12: 0001; 13: 0141, 0343; 14: 0001, 0078, 0252, 0420, 0574; 15: 0001, 0113, 0605, 0774, 0865; 16: 0152, 0298, 0770, 0802; 17: 0204
Tito, Josip Broz 19: 0274, 0465, 0922
Toon, Malcolm 2: 0160; 8: 0567
Torbert, Horace Gates 1: 0445
Trilling, Leon 3: 0827; 4: 0117
Tubby, Roger Wellington 7: 0118; 12: 0543
Tyler, William R. 13: 0080; 14: 0356
Varga, Eugene 5: 0001
Vedeler, Harold C. 2: 0001
Wailes, Edward Thompson 1: 0279, 0301, 0335, 0355
Walker, Peter C. 6: 0001
Whitman, John 3: 0352; 17: 0415
Wilkosz, Stefan 2: 0001
Williamson, Francis T. 6: 0963
Winship, Stephen 6: 0735
Wolfe, Thomas W. 7: 0744
Wright, Jerauld 2: 0632
Yevtushenko, Yevgeny 8: 0063
Zawacki, Edmund 8: 0736
Zawadzki, Aleksander 1: 0771; 2: 0309
Zhivkov, Todor 1: 0172
Zorin, Valerian 7: 0198
39
SUBJECT INDEX The following index is a guide to the major topics in this microfilm publication. The first
number after an entry refers to the reel, while the four-digit number following the colon refers to the frame number at which the subject begins. Hence, 7: 0198 refers to the folder that begins at Frame 0198 of Reel 7. By referring to the Reel Index, which constitutes the initial section of this guide, the researcher will find the folder title, inclusive dates, and a list of Major Topics and Principal Correspondents, listed in the order in which they appear on the film. Adenauer, Konrad
7: 0198 Adzhubei, Aleskey
16: 0152, 0298, 0371 Afghanistan
11: 0687 Africa
1: 0092, 0172; 4: 0726; 5: 0151; 6: 0816; 7: 0198; 8: 0632; 13: 0672; 15: 0113; 17: 0617, 0755
see also Ghana see also Sudan
Agricultural Act of 1961 17: 0169, 0450
Agriculture Battle Act 17: 0169, 0450 Canada 17: 0293 Cuba 17: 0293 general 7: 0198, 0618 grain sales 16: 0921; 17: 0001–0583 Poland 1: 0771 USSR 4: 0726, 0819; 6: 0294; 8: 0063,
0774, 0983; 14: 0277, 0308, 0420; 15: 0001, 0235, 0605; 16: 0921; 17: 0001–0583
wheat 11: 0484, 0640 Yugoslavia 18: 0481, 0715
Air force 3: 0867; 16: 0770
Airplanes U-2 2: 0632
Air transportation and airspace airspace violations 6: 0233, 0422, 0481,
0963; 7: 0001, 0118
air transport agreements 3: 0227; 4: 0243, 0451, 0554; 8: 0632
policy 3: 0827 Albania
cultural exchanges 1: 0092 foreign relations 15: 0113, 0235, 0293;
17: 0871 general 1: 0001; 17: 0617 governmental reorganization 1: 0092 self-determination 1: 0445
Albanian Communist Party 1: 0001
Amnesty political prisoners 1: 0445, 0609
Andreyevich, Mikhail criticism of Nikita Khrushchev 7: 0001
Angote, Allan 18: 0597
Arab nationalism 7: 0118
Archduke Otto 1: 0609
Armed forces Berlin 9: 0228, 0984; 11: 0001, 0185 USSR 3: 0459; 4: 0284; 5: 0001, 0151;
6: 0422, 0450, 0735; 7: 0001; 8: 0063, 0983; 10: 0627, 0972; 11: 0396
see also Air force see also Navy
Arms control and disarmament 1: 0301, 0771; 2: 0001, 0447, 0632;
3: 0193, 0352, 0510, 0827; 4: 0076, 0117, 0189, 0726, 0819, 0979;
40
Arms control and disarmament cont. 5: 0001, 0372, 0444, 0540, 0771; 6: 0327, 0577; 7: 0198, 0314, 0618, 0893; 8: 0567; 9: 0001, 0106, 0289, 0348, 0477, 0582, 0698; 10: 0001–0754, 0957; 11: 0001–0396, 0611; 12: 0001, 0369–0974; 13: 0001, 0080, 0141, 0475–0493, 0626–0915; 14: 0001–0117, 0308, 0356–0807; 15: 0001–0235, 0415, 0605; 16: 0001, 0152, 0371, 0452; 17: 0755; 18: 0481
see also Nuclear Test Ban Treaty Arms trade
3: 0041, 0158 Asia
trade 5: 0001 USSR relations 6: 0481 see also Cambodia see also China, People’s Republic of
(PRC) see also China, Republic of (Taiwan) see also India see also Japan see also Laos see also Pakistan see also Vietnam, Democratic Republic
of (North Vietnam) see also Vietnam, Republic of (South
Vietnam) Bakaric, Vladamir
19: 0274 Ball, George
11: 0640; 17: 0562 Barghoorn Detention
16: 0814, 0853, 0886, 0911 Bebler, Alex
17: 0755 Belgrade Conference
4: 0330; 17: 0617, 0755; 18: 0001 Berlin crisis
2: 0833; 3: 0193, 0510–0579, 0758, 0842, 0964; 4: 0076, 0243, 0451, 0819, 0979; 5: 0001, 0229, 0372–0540, 0771; 6: 0001, 0145, 0577, 0735; 7: 0893; 8: 0774; 9: 0890; 11: 0001–0611, 0640, 0763, 0815; 12: 0369–0974; 13: 0047, 0141, 0343–0437, 0507–0915; 14: 0001–0252, 0308–0574, 0807; 15: 0001–
0865; 16: 0152, 0371; 17: 0617, 0755; 18: 0139; 19: 1091
Berlin, Germany armed forces 9: 0984; 11: 0325 Free City proposal 12: 0001, 0213,
0369, 0455, 0543, 0667, 0832; 13: 0141, 0437, 0915
Khrushchev, Nikita 6: 0233; 7: 0198, 0468
see also Berlin crisis see also West Berlin
Birladeanu, Alexandru 2: 0855
Boland, Frederick H. 1: 0445
Borders China-India 2: 0632 Germany 11: 0815; 12: 0543, 0667 Germany-Poland 1: 0771; 2: 0001,
0160, 0309 see also Oder-Neisse border
Borisov, Sergey 17: 0562
Bowles, Chester 10: 0957; 11: 0687
Brazil 17: 0617; 18: 0307
Brezhnev, Leonid 6: 0327; 7: 0468, 0514; 18: 0597, 0715
Bucharest Conference 3: 0227; 16: 0001
Budgets 4: 0189, 0451, 0611, 0726, 0819;
6: 0001 see also Foreign budgets
Budway, Robert 1: 0355
Bulgaria 1: 0092, 0172; 3: 0073; 4: 0001;
5: 0151; 15: 0113 Bulgarian Communist Party
1: 0092 Bundy, McGeorge
5: 0001; 10: 0972 Cambodia
17: 0871 Canada
foreign relations 16: 0921 trade 17: 0293, 0381
41
Casroli, Monsignor 1: 0609
Castro, Fidel 7: 0198; 16: 0452, 0646
Ceausescu, Nicolae 2: 0855
CEMA see Council for Mutual Economic
Assistance (COMECON or CEMA) Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
3: 0382, 0622, 0731, 0928; 4: 0148, 0330, 0451; 6: 0510, 0876; 16: 0001, 0298
Chiang Kai-shek 2: 0447, 0632; 10: 0510, 0588
China, People’s Republic of (PRC) 2: 0447, 0632; 3: 0309, 0622; 6: 0001;
7: 0514, 0893; 8: 0774; 10: 0001, 0972; 11: 0667, 0687; 18: 0836; 19: 0274
see also Sino-Soviet conflict China, Republic of (Taiwan)
2: 0447, 0632 Chinese Communist Party (CCP)
7: 0001, 0618; 16: 0001 Chou En-lai
2: 0632 Ciszek, Walter
8: 0418 Citizen-government relations
7: 0118, 0514; 19: 0465, 0587, 0705 Civil aviation
5: 0001; 8: 0632 COMECON
see Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (COMECON or CEMA)
Commemorations and anniversaries Albanian Workers Party 1: 0001 October Revolution 1: 0001; 6: 0001
Communism Albanian Communist Party 1: 0001 Bulgarian Communist Party 1: 0092 CCP 7: 0001, 0618; 16: 0001 Communist Party of Italy 6: 0577 Communist Party, USA 7: 0744 CPSU 1: 0001; 3: 0867; 4: 0148, 0189,
0451, 0611, 0726; 6: 0422, 0577; 7: 0001, 0618; 15: 0415; 16: 0001, 0130, 0152, 0452; 17: 0871
general 3: 0041, 0158, 0731; 4: 0148; 6: 0577; 7: 0001, 0314; 14: 0356; 16: 0152
international communism 6: 0577; 8: 0221, 0567, 0774; 14: 0949; 16: 0001
Poland 7: 0893 spread of 10: 0957; 13: 0672; 14: 0001;
15: 0293 Western Communists 14: 0308 see also Leninism see also Marxism-Leninism
Communist Party of Italy 6: 0577
Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU)
1: 0001; 3: 0867; 4: 0148, 0189, 0451, 0611, 0726; 6: 0422, 0577; 7: 0001, 0618; 15: 0415; 16: 0001, 0130, 0152, 0452; 17: 0871
Communist Party, USA 7: 0744
Congo 14: 0001, 0078; 15: 0001
Conscription USSR armed forces 8: 0983
Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (COMECON or CEMA)
2: 0855, 0934, 0991; 5: 0151, 0444; 7: 0198; 11: 0001, 0185
Cuba agricultural trade 17: 0293 arms control and disarmament 10: 0193,
0285, 0418 foreign economic assistance 16: 0452 foreign relations 2: 0160, 0309; 4: 0076 general 3: 0579; 4: 0646, 0726; 5: 0771;
6: 0577; 9: 0001, 0106; 11: 0587, 0611, 0667–0763; 13: 0141, 0343, 0363, 0762, 0915; 14: 0001, 0117, 0308, 0356–0574; 15: 0293, 0774; 16: 0371, 0646; 17: 0001
military relations 16: 0646 missiles 10: 0001, 0418 U.S. relations 1: 0301; 10: 0285;
11: 0484; 15: 0415; 16: 0452
42
Cuba cont. USSR relations 6: 0735; 7: 0198;
10: 0001, 0627, 0972; 11: 0396; 15: 0235, 0415, 0774, 0865; 16: 0452
Yugoslavia relations 18: 0139; 19: 0465 Cuban missile crisis
6: 0001, 0145, 0450, 0816, 0963; 8: 0221; 9: 0890, 0931, 0984; 10: 0001, 0193, 0285, 0418, 0510, 0957; 11: 0001, 0396; 14: 0622, 0807; 18: 0715, 0836
Cultural exchanges Albania 1: 0092 Poznan International Trade Fair 1: 0771;
2: 0001, 0309 Rumania 2: 0855 technical exchanges 3: 0073; 4: 0001 20th International Plovdiv Fair 1: 0092 USSR 3: 0073; 4: 0001; 8: 0221;
11: 0185; 16: 0371 Yugoslavia 19: 0587
Cultural relations USSR 4: 0726, 0819; 5: 0001, 0294,
0540, 0663, 0771; 6: 0233, 0816 Cyrankiewicz, Jozef
2: 0309 Czechoslovakia
1: 0279–0395; 3: 0073; 4: 0001 David, Vaclav
1: 0395 De Gaulle, Charles
4: 0284; 7: 0893 Demonstrations and protests
Hungarian Revolution of 1956 1: 0445 Rostov, Russia 5: 0372, 0444, 0771 students 2: 0309
Denmark 5: 0771
Détente 7: 0893; 16: 0001
Detention U.S. citizens in USSR 5: 0771; 6: 0001
Diplomatic relations Bulgaria 1: 0092 Czechoslovakia 1: 0279, 0395 France 4: 0284 Hungary 1: 0445, 0609 Poland 1: 0771; 2: 0001, 0309
UK 9: 0698, 0931; 10: 0627 USSR 3: 0193, 0227, 0510, 0842, 0964;
4: 0076, 0117, 0284, 0300, 0360, 0726; 5: 0294, 0372, 0663; 6: 0001, 0145, 0327; 7: 0314, 0744; 8: 0001, 0221, 0774, 0983; 9: 0001–0289, 0435–0477, 0582–0698, 0786, 0834, 0931; 10: 0001–0510, 0627–0972; 11: 0001–0325, 0484, 0687, 0763; 12: 0001, 0213, 0369; 13: 0672, 0762; 14: 0117, 0420; 16: 0770, 0802, 0814; 17: 0481
Yugoslavia 17: 0617, 0755, 0871; 18: 0307, 0481, 0597; 19: 0001, 0465
Diplomatic visits and meetings Castro, Fidel 16: 0452, 0646 Dobrynin, Anatoly 10: 0957, 0972, 0977;
11: 0001–0763 Gromyko, Andrei 8: 0567; 11: 0815;
12: 0001–0974; 13: 0001–0507 Khrushchev, Nikita 5: 0151; 6: 0233,
0735; 7: 0468; 13: 0626–0915; 14: 0001–0420
Kuznetsov, V. 14: 0574, 0622, 0807 Mikoyan, Anastas I. 15: 0865
Disarmament see Arms control and disarmament
Djilas, Milovan 19: 0705
Dobrsielski, Marian 1: 0771
Dobrynin, Anatoly 10: 0957, 0972, 0977; 11: 0001–0763
Drosniak, Edward 2: 0001, 0309
Duda, Karel 1: 0279, 0395
Dutkanicz, Mary 6: 0001
Dymshits, V. Ye. 6: 0816
Economic assistance see International assistance
Economic conditions USSR 3: 0770; 4: 0106, 0117, 0189,
0554, 0726; 5: 0001, 0294, 0372, 0663; 6: 0145, 0510, 0963; 7: 0118, 0198, 0314, 0618, 0744; 8: 0063,
43
0221, 0983; 15: 0293, 0415; 16: 0452; 17: 0381
Economic indicators 3: 0382; 5: 0771; 6: 0577; 7: 0893
Economic policy USSR 4: 0189; 5: 0663; 7: 0893
Educational exchanges 3: 0073; 4: 0001
Energy resources and consumption 18: 0307
Espionage 1: 0092, 0301; 2: 0632; 4: 0726;
5: 0540, 0771; 6: 0145; 8: 0418; 9: 0698; 10: 0001, 0824; 14: 0622, 0807; 16: 0814, 0853
European Community 8: 0063
European Economic Community 6: 0145
Exchange of persons programs Rumania 2: 0855 USSR 3: 0073; 4: 0001 Yugoslavia 19: 0587
Exhibitions and trade fairs Brno International Trade Fair 1: 0335,
0395 Poznan International Fair 1: 0771;
2: 0001, 0309 20th International Plovdiv Fair 1: 0092
Federal Republic of Germany see Germany, Federal Republic of
(FRG) Food for Peace Program
PL 480 1: 0771; 2: 0001, 0160, 0309; 17: 0871; 18: 0139, 0597, 0836
Foreign budgets USSR 4: 0001, 0189, 0451, 0611, 0726,
0819; 6: 0001 Foreign economic assistance
see International assistance Foreign economic relations
Battle Act 17: 0169, 0450 Czechoslovakia 1: 0355, 0395 Eastern Europe 3: 0770; 4: 0148 economic blockades 15: 0774 Export-Import Bank 17: 0536, 0562,
0583 FRG 8: 0221; 15: 0415 GDR 15: 0415
most favored nation treatment 2: 0001, 0160, 0309; 18: 0813, 0836; 19: 0001, 0135, 0274, 0465, 0587
Poland 1: 0771; 2: 0001, 0160 Rumania 2: 0855, 0904, 0934 Supreme Economic Council for industry
and construction 6: 0735 USSR 2: 0855, 0904, 0934; 3: 0382,
0579, 0770, 0827; 4: 0076, 0148, 0646; 8: 0221; 14: 0420; 15: 0001, 0113; 17: 0204
Yugoslavia 17: 0755; 18: 0001, 0715; 19: 0135, 0813
see also Foreign trade see also International assistance
Foreign investment 3: 0382
Foreign relations Cuba 2: 0160, 0309; 3: 0827; 4: 0076,
0726 détente 7: 0893; 8: 0567; 16: 0001 East-West relations 6: 0577 France 6: 0963 FRG 3: 0510, 0548; 6: 0963 GDR 2: 0160; 4: 0076, 0117 Hungary 15: 0605 Iran 4: 0300 Japan 2: 0632 Laos 3: 0731, 0827 Middle East 7: 0118 Poland 2: 0160, 0309 PRC 2: 0447, 0632; 3: 0227, 0622;
8: 0221, 0567; 16: 0001 shift in East-West power balance
5: 0444; 6: 0294 Sudan 4: 0117 USSR 1: 0771; 3: 0126, 0193, 0227,
0309, 0352, 0459, 0510, 0548, 0731, 0758, 0827, 0964; 4: 0076, 0117, 0189, 0300, 0611, 0646, 0726, 0819; 5: 0001, 0372, 0444, 0540, 0771; 6: 0001, 0145, 0450, 0481, 0577, 0816, 0876; 7: 0314, 0468, 0618, 0893; 8: 0001, 0063, 0221, 0567; 11: 0396, 0484; 13: 0141; 14: 0420, 0807; 15: 0113; 16: 0001, 0152, 0853; 19: 1091
Vietnam, Republic of 3: 0731
44
Foreign relations cont. Yugoslavia 5: 0663; 6: 0577; 17: 0755;
18: 0139, 0836; 19: 0274, 0587, 0705, 0813
see also Diplomatic relations see also Diplomatic visits and meetings see also Foreign economic relations see also International assistance
Foreign trade Bulgaria 1: 0172 Canada 17: 0293 Cuba 17: 0293 Eastern Europe 3: 0579; 6: 0145;
7: 0314 European Economic Community 6: 0145 FRG 3: 0017 Hong Kong 8: 0063 Japan 5: 0444 Poland 18: 0001, 0307 Rumania 2: 0833, 0934, 0991; 3: 0017 USSR 3: 0227, 0352, 0510; 5: 0001,
0294, 0444; 6: 0510; 7: 0118, 0198, 0314; 8: 0063, 0567, 0774; 11: 0484, 0587, 0611; 13: 0080, 0141; 14: 0202, 0420, 0807; 17: 0204, 0293, 0381, 0481
Yugoslavia 17: 0755, 0871; 18: 0001, 0307
see also Foreign economic relations Foreign trade controls
USSR 4: 0819 Foster, William C.
11: 0560; 13: 0493 France
6: 0963; 12: 0213 Frost, Robert
mission to USSR 6: 0233 Geneva, Switzerland
2: 0447; 9: 0001, 0106, 0289, 0582; 10: 0510, 0588
German Democratic Republic (GDR) 2: 0160; 4: 0076, 0117; 11: 0815;
12: 0455, 0543, 0667, 0832; 15: 0001
German peace proposal 9: 0582, 0834, 0931
German question 9: 0001, 0106, 0158, 0228, 0348, 0435,
0477, 0582, 0698, 0786, 0834,
0931; 10: 0418, 0627; 11: 0001, 0687
German unification 12: 0543, 0667, 0832
Germany, Federal Republic of (FRG) 1: 0301; 3: 0017, 0510, 0548; 6: 0363,
0963; 17: 0871; 18: 0001, 0597, 0715; 19: 0135, 0587
Ghana 4: 0646
Gheorghiu-Dej, Gheorghe 2: 0855, 0934, 0991; 3: 0017
Goldmann, Nahum 7: 0198
Gomulka, Wladyslaw 1: 0771; 2: 0001, 0160, 0309; 3: 0622
Grains and grain products sales 16: 0921; 17: 0001–0583 see also Wheat
Greece 18: 0307
Gromyko, Andrei 3: 0548; 4: 0979; 5: 0540, 0771;
6: 0577; 8: 0418, 0567, 0632; 11: 0001, 0185, 0815; 12: 0001–0974; 13: 0001–0507
Hamouz, Frantisek 1: 0395
Harriman, W. Averell 1: 0609; 10: 0588; 13: 0507
Ho Chi Minh 3: 0579, 0622
Hodges, Luther 1: 0395
Hong Kong 8: 0063
Hoxha, Enver 1: 0001; 3: 0622
Humphrey, Hubert H. 2: 0001
Hungarian Revolution of 1956 1: 0445
Hungarian Socialist Worker’s Party 1: 0445
Hungary 1: 0445, 0445–0609; 3: 0073; 4: 0001;
7: 0618; 15: 0605 Ilichev, L. F.
6: 0233
45
Immigration and emigration 2: 0934; 8: 0221, 0567; 18: 0597
Imperialism 14: 0420, 0949; 15: 0113, 0235, 0293,
0415, 0605; 16: 0001, 0130, 0152, 0452
India 2: 0632; 5: 0771; 6: 0001; 11: 0687;
14: 0277 Industrial development
Rumania 3: 0001 International Access Authority
12: 0001, 0213, 0543, 0832 International assistance
Cuba 16: 0452 India 2: 0632 loans to USSR 8: 0983 Pakistan 6: 0001 PL 480 1: 0771; 2: 0001, 0160, 0309;
17: 0871; 18: 0139, 0597, 0836 Poland 1: 0771; 2: 0001, 0160, 0309 PRC 2: 0447 Rumania 3: 0001 USSR 4: 0330; 5: 0771; 6: 0001, 0510;
7: 0198 Vietnam, Republic of 2: 0447 Yugoslavia 18: 0139, 0307, 0481;
19: 0001, 0135, 0465, 0587, 0705, 0813, 0922
see also Military assistance International cooperation in cultural activities
Brno International Trade Fair 1: 0335, 0395
cultural exchanges 2: 0855; 3: 0073; 4: 0001; 19: 0587
general 5: 0001, Poznan International Trade Fair 1: 0771;
2: 0001, 0309 technical exchanges 3: 0073; 4: 0001 20th International Plovdiv Fair 1: 0092
Iran 4: 0300; 13: 0672; 14: 0420
Iraq 6: 0735
Italy 18: 0307, 0715
Japan foreign relations 2: 0632 nuclear weapons 5: 0540
trade 5: 0444 USSR relations 5: 0444, 0540; 6: 0294,
0804 Jews and Judaism
anti-Semitism 8: 0063 emigration from USSR 8: 0221, 0567 general 2: 0934 in USSR 7: 0198
John XXIII (pope) 7: 0118; 14: 0308
Joint Chiefs of Staff 8: 0632
Jouravlev, Boris G. 5: 0771
Journalists 2: 0632
Kadar, Janos 1: 0445; 15: 0605
Kennan, George F. 19: 1091
Khrushchev, Nikita Berlin 7: 0198 criticism 7: 0001 diplomatic visits and meetings 5: 0151;
6: 0233, 0735; 7: 0468; 13: 0626–0915; 14: 0001–0420
economic reforms 5: 0771; 7: 0893 general 1: 0001, 0445, 0609; 3: 0041,
0158, 0227–0352, 0459, 0510, 0622, 0731, 0827–0867; 4: 0076, 0117, 0189, 0243, 0284, 0360, 0646, 0819; 5: 0001, 0151, 0771; 6: 0001, 0233; 7: 0001, 0198, 0618; 9: 0001–0984; 10: 0001–0824; 17: 0328; 18: 0836; 19: 0587, 0705
Leninism 7: 0001 media 5: 0294 negotiations 13: 0626, 0672, 0762,
0915; 14: 0001, 0078, 0117, 0202, 0252, 0277, 0308, 0337, 0350, 0356
reaction to John F. Kennedy speech 7: 0314
relations with Joseph Broz Tito 8: 0001 retirement 14: 0356 speeches 14: 0949; 15: 0001, 0113,
0235, 0293, 0415, 0605, 0774 succession 7: 0118, 0198, 0468 USSR air space program 8: 0567 views on economy and foreign relations
8: 0567
46
Kohler, Foy David 11: 0667; 13: 0363
Kornienko, Georgi 7: 0314
Kosygin, Aleksey 6: 0001
Kozlov, Frol 6: 0001; 7: 0001
Kurdiukov, Ivan F. 5: 0372
Kuznetsov, V. negotiations 14: 0574, 0622, 0807
Labor unions USSR 8: 0774 Yugoslavia Trade Union Federation
18: 0715 Laos
2: 0447, 0632; 3: 0731; 9: 0001, 0106, 0158, 0228, 0698, 0786, 0834; 10: 0510, 0588, 0627, 0957, 0972; 11: 0001, 0396, 0667, 0763; 12: 0369, 0543, 0667; 13: 0047, 0080, 0141, 0343, 0363, 0437, 0507, 0672, 0762, 0915; 14: 0001, 0078, 0202, 0420, 0574; 15: 0001, 0113, 0774, 0865; 16: 0371
Latin America 6: 0963; 8: 0567; 16: 0452; 19: 0274,
0705, 0813, 0922 see also Brazil see also Cuba
Lazar, Edmund 1: 0445
Lenart, Jozef 1: 0395
Lenin, V. I. legacy 15: 0113, 0293, 0415, 0605;
16: 0452 Leninism
6: 0577; 7: 0001, 0198; 16: 0001, 0130 see also Marxism-Leninism
Licenses and permits exports 17: 0092, 0381, 0755
Loans USSR 8: 0983
Luben Karavelov (ship) 1: 0092
Lychowski, Tadeusz 1: 0771; 2: 0001, 0160
Macmillan, Harold 9: 0289, 0348
Macovescu, George 2: 0833
Makinen, Marvin 8: 0418
Malinovsky, Rodion 5: 0540; 6: 0450
Malita, Mircea 2: 0934, 0991
Mao Tse-tung 6: 0577; 7: 0001; 8: 0221
Marxism-Leninism 7: 0314; 8: 0221; 14: 0949 see also Communism see also Leninism
McCloy, John 13: 0475
Media de-Stalinization 5: 0151 Foreign Broadcast Information Service
4: 0451; 14: 0949; 15: 0235, 0415, 0605; 16: 0298
general 5: 0151; 16: 0298, 0646 nuclear weapons 4: 0979 radio 4: 0611; 11: 0484 reactions to Tito visit 19: 0922 Sino-Soviet conflict 6: 0735 television 16: 0802 USSR 5: 0540; 6: 0363, 0422; 7: 0893 Yugoslavia 17: 0617
Menshikov, Mikhail 3: 0227, 0731; 4: 0726
Merchant seamen 5: 0372
Michalowski, Jerzy 1: 0771
Middle East U.S. foreign policy 7: 0118 USSR foreign policy 6: 0387; 7: 0118;
8: 0221 see also Iran see also Iraq
Mikoyan, Anastas I. 5: 0294; 15: 0774, 0865
Military assistance USSR 5: 0372 Yugoslavia 17: 0755, 0871
47
Military bases USSR Guba Okolnaya submarine
support facility 7: 0198 Military expenditures
13: 0080, 0141, 0762 Military facility inspections
6: 0481; 10: 0510, 0588, 0627, 0754, 0824; 11: 0396; 14: 0117, 0622, 0807; 15: 0415, 0774
Military forces see Armed forces
Military occupations 1: 0445, 0609
Military policy 5: 0001, 0540
Military spending 6: 0510; 7: 0118
Military weapons 5: 0444; 6: 0450 see also Nuclear weapons
Milunovic, Veljko 18: 0836
Mindszenty, Joseph (Cardinal) 1: 0609
Missile defense 4: 0360
Missiles and rockets 3: 0459; 10: 0001, 0418
Molotov, Vyacheslav 4: 0646
Moscow Conference 3: 0352
Moses, Robert 5: 0663, 0771
Most favored nation treatment 2: 0001, 0160, 0309; 18: 0813, 0836;
19: 0001, 0135, 0274, 0465, 0587 Multilateral nuclear force
3: 0017; 6: 0963 Munro, Leslie
1: 0445 Nacvalac, Miroslav
1: 0279 National Liberation Movement
8: 0774 NATO
7: 0893; 16: 0742 Navy
U.S. 2: 0447, 0632
Ngo Dinh Diem 9: 0228
Nixon, Richard M. 3: 0459
Non-Aggression Pact 13: 0080, 0141, 0363, 0437, 0507,
0626, 0762, 0915; 14: 0202; 15: 0774, 0865
Norway 6: 0577
Novotny, Antonin 1: 0395
Nuclear inspections 9: 0931, 0984
Nuclear Test Ban Treaty 2: 0632; 4: 0076, 0554, 0646; 6: 0363,
0387, 0422; 8: 0063, 0567, 0774, 0983; 9: 0106, 0477, 0582, 0890–0984; 10: 0510–0972; 11: 0001–0325, 0484–0560, 0687; 12: 0543, 0974; 13: 0001, 0141, 0363, 0507–0915; 14: 0117, 0202, 0252
Nuclear testing 3: 0842; 4: 0117; 6: 0145, 0481;
9: 0698, 0786, 0984; 11: 0396, 0587, 0763; 14: 0337, 0574, 0807; 15: 0001, 0415, 0605, 0774, 0865
Nuclear war threat of 10: 0193
Nuclear weapons 2: 0160; 3: 0309, 0827; 4: 0819;
5: 0540; 6: 0735, 0963; 7: 0314; 10: 0972; 11: 0185; 17: 0617
Ochab, Edward 2: 0001
October Revolution 1: 0001; 6: 0001
Oder-Neisse border 1: 0771; 2: 0001, 0160, 0309; 12: 0543,
0667 “Open Cities” plan
8: 0736 Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD)
18: 0139 Paderewski, Jan
2: 0309 Pakistan
6: 0001
48
Paracel Islands 2: 0447, 0632
Passioutin, Alexei 6: 0963
Pathet Lao 2: 0447
Peace Corps 7: 0744
Peaceful coexistence 3: 0227, 0622, 0827, 0964; 6: 0577,
0963; 16: 0130 Petroleum and petroleum industry
7: 0198 PL 480
1: 0771; 2: 0001, 0160, 0309; 17: 0871; 18: 0139, 0597, 0836
Plovdiv, Bulgaria 20th International Plovdiv Fair 1: 0092
Poland foreign economic relations 1: 0771;
2: 0001, 0160 general 1: 0771; 2: 0001–0632; 3: 0073;
4: 0001; 13: 0672; 18: 0001 most favored nation treatment 2: 0001,
0160, 0309 self-determination 2: 0309 Sino-Soviet conflict 7: 0893 student protest 2: 0309 trade relations 18: 0307
Political parties Albanian Workers Party 1: 0001 Bulgarian Fatherland Front 1: 0172 Bulgarian National Front 1: 0092 CCP 7: 0001, 0618; 16: 0001 Communist Party of Italy 6: 0577 Communist Party, USA 7: 0744 CPSU 1: 0001; 3: 0867; 4: 0148, 0189,
0451, 0611, 0726; 6: 0422, 0577; 7: 0001, 0618; 15: 0415; 16: 0001, 0130, 0152, 0452; 17: 0871
Hungarian Socialist Worker’s Party 1: 0445
Political prisoners 1: 0445, 0609
Popov, Lyubomir Dimitrov 1: 0172
Popovic, Koca 17: 0617, 0755; 18: 0307, 0481;
19: 0135, 0922
Powers, Francis 4: 0726
Poznan International Trade Fair 1: 0771; 2: 0001, 0309
PRC see China, People’s Republic of (PRC)
Prisoners U.S. in PRC 2: 0447, 0632 U.S. in USSR 5: 0771; 6: 0001
Propaganda 1: 0172; 4: 0611, 0819; 6: 0001;
14: 0420 Proxmire, William
18: 0481 Public opinion
Czechoslovakia 1: 0355 foreign opinion of U.S. 6: 0001; 7: 0314 “Open Cities” plan 8: 0736 Poland 1: 0771; 2: 0001 PRC 2: 0632 USSR 7: 0198
Pugwash Conference 19: 0587
Puja, Frigyes 1: 0609
Quarantine U.S. quarantine of USSR ships 9: 0582;
10: 0193, 0285, 0418, 0510; 11: 0396; 14: 0622
Radvanyi, Janos 1: 0445, 0609
Religion 6: 0327 see also Jews and Judaism
Retirement Khrushchev, Nikita 7: 0001, 0118, 0198,
0468 Rogers, Paul
8: 0451 Roland, E. J.
8: 0451 Rossiya, Sovetskanya
U.S.-USSR relations 7: 0314 Rostov, Russia
5: 0372, 0444, 0771 Rostow, W. W.
11: 0611
49
Rumania cultural exchanges 2: 0855 foreign economic relations 2: 0855,
0904, 0934 general 2: 0833–0991; 3: 0001–0017,
0073; 4: 0001 industrial development 3: 0001
Rusk, Dean 10: 0977; 11: 0001, 0185, 0325;
12: 0369, 0455, 0543, 0667, 0832, 0974; 13: 0001, 0047, 0080
Ruzek, Milsoslav 1: 0355
Salinger, Pierre 11: 0611
Schlesinger, Arthur 11: 0611
Science and technology 3: 0731; 5: 0001; 19: 0465
Scientific exchanges 3: 0073; 4: 0001
Self-determination Albania 1: 0445 Poland 2: 0309
Ships and shipping fishermen 8: 0063 interference with merchant ships
5: 0372, 0540, 0663, 0771; 6: 0422, 0816
U.S. policy 8: 0451 U.S. quarantine of USSR ships
09: 0582; 10: 0001, 0193, 0285, 0418, 0510; 11: 0396; 14: 0622
Sino-Indian conflict 6: 0001, 0145; 10: 0957; 15: 0235
Sino-Soviet conflict 1: 0001, 0771; 2: 0160, 0309, 0934;
3: 0017, 0227, 0510, 0548, 0579, 0622; 4: 0076, 0646, 0819, 0979; 5: 0001–0229, 0372–0540; 6: 0001–0363, 0422, 0719, 0735, 0963; 7: 0001, 0198–0618, 0893; 8: 0001, 0063, 0221, 0567, 0774, 0983; 11: 0560; 13: 0762; 14: 0252, 0308, 0420; 15: 0235, 0293; 16: 0001, 0130, 0152, 0452; 17: 0871; 19: 0135, 0465
Skopje disaster relief 19: 0587, 0705, 0813, 0922
Smirnov, Andrey 4: 0979
Smirnovsky, Mikhail 8: 0418, 0632
Smith, Raymond 5: 0663
Socialism 3: 0622
Sorenson, Theodore 11: 0587
Souvanna Phouma 9: 0001, 0228, 0834; 10: 0510, 0588
Space programs 3: 0842; 4: 0189, 0979; 5: 0294, 0540;
6: 0001; 8: 0221, 0567; 9: 0001, 0477, 0582, 0761; 14: 0356; 15: 0415
Speeches and addresses Kennedy, John F. 7: 0314 Khrushchev, Nikita 14: 0949; 15: 0001,
0113, 0235, 0293, 0415, 0605, 0774 Malinovksy, Rodion 6: 0450
Stalin, Joseph 3: 0867; 4: 0284; 8: 0063
Students African 1: 0092, 0172 Moscow 6: 0363 Poland 2: 0309
Sudan foreign relations 4: 0117
Sweden 6: 0735; 7: 0314
Teng Hsiao-ping 3: 0622
Thompson, Llewellyn E. 9: 0106; 11: 0396, 0484, 0815;
12: 0001, 0213; 13: 0343 Tito, Josip Broz
1: 0445, 0609; 8: 0001, 0063; 17: 0617, 0755, 0871; 18: 0001–0715, 0836; 19: 0001, 0135, 0587, 0813, 0922
Tito, Vladamir 5: 0001
Togliatti, Palmiro 6: 0145, 0577
Trade see Foreign trade
Tramiczynski, Witold 2: 0001, 0160
50
Travel and tourism 4: 0979; 5: 0151; 7: 0744; 8: 0736;
11: 0640 Treaties and conventions
air transport agreements 3: 0227; 4: 0243, 0451, 0554; 8: 0632
arms control and disarmanent 2: 0447; 10: 0510, 0588
Captive Nations Resolution 17: 0617 Convention on the Territorial Sea and
the Contiguous Zone 8: 0451 French-FRG treaty of cooperation
6: 0387 U.S.-USSR Exchange Agreement
3: 0073; 4: 0001 see also Nuclear Test Ban Treaty
Trotskyism 8: 0774
Turkey 10: 0193; 18: 0001
20th International Plovdiv Fair 1: 0092
U-2 spy plane 2: 0632
Ulbricht, Walter 3: 0622
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR)
3: 0041–17: 0583 United Kingdom (UK)
USSR relations 9: 0698, 0931; 10: 0627 United Nations (UN)
1: 0445; 3: 0731; 7: 0893; 8: 0567; 10: 0001, 0285, 0418; 13: 0915; 15: 0774
Ustinov, V. I. 4: 0726
Vatican 1: 0609
Verosta, Stefan 1: 0445
Vietnam, Democratic Republic of (North Vietnam)
10: 0510, 0588 Vietnam, Republic of (South Vietnam)
2: 0447, 0632; 3: 0731; 15: 0865 Vietnam conflict
8: 0774; 9: 0158, 0228 Vilkov, Boris
6: 0963
Voutov, Petur 1: 0172
Vracaric, Lazo 17: 0871; 18: 0001
Wang Ping-nan 2: 0447, 0632
War Claims Act of 1948 19: 0587
Weapons see Military weapons see Nuclear weapons
West Berlin armed forces 9: 0228; 11: 0001, 0185,
0815; 12: 0001, 0213, 0543, 0832, 0974
Dobrynin, Anatoly, proposal 11: 0325 Wheat
11: 0484, 0640 Winiewicz, Fonmin
2: 0160, 0309 World War II
15: 0001 Yugoslavia
citizen-government relations 19: 0705 constitution 19: 0274 cultural exchanges 19: 0587 export licenses 17: 0755 foreign economic relations 17: 0617,
0755; 18: 0001, 0481, 0715; 18: 0307; 19: 0135, 0587, 0813
foreign relations 5: 0001; 17: 0617, 0755, 0871; 18: 0001, 0139, 0307, 0597, 0715, 0836; 19: 0001, 0135, 0274, 0465, 0587, 0705, 1091
general 2: 0160; 5: 0771; 7: 0314; 18: 0001, 0597; 19: 0274, 0587, 0705, 0813, 0922
international assistance 18: 0139, 0307 military assistance 17: 0755, 0871 most favored nation treatment 2: 0160 technology exchanges 19: 0465 U.S. citizens in Yugoslavia 19: 0465
Zantovsky, Jaroslav 1: 0395
Zastera, Jaromir 1: 0301
Zhivkov, Todor 1: 0092; 19: 0135
Zhukov, Yuri 4: 0554
51
Zinchuk, Alexander 6: 0481
Zizka, Karel 1: 0355
THE JOHN F. KENNEDY NATIONAL SECURITY FILES
Africa: National Security Files, 1961–1963Asia and the Pacific: National Security Files, 1961–1963
Latin America: National Security Files, 1961–1963The Middle East: National Security Files, 1961–1963
U.S.S.R. and Eastern Europe: National Security Files, 1961–1963Vietnam: National Security Files, 1961–1963
THE LYNDON B. JOHNSON NATIONAL SECURITY FILES
Africa: National Security Files, 1963–1969Asia and the Pacific: National Security Files, 1963–1969
Latin America: National Security Files, 1963–1969The Middle East: National Security Files, 1963–1969
The United Nations: National Security Files, 1963–1969U.S.S.R. and Eastern Europe: National Security Files, 1963–1969
Vietnam: National Security Files, November 1963–June 1965Vietnam, Special Subjects: National Security Files, 1963–1969
Western Europe: National Security Files, 1963–1969
UPA Collections from LexisNexis®
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