1893-1976
Eastern Europe
(372) documents
East Asia
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Central America and Caribbean
1912- 1994
March 4, 1972
A report by Etre Sandor on a conversation between Pak Seong-cheol and Frigyes Puja regarding Nixon’s visit to China, Chinese-North Korean-Soviet relations, and the situation inside North Korea.
September 28, 1972
A report by Etre Sandor on North Korea’s internal and external policies, the Korean reunification issue, and Hungarian-North Korean relations.
October 22, 1959
In their conversation, Dobi and Mao Zedong discussed politicial, economic, and agricultural development in Hungary and China, and compared opposition to the current Great Leap Forward in China to the 1956 uprising in Hungary.
January 25, 1982
Summary of Chinese foreign relations with socialist countries and anti-Soviet policy.
February 21, 1985
Summary of an informal Interkit meeting to discuss China's foreign policy and tension with the Soviet Union.
November 6, 1984
Summary of annual Interkit meeting to coordinate Soviet bloc analysis of and policy toward China.
August 29, 1963
Hungarian Ambassador to Bulgaria Karoly Prath summarizes developments on Bulgarian-Cuban relations gathered from Hungarian-Bulgarian diplomatic contacts. Bulgarian-Cuban relations were not adversely effected by the Cuban Missile Crisis. The relationship is dominated by economic development (e.g. the expansion of trade, specialist exchanges, Bulgarian loans to Cuba, the root causes of Cuba's economic difficulties). Prath also discusses Bulgarian concerns over the influence of China on Cuba.
June 23, 1963
Chargé d’Affaires ad interim Erzsébet Görög writes a preliminary assessment of Castro’s state visit to the Soviet Union in 1963. Görög reports on improvements in Cuba’s party organization and positive reactions from the Cuban public and media on Castro’s visit. Görög notes different reactions to the visit between the economic/technical and artistic intelligentsia, adding that “Khrushchev managed to win Fidel over to his side in the Soviet-Chinese dispute.” Other topics include emigration and external counter-revolutionary activities.
April 11, 1967
Kim Jae-seok reports on North Korea's stance regarding China's Cultural Revolution.
October 20, 1966
The Hungarian Embassy reports on North Korea's relations with the Soviet Union and China and Japan's foreign relations.