1893-1976
Eastern Europe
(372) documents
East Asia
1893- 1976
1898- 1969
1898- 1976
1900- 1975
1954-
1886- 1975
Western Europe
May 28, 1957
This issue contains sections on overseas Chinese in South Vietnam, higher education enrollment, improving medical services, quotas on periodicals and newspapers, and disease prevention in Shanxi province.
August 22, 1956
This issue begins with a joint Sino-Syrian statement about the decision to exchange ambassadors and establish embassies in their respective countries. It also outlines plans for Nepali Prime Minister Tanka Prasad Acharya and Lao Prime Minister Prince Souvanna Phouma to visit China. Other sections address industrial and agricultural matters, newspaper subscriptions for different organizations, and provincial administrative concerns.
April 6, 1989
Hu Qili describes ongoing economic reforms in China. As for political reform, Hu indicates that China wants "to further unfold socialist democracy and perfect the judicial system."
June 23, 1969
A West German diplomat meets with a Xinhua correspondent to discuss China's relations with Bonn
September 11, 1965
The Chinese Embassy in Pyongyang reports that North Korea's reaction to the Indo-Pak War has been timid.
November 29, 1963
André Saint Mleux tracks recent Xinhua dispatches on the state of Franco-American relations.
October 6, 1969
Following the peak of the Cultural Revolution, the French Foreign Ministry concludes that Sino-French relations "have shown signs of détente, which, in the current context, represents important progress."
September 3, 1968
The Department of Asia-Oceania analyzes shifts in Chinese foreign policy toward Eastern Europe following the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968 and connects the apparent changes in Beijing's diplomacy to the Sino-Soviet split and the Vietnam War.
June 15, 1971
Zhou Enlai speaks with a Chinese delegation traveling to Pyongyang to apologize to North Korea. He emphasizes the importance of self-criticism, the historic camaraderie between China and North Korea, and matters regarding cultural exchange with North Korea.
January 2, 1950
Mao Zedong informs the Central Committee of "an important breakthrough" in his talks with Stalin, and asks that Zhou Enlai immediately come to Moscow to conclude a new Sino-Soviet treaty.