1893-1976
Eastern Europe
(372) documents
East Asia
1898- 1976
North America
1893- 1976
1883- 1954
1918- 2007
1879- 1953
1913- 1983
December 29, 1960
Zhou Enlai and Sihanouk discuss the situations in Laos and in the Congo, commenting on the Geneva Conference on Laos and the role of the United Nations in resolving the Congo crisis.
August 5, 1961
Huang Zhen and Jerzy Knothe discuss the socialist bloc's foreign policy coordination.
1964
The Chinese Foreign Ministry reviews the process of the normalization of relations between China and France and speculates how the establishment of diplomatic relations between China and France might affect China's status in the United Nations and with the UK, Europe, Africa, and Japan.
November 19, 1957
A.A. Gromyko and Mao Zedong discussed Sino-Soviet relations, U.S. relations with Taiwan and Chiang Kai-shek, Chinese economic policy and conditions in comparison to industrialized countries, Chinese foreign policy and relations with the U.S. and Britain, the United Nations, Stalin, and Soviet leadership.
October 13, 1969
Hamdi Ould Mouknass praises Zhou Enlai as "a great statesman" and suggests that the People's Republic of China ought to gain entry into the United Nations.
September 5, 1972
Discussion points from Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim's meeting with Zhou Enlai
September 23, 1977
Huang Hua, commenting on a number of developments around the world, suggests that China's foreign policy continues to emulate the thinking and concerns of Mao Zedong.
August 6, 1977
Hua Guofeng and Kurt Waldheim discuss China's domestic policies and foreign policies.
April 30, 1979
Huang Hua says that "the Vietnamese were the Cubans of Asia but rather more dangerous." In addition to commenting on the situation in Indochina, Huang weighs in on Soviet and Cuban policies toward the Third World, events in the Middle East, and China's involvement in the United Nations.
June 10, 1981
Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim thanks China for its growing involvement in international affairs.