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Documents

September 5, 1950

Rail Invoice for One in a Group of Soviet Tanks Delivered to Hungary

Shipping invoice for a T-34 tank purchased in 1950.

January 27, 1951

Report about the Number of Personnel Planned for the Hungarian Peoples' Army for the Autumn of 1951 and the Autumn of 1952

This table depicts the planned increase in personnel in the Hungarian People's Army between 1951 and 1952.

February 2, 1951

Report about the Number of Personnel Planned for the Hungarian Peoples' Army for the Autumn of 1951 and the Autumn of 1952

The planned number of personnel in the Hungarian Peoples' Army increases between 1951 and 1952.

May 5, 1970

Minutes of the Meeting of the Political Committee, 5 May 1970

Discusses Chinese-Hungarian Foreign Relations, their history, trade, and issues a resolution for future interactions between the two states.

August 4, 1971

Minutes of the Joint Meeting of the Central Committee and the Ministers’ Council

These notes discuss foreign policy issues related to China, Hungary, the Soviet Union, and Romania. To quote the document itself, it "was a bilateral discussion of the internal situation of fraternal Parties and countries, and later an exchange of opinion on contemporary foreign policy questions and the problems of the international workers’ movement."

November 3, 1977

Report, Permanent Mission of Hungary to the International Organizations in Vienna to the Hungarian Foreign Ministry

The DPRK's representation to Austria and Czechoslovakia is under-staffed and has little knowledge of international organizations. They are further impeded by language barriers. Hungary encourages an upgrade in representation.

March 7, 1983

Memorandum, Hungarian Academy of Sciences to the Hungarian Foreign Ministry

The DPRK asks Hungary to train Korean experts on the operation and management of a nuclear power plant.

April 6, 1983

Letter, Hungarian Foreign Ministry to the Hungarian Academy of Sciences

Hungary politely defers North Korea's request for training on a nuclear power plant to the Soviets.

June 23, 1961

Telegram from Gaqo Paze, the Albanian Ambassador in GDR to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Albania

Gaqo Paze reports from Berlin that during the conversation between the Yugoslav Ambassador to Berlin Voshnjak, and the Soviet ambassador to Berlin Pervukhin, the latter had asked if Yugoslavia would subscribe to the peace treaty with the GDR if the Western states would not accept to sign the peace treaty with both German states. Voshnjak avoided giving a direct answer several times, but in the end he implicitly expressed, according to Gaqo Paze, that Yugoslavia would not sign the treaty.

June 15, 1961

Telegram from the vice-minister of foreign affairs of Albania, Vasil Nathanalili, to the Albanian embassy in Budapest

The person-in-charge of the Hungarian embassy in Tirana informed Vasil Skorovoti, the Albanian diplomat in the Albanian Foreign ministry, that the Hungarian government wants to consult with the friendly governments of the socialist camp on the proposal to have the same stance on the non-aligned countries conference. The Hungarian government does not approve of the conference, but it thinks that the divisions among the non-aligned countries should be exploited by the socialist bloc in order to change the character of the conference to one of anti-imperialism and anti-colonialism. The Hungarian government wants to know the Albanian government’s stance on this issue. The Albanian government asks the Albanian embassy in Budapest to gather information on this issue in order to respond to the Hungarian government as soon as possible.

Pagination