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Documents

June 19, 1976

Plan for Collaboration between Bulgarian and Polish Counterintelligence Services

February 15, 1977

Plan for Collaboration between Bulgarian and Polish Ministries of the Interior for 1977

September 12, 1980

Information from Bulgarian Representative in Warsaw on the Situation in Poland

January 11, 1981

Report from Bulgarian Representative in Warsaw on a Meeting with Minister Milewski

February 2, 1981

Report by Capt. Cheneshev from Bulgarian International Relations Section on the Situation in Poland

September 3, 1949

Telegram, Tunkin to Vyshinsky

Kim Il Sung, having recieved intelligence suggesting South Korea intended to seize the Ongjin Peninsula, requests Soviet permission to move further into South Korea.

September 14, 1949

Telegram from Tunkin to the Soviet Foreign Ministry in Reply to 11 September Telegram

North Korea plans to attack South Korea, but the Soviet Foreign Ministry is skeptical about North Korea's actual military capabilities and generally disproves of North Korea's plans.

January 19, 1950

Telegram Shtykov to Vyshinsky on a Luncheon at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the DPRK

Shtykov reports a meeting with Kim Il Sung, along with Chinese and Korean delegates. Kim Il Sung expresses his view on the prospect of a liberation of the South Korean people that is to follow the Chinese success in liberation. Kim expresses his view that the South Koreans support his cause for reunification which the South Korean government does not seem to purse, and that he desires to ask Stalin for permission on an offensive action on South Korea.

October 18, 1986

Memorandum of Conversation of Polish Officials Concerning a Proposed Consultative Council

Memorandum of conversation regarding the proposed Consultative Council and its goal to increase trust and develop recommendations and the inclusion of non-party people and members of the Catholic church

June 20, 1953

Special Report No. 2 of the WUBP in Wroclaw (Poland), Regarding Spillover from Events in Berlin

Polish repercussions following the recent East German Uprising are reported, including hostile public opinions by “ethnic Germans” towards the GDR government and the Soviets. It is noted that hostile commentaries often cite “imperialist radio broadcasts” as a source of information.

Pagination