1893-1976
Eastern Europe
(372) documents
North America
1880 - 1959
1886 - 1957
1891 - 1986
Western Europe
-
1879 - 1953
1905 - 1965
July 4, 1947
A letter of invitation from the French Legation in Romania addressed to Minister Tatarescu to invite the Romanian Government to the conference in July 12 in Paris.
A letter of invitation sent by the Office of the British Political Representative in Bucharest, Adrian Holman, on behalf of both British and French Governments,addressed to the Romanian Government (via Foreign Minister Tatarescu) to participate to the Conference on ERP in Paris, on July 12, 1947.
June 25, 1947
Ambassador Iorgu Iordan explains the attitude of Soviet Union towards the Marshall Plan, based on an analysis of the Soviet press.
The French Legation in Romania explains the Marshall Plan.
June 21, 1947
This letter from the Dutch Government to the Romanian Foreign Minister includes an explanation of the Marshall Plan.
June 6, 1947
A press release from the US mission in Bucharest, distributed in Romanian, explaining the Marshall Plan following a major speech by George Marshall on Harvard University.
June 5, 1947
A speech made by George C. Marshall at Harvard University to announce the Marshall Plan, translated into Romanian for use by the Romanian Government on the basis of USIS Newsletter #133.
July 5, 1947
This telegram from the Foreign Minister of USSR to the Vice-President of Council of Ministers and Foreign Minister Tatarescu informs the Romanian Government why the USSR has rejected the Marshall Plan.
March 31, 1993
Kohl and Mubarak discuss the recent bomb attack in Cairo and the question of the assassins. Upon Kohl's question, Mubarak rejects the idea that Libya and Gaddafi could be behind it. Rather, Mubarak suggests the changes in Gaddafi’s position and the latter's concern about fundamentalist terror in Libya. Mubarak thinks Iran was behind the terror attack in Cairo.
March 29, 1993
During their first meeting, Kohl and Clinton examine the relevance of their joint support for Yeltsin and the need for more international financial aid for Russia agains the backdrop of the forthcoming Clinton-Yeltsin meeting in Vancouver in early April. Moreover, Kohl and Clinton discuss the relevance of intensified U.S.-German ties in the fields of culture, education and trade after the end of the Cold War.