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May 22, 1973

Hungarian Central Committee Report on Fight against 'Hostile Propaganda'

This Central Committee report to the Hungarian Politburo reviews efforts of Party and government organs to analyze Western broadcasting and other information programs targeted on Hungary. The report indicates the extent of the resources devoted to analyzing "hostile" information programs, criticizes as inadequate the efforts to counter "hostile propaganda" claiming to "improve socialism," and urges better coordination of counterpropaganda. The resolution of the Politburo accepting the report follows. This resolution, adopted on May 22, 1973, was declared invalid ten years later by a resolution made on October 11, 1983.

May 17, 1954

Report of András Szobek to the Hungarian Foreign Ministry About His Meeting With Mao Zedong on 20 April 1954

Szobek reports on a meeting with Mao Zedong in which they discussed developments in Hungary.

May 22, 1957

Report of Hungarian Ambassador Sándor Nógrádi to the Hungarian Foreign Ministry About His Conversation With Mao Zedong on the Occasion of Presenting His Credentials

Mao Zedong and Nógrádi discuss and compare the communist parties in China and Hungary.

October 15, 1957

Report of János Kádár to the Political Bureau of the Hungarian Socialist Workers’ Party About his Meeting with Mao Zedong on 27 September 1957

Mao Zedong describes the current campaign in China against "rightist" elements. Kádár then provides a detailed analysis of the 1956 uprising in Hungary and its aftermath.

October 22, 1959

Letter of Hungarian Ambassador Sándor Nógrádi to the Hungarian Foreign Ministry on the Meeting of Hungarian President István Dobi and Mao Zedong

In their conversation, Dobi and Mao Zedong discussed politicial, economic, and agricultural development in Hungary and China, and compared opposition to the current Great Leap Forward in China to the 1956 uprising in Hungary.

January 11, 1964

Report, Embassy of Hungary in North Korea to the Hungarian Foreign Ministry

In this report, Hungarian Ambassador to North Korea József Kovács details a conversation with Soviet Ambassador Moskovsky and Romanian Ambassador Bodnaras about the Soviet interpretation of North Korean-Chinese relations. Moskovsky states that his predecessors underestimated the situation.

January 25, 1982

Appendix to 'Some New Phenomena in the Chinese Pursuit to Differentiate Socialist Countries'

Summary of Chinese foreign relations with socialist countries and anti-Soviet policy.

January 25, 1982

Cable from the Embassy of the Hungarian People's Republic to China, 'Some New Phenomena in the Chinese Pursuit to Differentiate Socialist Countries'

Soviet bloc diplomats respond to a report on China's foreign policy and strategy to move closer to Soviet allies.

September 14, 1983

Ciphered Telegram, Embassy of Hungary in North Korea to the Hungarian Foreign Ministry

A report on a iscussion between Kim Il Sung and Demichev about foreign policies toward Soviet and KAL incident

September 12, 1983

Ciphered Telegram, Embassy of Hungary in North Korea to the Hungarian Foreign Ministry

A request from Soviet Union to North Korea to explain North Korean actions regarding the KAL shootdown incident.

Pagination