1893-1976
Eastern Europe
(372) documents
East Asia
North America
Southeast Asia
1893 - 1976
South Asia
1898 - 1976
1879 - 1953
1949 -
1954 -
1912 - 1994
August 14, 1966
Ambassador Jerzy Knothe and Prime Minister Zhou Enlai discuss ongoing Chinese class struggles.
October 1966
Gomulka and Brezhnev discuss the Cultural Revolution in China and its implications for international communism. Also addressed is Chinese attitudes toward Vietnam.
January 18, 1967
Gomulka, Podgorny and Brezhnev discuss an upcoming conference of communist parties. Central to the discussion is the attitude of the Chinese.
September 14, 1976
An interkit meeting gets postponed to give participants more time to assess the effects of Mao Zedong's death.
September 24, 1976
A telegram claiming that one of the most significant problems in China following Mao's death is the personnel problem, that there is "no single exceptional personality" on the Chinese scene.
September 29, 1976
An assessment of the situation in China following Mao's death and a few lines about Soviet policy following this development.
December 23, 1976
The Secretary Deputy Head of the International Department of the CC CPSU, Oleg Rakhamnin, reports there are no changes in China’s anti-Soviet propaganda
June 21, 1977
An excerpt of speeches given to the meeting participants. A major theme is "how to win back China."
January 13, 1979
Leonid Ilyich analyzes the establishment of US-Chinese diplomatic relations and recent developments in Iran and the Middle East. Todor Zhivkov talks about Bulgaria’s economic development and the Soviet cancellation of Bulgarian debt.
April 12, 1967
Members of the Hungarian Central Committee discuss recent trips to Moscow and Budapest. Those involved debrief the group on discussions at both locations over the domestic situation in China and its possible repercussions for international communism.