Discover Our Collections


  • Collection > National Security Files (remove)
  • Tag > Digital item (remove)
  • Subject > USSR and Eastern Europe (remove)

9 results

  • Will assist the Secretary of' State in exploring problems of · procedure and timing connected with holding discussions with the .Soviet Union and in proposing for my consideration the channels which would be most desirable from our point of view
  • delineated in our report to you last January 31 on future cooperation with the Soviet Union. Consistent with that report, the biolo gy and medicine agreement for the first time opens the way to cooperation· in an area related to manned space f li ght
  • Secretary of the Space Council, the Director of Central Intelligence,, the Science Advisor, and certain of my staff. This report presents a reasonable and persuasive approach to a program of cooperation with the Soviet Union in the field of outer space
  • the Soviets have in mind in terms of consulates in the US. However, the rapid implementation of plans to open at least one consulate in the Soviet Union and in the US is an act which can be taken within a very short time once the convention has been ratified
  • ~~~~~~-J {)fe,, (\ #§. report #6 report: 7) \~/02 \\ L-~ {X;HO \ :r:e HSA:M 364 Tab B "Relations with the Soviet Union and Eas't Ettropean Bloc Countr i es IR the Industr ial and Copyright Fields" Secret 7 pp rJ.;
  • their economic dependence upon the Soviet Union. Application of the GATT rules, whether modified or not, should influence the East European countries toward adopting more multilateral methods in their trade with the CP 1 s. By freeing them from the neces­ sity
  • and North America. C. As the Soviet Union continues to harden mis­ sile sites and increases its mobile mari­ time weapons , this capability will grow both in abso l ute terms and in terms of the striking power that would remain after the Soviet Union
  • and other reform s were initiated. ~ Dissention between Czechoslovakia and the S o viet Union rose rapidly. The summer maneuvers 1\'r;'r"J 1.,• .... .i J;il\) ~· . i'' I -.q:._ 11 .1 • Gy Ch I \..-~ ,- .~ - I ' . ,,, ~-, , ·· ...._... c q
  • to the West is provided by t he desire of Eastern Eur opean intellec­ tuals to pursue professional c onta c t s with their Westel"n coll eagues . A third t ie is the desir e of the Eastern European s tates t o assert their independence against the Soviet Union