Word: bonne
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...flat no from allies was only the beginning of Washington's bill of complaints. Bonn made it clear that it did not much like the U.S.'s supplying Israel through West German ports but it did nothing to stop the flow so long as the fighting was going on. Once the cease-fire was announced, however, Chancellor Willy Brandt's West German government politely asked the U.S. to quit using its ports. Finally, embarrassed by a reporter's inquiry about an Israeli ship that was loading arms at Bremerhaven, West German Foreign Ministry State Secretary Paul...
...Security Council to convene, but Kissinger was unable to build a consensus among the permanent members of the Council-or the warring parties-for a resolution aimed at stopping the fighting. As the week passed without significant progress, Kissinger was obliged to cancel a quick trip to London and Bonn; like détente, "the Year of Europe" remains one of his highest priorities, but for the moment it will have to wait...
...visits to Paris, London and Bonn, Tanaka had been eager to show West Europeans that Japan is no longer content with its traditionally low diplomatic profile. As the world's second largest trading power, Japan wants to be involved in the shaping of new relationships between the European Economic Community and the U.S. But the Europeans were at best lukewarm toward Tanaka's visions of a "more balanced triangle." In Paris, the first stop on Tanaka's itinerary, Georges Pompidou agreed to send the Mona Lisa to Tokyo and to cooperate with Japan in a uranium enrichment...
Although the Iron Curtain is less rigid than it used to be, Western newsmen are still welcomed cautiously in East Germany. After arriving in Leipzig, 90 miles southwest of the Berlin Wall, Chief European Correspondent William Rademaekers and Bonn Bureau Chief Bruce Nelan discovered that their time was not to be entirely their own. "The authorities," Rademaekers says, "had organized a togetherness program stretching over two weeks." Reluctantly, G.D.R. officials gave in to the correspondents' request to split up: Rademaekers traveled east to the Polish border, while Nelan went as far south as "Saxon Switzerland" near the Czech border...
Nelan, a TIME correspondent since 1965, first visited East Germany last year, when he became Bonn bureau chief. Rademaekers, who has served in most of the European bureaus of TIME since joining in 1959, got his first taste of East Germany more than twelve years ago, and has been back as recently as last summer for a retrospective on the Berlin Wall...