Word: ceau
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...With Ceauşescu at his side and a white ambulance trailing discreetly behind in deference to his age, De Gaulle plunged repeatedly into the crowds, delighting them with carefully rehearsed greetings in Rumanian. He talked to housewives, questioned workers in greasy overalls about wages and working conditions, listened gravely to serenades by gypsy bands...
...encouraged Ceauşescu - who is as critical of the Warsaw Pact as De Gaulle is of NATO - to join him in breaking up the system of blocs that divides Europe. Flamboyantly, he invited Rumania "to march side by side" with France toward a united Europe free from big-power domination. The two leaders agreed to form a commission to coordinate their efforts toward this goal, and De Gaulle declared in sonorous tones "the right of each people to speak in its own voice...
While full of praise for his ebullient host, Ceauşescu carefully avoided making any provocative statements that might have incurred Moscow's wrath; he is in enough trouble with Russia already. A series of recent head-on clashes with the Kremlin has so fractured relations that Rumania is no longer welcome at high-level Communist conferences. The open display of support from De Gaulle was thus a welcome boost to Ceauşescu, whose position in the Soviet-dominated camp is becoming increasingly isolated. While De Gaulle seeks to broaden his contacts in Eastern Europe, Ceauşescu...
...rambling, 18-page declaration issued from Bucharest's erstwhile Royal Palace, there was not a word about a strengthened command structure-clear evidence that Rumanian Leader Nicolae Ceauşescu had once again thwarted Soviet designs. Instead, the declaration reiterated Brezhnev's call for a pan-European "security conference" aimed at the simultaneous dismantling of NATO and the Warsaw Pact. When Brezhnev first proposed the conference in March, he wanted to keep the U.S. out of any European settlement. This time, the U.S. role was purposely kept ambiguous. In any case, there was no indication in Western capitals...
...take them up. Unity was maintained-on the surface at least-right up to the moment that Brezhnev boarded his Aeroflot Ilyushin-18 to fly back to Moscow. After kissing a row of little girls and accepting a spray of red gladioli, Brezhnev heartily embraced Ceauşescu and bussed him three times on the cheeks. The Rumanian's face remained impassive throughout the whole performance. After all, to be kissed but not squeezed by the Russian bear was a small enough price to pay for independence...