Word: gromyko
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Aware of Moscow's feeling, Kissinger prefaced his fifth Middle East trip in seven months last week with a stopover in Geneva for nine hours of discussions with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko. The Secretary flew on to Algiers for brief talks with President Houari Boumedienne with only a negative promise from Gromyko. The Russians did not endorse any particular series of disengagement proposals. They merely agreed, one U.S. official reported later, "not to work against the concept of disengagement...
...days later] after we were already in the air flying toward Paris for the [four-power] conference with Eisenhower, [Foreign Minister] Andrei Andreyevich Gromyko, Malinovsky and I began to think over the situation. We felt our responsibility-and the tension that went with it-more acutely than ever before. We were haunted by the fact that just prior to this meeting, the United States had dared to send its U-2 reconnaissance plane against us. It was as though the Americans had deliberately tried to place a time bomb under the meeting, set to go off just as we were...
After consulting with Gromyko and Malinovsky, Khrushchev decided to draft a tough new declaration, which was transmitted to Moscow for approval by the collective leadership in the Kremlin...
...promise of U.S. accommodation with the Arabs, there were plenty of pitfalls to make Kissinger cautious about what he could accomplish on a trip to settle Israeli-Syrian disengagement. It was to commence in Geneva with a conference with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko and then take the Secretary to Algiers, Cairo, Kuwait, Damascus and Jerusalem. Obstructions anywhere along the way could threaten Kissinger's success...
...vitriolic attack on U.S.-Soviet detente. Teng also lauded the Arab oil embargo, which he said had broken the "international economic monopoly" of the rich nations, and urged producers of other raw materials to emulate it. He drew a surprisingly low-key response from Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, who said that "isolated voices are to be heard that show there are some who have come to the session with intentions alien to [the conference's] lofty ideals...