Word: kremlins
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...current views. Some of them: he hadn't the "faintest idea" whether or not he would drop Dean Acheson as Secretary of State; he foresaw the day when East-West power will come into some kind of balance and it may become possible to negotiate with the Kremlin; and he bespoke his determination to put his "own stamp" on the campaign but acknowledged that he was for a "refreshened Fair Deal...
...cold war, not cold peace, was still the order of the day in the Kremlin, where the Communist Party Congress met for the first time in 13 years. Molotov cried that U.S. "ruling circles" are "conducting preparations for unleashing a new world war"; Malenkov accused the U.S. of saddling "their junior partners, enslaving them, flogging them mercilessly," also "inspiring plots against their English and French allies" in their colonies. "The conflicts at present dividing the imperialist camp can lead...
Roosevelt urged the placement of the last issues holding up the Korea peace talks before the U.N. General Assembly so that it would "place the Kremlin before the eyes of the world as not only having initiated the Korea conflict, but being responsible for its continuance." He is shown above (right) with Mrs. Reed Harwood (center) and Herbert Ehrman (left) at an early evening speaking engagement in Brookline...
...Ambassadors in Moscow had undergone similar treatment. Furthermore, it was not in character: Kennan rarely talks this freely to newsmen. Kennan could hardly have been surprised at the Russian reaction to his remarks. Pravda promptly blasted him as an "ecstatic liar."* Kennan may have had an idea that the Kremlin would ask for his recall; although an important Communist congress was to open in Moscow this week (see FOREIGN NEWS), he did not hurry back to his post, instead went to visit his daughter in Switzerland...
...days after Stalin's article appeared, the Party Congress opened, bringing 2,000 comrades in chauffeured limousines. As the cold rain glistened on the yellow facade of the great palace of the Kremlin, the delegates gave the dictator one of the greatest ovations of his life. Ideologically, the 72-year-old dictator had completely overshadowed everyone at the meeting and set its tone...