Word: molotovs
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...their first talks with Molotov and Stalin, the Western envoys had proposed: 1) immediate and unconditional lifting of the Berlin blockade; 2) recognition of Soviet money as exclusive currency in all of Berlin; 3) renewed discussions by the Council of Foreign Ministers on a peace treaty for Germany...
...Molotov, Minister of Foreign Affairs, U.S.S.R...
...Comrades J. V. Stalin and V. M. Molotov...
Follow That Car. Correspondents got no briefings before the Kremlin visits, and no comment afterwards. They haunted the embassy entrances, set out in hot pursuit whenever a bigwig drove away, trailed the envoys to every lunch and dinner date. Arriving at the British embassy after one tiring encounter with Molotov, Ambassador Smith, usually an even-tempered man, snapped irritably: "You just sit here. I'll tell you everything." Then he told the newsmen nothing...
When U.S. Ambassador Bedell Smith left the Kremlin one night last week, he said to newsmen: "Molotov, three hours. No Stalin. No comment." The reporters then turned to Frank Roberts of Britain. "You heard him, didn't you?" said Roberts. "No comment." Yves Chatigneau of France smiled, said nothing...