Word: molotovs
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Difficult Agenda. In Vienna this week, when the Big Four foreign ministers met to sign the Austrian treaty, Vyacheslav M. Molotov accepted the invitation for the Soviet Union. As outlined and accepted, the conference would have three stages. First, the foreign ministers would meet briefly to lay the groundwork, and perhaps to agree on a broad agenda. Then, with their foreign ministers at hand, the Big Four heads of government-Dwight Eisenhower, Anthony Eden, Edgar Faure and Nikolai Bulganin-would meet to discuss issues and methods of arriving at solutions. Later the foreign ministers and their aides would deal...
...Stalin it has been meaningless. Without taking at its face value all that the Russians say about collective leadership, it is still obvious that in Moscow now there is no "highest level." The mystical belief that a Churchill-Malenkov meeting could dissolve the solid differences that an Eden-Molotov meeting would merely register has lost all content today when the prospect is an Eden-Bulganin or Attlee-Bulganin meeting. No British government can undertake to ease an anxious world of its fears merely by convening a new conference. It obviously cannot liquidate the armed might or shatter the dogmatic ambitions...
...week's end Dulles, Pinay and Macmillan flew off to their rendezvous in Vienna with Russia's Molotov, who" quickly accepted their proposals. It was agreed that the time of the meeting should be between mid-July and late August...
Their visit, said Tito's party spokes man, was expected to contribute richly "toward a further relaxation of international tension and the development of peaceful international cooperation upon the basis of equality." Conspicuously ab sent from the guest list: stonefaced Foreign Minister Molotov...
Austria's Foreign Minister Leopold Figl had gone out of his way to say that Austrian independence was "particularly due to American help." When Molotov arrived from Warsaw (see above), all grinny with benevolence, Figl greeted him at the airport with a good-natured but double-edged reference to Austria's ten years of occupation. "Now you come as a real liberator," Figl told Molotov...