Word: molotovs
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...army marshals do not enter lightly into correspondence with old friends abroad. Zhukov's letter, taken together with his May Day speech, was an official gesture toward the West. Coming from Zhukov, and not from Molotov the Great Stone Face, the message was, and was meant to be, more acceptable. For Georgy Zhukov is a great professional soldier, whose name will be linked in Russian history with the victories of Moscow, Leningrad, Stalingrad and Berlin. Zhukov has always faithfully obeyed party orders, but he also seems to have stayed out of power politics and cliques. From the point...
Then came the war in Korea. Like magic, Zhukov turned up beside Molotov at a gathering in Warsaw, and again on the 1952 Moscow party Congress. But his real return to favor dates from Stalin's death on March 5, 1953, and the arrest four months later of arch-Commissar Beria. The same plenary meeting of the Central Committee which denounced Beria elevated Zhukov to full membership on the Central Committee of the Communist Party...
...June the United Nations will hold a special commemorative session in San Francisco on the 10th anniversary of the signing of the charter. Many of the foreign ministers of the world-maybe even Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov-will be there. We respectfully suggest that it would be fitting for President Eisenhower to open that conference in person with an appeal for a new effort to establish peace...
Some months ago, before the Paris accords to rearm West Germany were ratified, Russia's Molotov was threatening that if the treaties went into effect, a Big Four meeting would be useless, because there would be nothing to negotiate about. Now that the accords have been ratified,- Russia was angling for a four-power Foreign Ministers' conference in Vienna. Purpose: to approve the Raab-Molotov deal made in Moscow, which promises to end Allied occupation of Austria (TIME, April 25). The three Western powers, after consultations among themselves, replied that they would be pleased and ready to have...
...Austrian Example. The U.S. wants the ambassadors at Vienna to examine obscurities (possible booby traps) in the Raab-Molotov agreement. Example: Are the Western powers expected to guarantee Austria's "neutrality," or merely her territorial integrity...