Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich Parallel History Project (PHP)
Friday, 28 October 2016 HOME / COLLECTIONS / Warsaw Pact Records / Deputy Foreign Ministers Contact
  • /COLLECTIONS
    • Warsaw Pact Records
        A Cardboard Castle?
      • Party Leaders
      • Defense Ministers
      • Foreign Ministers
      • Deputy Foreign Ministers
      • Crimea Meetings
      • Militärwesen
      • German Military Archives
    • Warsaw Pact War Plans
    • Intelligence
    • Crises
    • Warsaw Pact Generals
    • National Perspectives
    • NATO Records
    • Global Cold War
  • /CONFERENCES
  • /PUBLICATIONS
  • /NEWS
  • /SERVICES
  • /PHP NETWORK
  • /ABOUT


Report to the Hungarian Socialist Workers' Party Political Committee on the Meeting of the Deputy Foreign Ministers Preparing the Forthcoming Session of the Political Consultative Committee

26 Feb 1968
Description: This report outlines issues agreed at the February 1968 meeting of the Warsaw Pact deputy ministers of defense in East Berlin and later addressed at the Political Consultative Committee (PCC) meeting in Sofia. With the exception of Romania, all participants agree on the following topics for the PCC agenda: (i) a discussion of the draft version of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, (ii) an exchange of views on the situation in Vietnam, and (iii) a discussion on questions related to the establishment of a staff and military council assigned to the High Command of the United Armed Forces.

Collection: Deputy Foreign Ministers

Download in:
  • English (79 KB )
  • Hungarian (203 KB )
Document Type: Report
Language of Original Document: Hungarian
Translators: Ervin Dunay
Number of Pages: 10
Cold War Period: 1960s
Document Source: Hungarian National Archives (MOL), Budapest
Call Number: M-KS-288 f. 5./448. ő.e. and XIX-J-1-j, 1968, 100. doboz, VI-1, 001289/19/1968

Search



 




International Relations and Security Network (ISN) Center for Security Studies (CSS) Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETH) Disclaimer Privacy Policy Parallel History Project (PHP)