A file containing documents relating to Yugoslavia's relations with the United States. Subjects discussed in the file include statements made by Dean Rusk, the American Secretary of State, about the future American aid programme to Yugoslavia; a Czech journalist's question at a press conference about Yugoslavia being a tool of American policy; a visit by Ko?a Popović, a Yugoslav vice-president, to Washington; and conversations between the British and American ambassadors in Belgrade about American-Yugoslav relations. Other issues covered include a visit to Yugoslavia by Adlai Stevenson II, the American ambassador to the United Nations, and Earl Warren, the American Chief Justice, during which discussion covered the new Yugoslav constitution and Yugoslav opposition to the European Common Market; and an interview given to an American journalist by Josip Tito, the Yugoslav president, which had been broadcast on Yugoslav television and had covered the Berlin crisis, American-Soviet relations, and Yugoslav internal affairs.
- Collection ID
- FO371
- Copyright
- Article(s) from The Washington Post © The Washington Post. Article(s) from The Washington Post © The Washington Post.
- Countries
- China Czechoslovakia Soviet Union United Kingdom United States of America
- Department Reference
- File 103145
- Document Type
- Correspondence Memoranda Reports
- File Reference
- FO 371/163920
- Identifier
- 10.1080/cwee.fo371.163920
- Note
- The following items have been removed from this file due to copyright restrictions:Belgrade/Zagreb Home Service, 11 August 1962, General and Western Affairs;Borba, 12 August 1962, President Tito's interview with Drew Pearson.
- Pages
- 50
- Persons Discussed
- Adlai Stevenson Dean Rusk Edvard Kardelj George F. Kennan John F. Kennedy Josip Broz Tito Koča Popović Milovan Đilas
- Published in
- United Kingdom
- Subject Countries
- Yugoslavia
- Themes
- International Relations