Search results
Nikolai Novikov
- Nikolai Novikov was the Soviet ambassador to the United States.
alphahistory.com/coldwar/novikov-responds-long-telegram-1946/
When the U.S. began formal diplomacy with the Soviet government during 1933 after the election of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, Kennan accompanied Ambassador William C. Bullitt to Moscow.
Nikolai Novikov was the Soviet ambassador to the United States. In September 1946 Novikov reported to Moscow in response to George Kennan's 'Long Telegram'.
Nov 13, 2009 · George Kennan, the American charge d’affaires in Moscow, sends an 8,000-word telegram to the Department of State detailing his views on the Soviet Union, and U.S. policy toward the communist...
- Missy Sullivan
George Kennan (1904-2005) was an American diplomat who served in Europe and the Soviet Union during and after World War II. Kennan’s advice to Washington, most notably his famous ‘Long Telegram’, helped shape United States foreign policy in the early Cold War.
Jan 27, 2016 · U.S. diplomat, scholar, and public intellectual George Kennan (1904 – 2005) was one of the nation’s most perceptive observers of the Soviet Union during the early Cold War. Kennan entered the Foreign Service in 1926. Fluent in Russian, he was stationed in Latvia prior to the U.S. diplomatic recognition of the Soviet Union in 1933.
By Nikolai Novikov, Soviet Ambassador to the United States. The text remained secret until 1990, when it was made available to scholars at a conference on the Cold War organized by the United States Institute of Peace and the Research Coordination Center of the Soviet Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Aug 14, 2021 · Kennan's diplomatic career was substantial but modest. His highest ranks were ambassador to the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia and director of the US State Department's policy planning staff.