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Letter From Chairman Khrushchev to President Kennedy, October 27, 1962. Department of State Division of Language Services (Translation) LS NO. 46236 T-94/T-24 Russian. Embossed Seal of the USSR. J. Kennedy, President of the United States Copy to U Thant, Acting Secretary General of the U.N. Dear Mr. President,
Letter From President Kennedy to Chairman Khrushchev, October 22, 1962. The White House Washington, October 22, 1962. Sir: A copy of the statement I am making tonight concerning developments in Cuba and the reaction of my Government thereto has been handed to your Ambassador in Washington.
As I had informed you in the letter of October 27, we are prepared to reach agreement to enable United Nations Representatives to verify the dismantling of these means.
This folder contains materials collected by the office of President John F. Kennedy's secretary, Evelyn Lincoln, concerning President Kennedy's correspondence with Soviet Union Premier Nikita Khrushchev.
Note: 1590 pages of letters, telegrams, and translations passed between John F. Kennedy and Nikita Khrushchev. This total does not include correspondence in draft form. The complete Kennedy-Khrushchev correspondence can be found in the online volume of the Foreign Relations of the United States .
Soviet Primier Nitka Khrushchev answering President John F. Kennedy broadcast message of October 22, 1962 discussing solutions to the Cuban Missile Crisis.
President John F. Kennedy's letter to Soviet Primier Nitka Khrushchev answering his letter of October 26, 1962 discussing solutions to the Cuban Missile Crisis.
Letter From Chairman Khrushchev to President Kennedy, October 24, 1962. Moscow, October 24, 1962. Dear Mr. President: I have received your letter of October 23, have studied it, and am answering you.
Khrushchev announces the dismantling of Soviet missile bases in Cuba. Nikita Khrushchev's Message to John Kennedy October 28, 1962
On 28 October 1962, Nikita Khrushchev, the First Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, sends a letter to the US President, John F. Kennedy, in which he justifies the purely dissuasive objective of the missiles supplied by the USSR to the Cuban regime.